10 April, 1919.] Journal of Agriculture, Victoria. 



Xlll 



"This is for you, girls! 



It's the most wonderful separator I ever saw. I just brought It from 

 Johnson's Hardware Store where they were demonstrating it. You can't 

 guess what it will do." 



"I think I know, father. You told me last week about the loss of 

 cream in our old separator when I turned it too slow. You timed me 

 and pretty near scolded me when you found I was turning 37 revolutions 

 instead of 60. This is the separator that "skims clean at any speed." It's a 



SHARPIES 



C SUCTION-FEED m^ 



REAM SEPARATOR 



"Mary Is a smart girl, mother— she guessed It. We all helped to 

 test It and it skimmed to a trace when turned as slow as 36 and equally 

 clean when turned as fast as 55 turns. It simply skimmed faster when 

 we turned it faster. And the cream remained at 35% thruout the 

 varying speeds." 



"Why, father— then we will know exactly what the cream check 

 will be each week, wont we?" 



"Indeed we will, mother. Now look at the bowl. It's a plain 

 straight tube with a small ring like a napkin ring in it. 



"Goody!— I'll get thru washing up in a jiffy, no discs!" 



"Yes, girls, and note the knee-low supply tank, and the automatic 

 once-a-month oiling— it has any other separator I ever tried, beat a mile. 

 But then— it's made by the oldest and largest Separator Works in America." 



Agents for Victoria— NEWELL & COY., King St., Melbourne 



