. Our farm and building book. . he stable, however, a woodenbuilding is preferred. Anybody canbuild a wall 8 or 9 feet high, but whenthe wall is run up. then special scaf-folding and hoisting machinery compli-cate the work. There is no objectionto a concrete or stone wall for a dairystable, provided that attention is givento ventilation and provided that thewall is not used to hold back a bank ofearth. A stable wall is intended to keepcows in condition to yield a large sup-ply of milk. The concrete or stone walls areporous enough to let moisture throughwhen the earth is piled against


. Our farm and building book. . he stable, however, a woodenbuilding is preferred. Anybody canbuild a wall 8 or 9 feet high, but whenthe wall is run up. then special scaf-folding and hoisting machinery compli-cate the work. There is no objectionto a concrete or stone wall for a dairystable, provided that attention is givento ventilation and provided that thewall is not used to hold back a bank ofearth. A stable wall is intended to keepcows in condition to yield a large sup-ply of milk. The concrete or stone walls areporous enough to let moisture throughwhen the earth is piled against want plenty of moisture, butthey want it through the wateringtrough and not through the air. Propersanitation demands that stable air snailbe as pure as possible and as free aspossible from excess moisture. It is only recently that farmers havediscovered that windows may be placedin a stone wall or a cement wall andthat the cost of building is no greaterbecause the cost of the frames and sashis saved in cubic wall Floor Plan of Barn No. A264L


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthousepl, bookyear1915