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Show SEPARATE STALL FOR COWS Youngsters Prevented From Crowding and Nursing Each Other's Ears-Expense Ears-Expense Is Small. A Wisconsin farmer, who had a number of calves, thought It might be well to find some means of keeping them separate while feeding They pushed and pulled and "nursed" each other's ears so that the stronger ones were well fed while the weaker went hungry. Steel stanchions-were an expense ex-pense which he did not feel was Justified Justi-fied with his small herd. At little cost and with small labor he built wooden stalls to which the calves could be tied while feeding. Board partitions separate them more completely from one another, and individual in-dividual earthenware bowls, which fit Into a wooden frame, form separate feeding devices which may be easily renewed and cleaned. |