The 4- VITAL FACTORS 
of Cheapest Tractor Power 
LOWEST 
UPKEEP 
EXPENSE 
10MCEST 
AVERAGE 
LIFE 
ftEASONAlLt 
PRICE 
Summer Pasture on Small Area 
What i s the best way to feed a cow 
this SummerV I have two acres of laud 
in two separate parcels, I would like to 
grow a crop on one acre, and either cut 
or pasture, and then on the other either 
a crop for Winter or late Fall feeding. 
My plan was oats and cow peas, and as 
soon as large enough stake Cow in them, 
and sow other parcel to 'Sudan grass, cut 
Sudan late and feed to cow green; turn 
under the oats and cow peas and sow rye. 
Do you think T could get a Summer pas¬ 
ture economically? G. E. B. 
Rather than sow oats and cow peas I 
would suggest a combination of oats and 
Canada field peas. Cow peas are a hot 
weather crop and do not provide a satis¬ 
factory companion crop with oats. Oats 
and peas, to do well, should he seeded as 
early in the Spring as the ground con be 
properly prepared. If the seeding of the 
oat9 is delayed until it is the right time 
to sow cow peas the oats are apt to rust, 
and the hot weather will cut down their 
growth and yield very materially* After 
the oats and Canada field peas are har¬ 
vested, either as a green forage or cured 
as hay, then it would be possible to either 
plow or disk the area and seed with cow 
peas. 
Personally, I was never able to become 
enthusiastic over Sudan grass. Either 
cow peas or Soy beans would make a bet¬ 
ter Crop to plow under thau the oats and 
peas, and perhaps rye and vetch ■would 
be even better. With successive seeding 
of oats and Canada field peas for use as 
soiling crops you can supply an abund¬ 
ance of green forage for your cow, and if 
by chance you are unable to use all of 
tile crop in this manner it can be cured 
as hay and fed as roughage. An acre of 
land in pasture ought to keep a cow dur¬ 
ing the flush grass season, provided you 
have made arrangements, such as you 
have suggested, to supplement this pas¬ 
ture with a green crop. Much, of course, 
would depend upon the fertility of the 
area in question and its ability to grow 
forage. 
Ration Without Silage 
I have no silage, and a fair quality of 
hay. What would be good feed with 
corn, ground cob and all ? N. H. D. 
In the absence of silage, and in the 
event that the quality of hay that is 
available is poor, and with only corn and 
cob meal as a base for your concentrates, 
I would suggest the following shovel mix¬ 
ture: 400 lbs. corn and cob meal, 200 lbs. 
bran, 200 lbs. gluten meal. 200 lbs. oil- 
meal. The addition of 100 lbs. of brew¬ 
ers’ or distillers’ grains would improve 
this mixture, although T would not buy 
any brewery products if I were forced to 
use yeast or vinegar groins carrying as 
low as 13 per cent of protein and ns much 
as 25 per cent of fiber. Unfortunately 
many yeast and vinegar grains are being 
merchandized on the reputation of brew¬ 
ers’ or distillers’ grains, and actually they 
contribute very little feeding value to a 
ration. Some cornstalks would add to 
the variety of roughage and, if available, 
the cows should be fed this roughage in 
the middle of the day. 
'Ihc 
HINMAN 
ELECTRIC 
MILKER 
* 150 . 92 . 
(F. O. B. Oneida, N. Y.) 
For those with electric power 
of any current this outfit is 
without an equal. 
Every principle of the reliable 
Hinman Standard Milker is retained. 
.The power unit and pump come in a 
neat, compact fight outfit carried in 
one hand. No shafting, pulleys, belt¬ 
ing drive rods. When it arrives you 
attach to any lighting plug and milk! 
The Hinman Standard Milker at 
$45.00 per Unit or this complete out¬ 
fit at $150, will earn their first cost 
every year in use. 
Simple to use, easy to keep clean 
and made by the oldest manufacturer 
of milking machines. The Hinman 
is made by men who were dairymen 
first and was never excelled for what 
is best for dairymen. 
HINMAN 
AGENCY 
Write today for 
our new 1922 
Catalogue, 
A valuable, money ... . 
making offer for Hinman Milking 
open territory. Machine Co. 
