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"Sheep are kept with profit on numerous farms scattered throughout the irrigated districts of the northwest. On some of these farms they have been kept with success for many years so that sheep raising is by no means an experimental enterprise on such farms. The present outlook for the sheep business appears to warrant the maintenance of many more farm flocks than are now being kept in these districts, and this bulletin is deigned to further the expansion of the industry by pointing out its possibilities and by giving examples of good farm practice with sheep. The method of handling and feeding sheep as practiced on 12 representative irrigated farms, large and small, and in various parts of the Northwest are described in some detail. A few of these farms specialize in sheep, but on most of the sheep enterprise is combined with some other major enterprise such as dairying, hog raising, growing sugar beets, or orcharding. One of the more serious problems that the farmer must face in introducing sheep on an irrigated farm is that of pasture; hence special attention has be given to outlining methods to be followed in establishing pasture grasses and pasture supplements."--Page 2
"Farm forestry helps farmers in : Marketing timber profitably. Supplying timber for farm needs. Furnishing paying employment during the winter. Making waste lands yield a profit. Increasing the sale value of the farm. Farm forestry means: Improving the woods by the fight kind of cutting. Protecting the woods from fire and other injuries. Utilizing farm timber to the best advantage. Reclaiming gullies and utilizing waste lands by planting forest trees. Keeping the home forest growing at its maximum rate of production. Farm forestry, as a branch of agriculture, is the handling of forest trees and woodlands in such a manner as to increase the income and permanent value of the farm and add to its comvort and attractiveness as a home."--Page [2].