or sheep, pigs or a calf. Raise the tongue, which lets the rear end on ground, then drive in the animal, shut the gate, pull tongue down and you have your load ready to fasten to a wagon. HOW TO STAKE OUT STOCK A convenient and simple contrivance so that no harm can come to the animal is to drive two stakes several feet apart and stretch a rope or wire on which a ring is placed. To this ring fasten halter strap. The animal can graze up and down on both sides without tangle or injury. The ring slides, and the stretched wire will give some. FEED BOX FOR FIELD A handy feed box for use in open lots or when steers are being fed upon grass is shown in the TUB FEED BOX cut. Cut a barrel in two and strengthen the halves by placing a frame of two boards across the inside, as shown in this sketch. This will prevent the tub being smashed and will allow four animals to eat out of the trough without bothering each other unnecessarily. It is important that a very strong barrel be selected and that the hoops be nailed to each stave. Be advis'd; Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot Have more than thou showest, Learn more than thou trowest, Set less than thou throwest.-King Lear. CHEAP SHEDS OF STRAW It would pay every farmer to put up in the pastures some kind of protection for his sheep, hogs and cattle. Where labor is scarce and hay and straw is plentiful and cheap, a condition which prevails in many large sections, straw sheds and barns are very profitable. Put up a framework of posts 8 feet high, 16 feet wide and as long as needed; 30 feet is a good length. The posts are hewed evenly on two sides and set so that a bale of straw will fit snugly between them. They are cut off at a uniform height and a 2 x 6 spiked securely on top. Rafters are nailed to this and covered loosely with poles. Baled straw is used for the sides. After the sides are up the roof is covered 2 feet deep with loose straw held in place with a few poles that are tied together in pairs and placed over the ridge. Several of these sheds have been built for five years and have not needed any attention. Life is made up not of great sacrifices or duties, but of little things, in which smiles and kindness, and small obligations given habitually, are what win and preserve the heart and secure comfort.Sir H. Davy. You must cut your coat according to your cloth. FEED TROUGH FOR SHEEP For a sheep trough procure two 6-inch boards, a, about 3 feet long and at the bottom of each fasten another board, b. Make a flat trough and let the ends project above the top. Bore a hole through each end and also through the standards, a, and hang the trough on bolts. After the sheep eat and .b. SWINGING SHEEP TROUGH leave the cobs, or if it rains, the trough can be turned bottom side up and quickly cleaned. The luck that I believe in Is that which comes with work, Who's content to wish and shirk. The men the world calls lucky That success comes, not by wishing, A NOVEL FEED RACK An overhead manger, as shown in the sketch, is excellent for sheep or calves. It should hang just high enough so that they will pass under with |