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Show IH-I in a, .i i 1 1 a I L1VC STOCKH 1 Make a separate pen for your i brood sows and don't have too much straw. A man who will keep hla aheep In a muddy lot baa iviall conception of bis duty. Whitewashing atables mnkn them ' llKhter, cleaner and niuh more i healthful and sanitary. When a farmer has had silage for bis wes one winter he hardly knows how to keep them without It. When hows are first put In a strange barn they will frequ ntly not ! eat well for perhaps a week. Noon Is a good time to supply tbe stock with some gren stuff, such ss I cabbacea or roots of any kind. ; A sheep la th most nervous animal I i on the farm and get Into low condl- j tion quickly and recovers slowly. j i Fllage keeps Ibe sappy apwaranoe ' of tbe Sheeps' bodies and a lutter In the wool that dry fed will seldom do. I)on't feed cairota too liberally to the horses; they are a laxative. Cut i In ellces to tbey can be easily chewed up. A pig Ore months old requires one pound of dicer.tible nitrogenous fed i to five pounds of digestible carbuby- draiea. |