114 



S& JOHNSON & STOKES, PHILADELPHIA 



JS^^s^ 



"Vigor" Ground Beef Scrap J. & 5. "Vigor" Egg Food 



Or Prepared Meat for Poultry 



This is prepared 

 ..^,• 1- •••• '^-'^=-».iQ> with great care, and is 



100 Lbs. 



"VIGOR" 



Prepared Meat 



for Poultry 



FROM 



JOHNSON & STOKES 



shipped by, us to all 

 parts of the United 

 States, principally to 

 parties who are engaged 

 in raising poultry and 

 eggs for market. It is 

 the finest thing we 

 know of to cause hens 

 to lay during the win- 

 ter. Feed three times 

 a week, at the rate of 

 about a handful to ever}- 

 three birds, in the morning meal of hot food. High 

 prices alwajs prevail at this season of the year, 

 which make it extremelj' profitable' to feed. lo 

 lbs., 40C. ; 50 lbs., f 1.50 ; loo lbs., 112.75 ; P^r ton, 

 I48.00. 



High Protein Beef Scrap 



.\ superior grade of 

 meat prepared for the 

 C3'phers Compan)', and 

 sold very largely to the 

 largest consumers in 

 this country. 



It shows 50 to 65 per 

 cent Protein, which 

 places it at a very high 

 grade. 



HIGH PBOtElM 



BEEFSCR/^ 



^i^. roR •-■■■'* 



POULTRY, 



flA^FACTURED F W 

 VfFAL04N.Y.JU.S.% 



Price 



50 lbs. 

 100 " 



. $1.60 

 • 2.75 



Spratt's Patent 

 Prairie Meat Crissel 



This is a very fine grade of prepared meat, put 

 up by the celebrated " Spratt's Patent " Company. 

 Some of our customers will have it, though at an 

 advanced price, as the brand "Spratt's Patent" 

 is always a guarantee of superior quality. 



Price 



50-lb. bag $1.75 



100 lbs 3.25 



neat and Bone 



This is a good, clean, sweet article, and not a 

 refuse from a fertilizer works, as many of such 

 products are. It is meat scrap, bone, and dried 

 blood, cooked under steam pressure, and then dried 

 and ground. It makes an excellent poultr\- food. 



Price 



10 lbs J0.40 



50 lbs 1.50 



100 lbs 2.50 



100 lbs. 



Vigor" 

 Egg Food 



From 



John'.on & Stokes 



Seedsmen 

 Pliilidelphia Pa 



■ AMiMAL MEAL 

 MAKES HENS LAY. 



This is a great egg 

 and vigor -producing 

 food. It is our own 

 brand, and we know 

 whereof we speak when 

 we give it our highest 

 praise and guarantee. 

 It is to be fed as a mash, 

 dry and crumbly. Feed 

 morning and night, and 

 if the fowls are kept in 

 an enclosure, scatter 

 our "Vigor" Scratch 

 Food in the litter at noon, to induce exercise in 

 scratching for it. This food will keep them in good 

 laying condition, as it gives them the necessary 

 .stimulus without producing fat. It is a coDiplete 

 food. Nothing else need be given them but grit 

 and occasional green cut bone. It will also help 

 the fertility during the cold months. 



Price, 50 lbs., $1.50 ; ico lbs., $2.25. 



Bowlder's Animal Meal 



The rich- 

 est part of 

 the egg is 

 the albu- 

 men. The 

 laying hen 

 and grow- 

 ing chicks 

 should be 

 fed upon 

 food rich 

 in albumen 

 and easily 



digested. ' 'Animal Meal ' ' contains a large amount 

 of albumen, as well as material for the shell. 



It is a well-balanced animal food, and contains 

 less than 5 per cent water, while scraps contain 20 

 to 30, and fresh meat 75 to 80 per cent. It will 

 therefore go farther, and, being thoroughly cooked, 

 is more easily digested. 



Price, per 5-lb. carton, 20c. ; 25 lbs., 75c. ; 50 lbs., 

 I1.35 ; 100 lbs., $2.50. Special prices ijy the ton. 



Ground Dried Blood 



Two Ounces of Ground Dried Blood Represent 

 One Quart of Raw Blood 



Blood Meai, is greatly relished by fowls, and 

 an increase in the number of eggs is quickly 

 noticed when it is fed. Poultrymen must feed 

 more or less meat scraps in winter to make hens 

 lay ; this is generally acknowledged. Blood Meal 

 is merely a meat in a highly concentrated form, 

 rich in albuminoids and ash, both of which enter 

 largely into the composition of the egg. 



As to the advantages gained by feeding Blood 

 Meal to young chicks, ducks, and turkeys, we can 

 say that there is positively nothing better for them. 

 Those raising chicks hatched in incubators tell 

 us that the loss from weakness, or "breaking 

 down," as they term it, is enormous. If Blood 

 Meal is mixed wiih their ration of feed at the 

 rate of one part of blood to twenty of meal or 

 shorts, no chick will die from the cause men- 

 tioned. 



Price, 5 lbs., 25c. ; 50 lbs. ,$2.00; per 100 lbs., 

 I3-50. 