Write now I c. « « » 
Feorth 5t., Ootid*. N.Y. 
cares itch, mango and 
scabies on your ani¬ 
mals, or it doe* not 
cost yon a cent. Absol 
utoly guaranteed. Liberal package $1.50 at your- 
dealer, or write oratuwn firms, lot., b<» n«. b, Htwpori, vi 
SCAB-CHASE 
Dairy Ration Without Hay 
We have 25 head of cattle, and enough 
hay to last two weeks longer. Would it 
be possible to keep them till June 1 with¬ 
out hay? We are in retail milk business. 
We have silage and cornstalks and can 
buy beet pulp, gluten, cottonseed, corn- 
meal, ground oats, middlings, bran and 
linseed meal. What is a well-balanced 
ration for these cows? C. A. D. 
Waverly, Pa. 
Where one has silage and an abund¬ 
ance of cornstalks it is possible to get 
along without hay as a portion of the 
roughage. It would mean, however, the 
feeding of all of the silage and corn fod¬ 
der that the cows would clean up, aud the 
use of more concentrates, As a matter 
of fact, I should prefer choice shredded 
or cut cornstalks to Timothy hay in a 
ration for cows in milk and, if the 
silage is of first quality, I would not hesi¬ 
tate to limit the roughage to these two 
products if the cows are to have access 
early in June to abundant pastures. Ally 
deficiency in mineral matter that might 
result from a lack of legume hay would 
be compensated for when the cows go out 
to grass. If it is possible to buy some 
beet pulp, then this, if moistened 12 
hours before feeding, would properly re- 
place'some of the roughage, I like the 
idea of feeding some beet pulp with 
silage, although, under average circum¬ 
stances, it is relatively an expensive pro¬ 
cedure. With the products available as 
named I would use a ration consisting of 
300 lbs. oornmeal, 200 lbs. ground oats, 
200 lbs. bran, 200 lbs. linseed meal, 200 
lbs. gluten feed. I should add 1 per cent 
of salt to this mixture. 
Motts Feeding Tankage 
Cuf.t Your Feed Bills About Half 
Contains giniits. vegetable, moots, bom*. t«bl« scraps, 
•0\ Concentrated, absolutely pure and sterile Balanmd 
ration for poultry and 8 wine Cent About liAlfotlisr tankages. 
H. E. MOTTS CO. Witte for sample 
Rm. 322, Commercial Rank Building C D CT ET 
Cleveland. Ohio ■ *V Ks K 
| Kreso Dip No. 1 
(standardized) 
WILL 
PROTECT YOUR PROFITS 
BY KEEPING 
All Livestock and Poultry Healthy 
Effective. Uniform. Economical. 
Kills Lice, Mites and Fleas. 
For Scratches, Wounds, Scab, 
and Common Skin Troubles. 
PREVENTS HOG CHOLERA 
Experiments on live hogs prove that a 2 1'2 per cent 
dilution of Kreso Dip No. 1 will kill virulent 
hog-cholera virus in 5 minutes hi' contact. 
FREE BOOKLETS. 
We will send you a booklet on the 
treatment of mange, eczema or pitch 
mange, arthritis, 6ore mouth, etc. 
We will send you a booklet on how 
to build a hogr wallow, which will keep 
bogs clean and healthy. 
We will send you a booklet on how 
to keep your hogs free from insect para¬ 
sites and disease. 
WRITE FOR THEM. 
Animal Industry Department of 
PARKE, DAVIS & CO. 
DETROIT. MICH. 
Use the 
sprinklingcan about 
your premises—the dipping 
tank where the occasion de¬ 
mands. For your hogs, a wal¬ 
low is the most convenient, and 
quite effective. To every 70 to 
100 gallons of water add one 
gallon of Dr. Hess Dip and Dis¬ 
infectant. Then your premises 
—the cow barn, the stables, the 
pig pen, the poultry house, the 
sink, drains, closets, cesspools 
-—everything, everywhere, will 
be pure and healthful. 
You can dip, or you can spray 
or sprinkle, or apply with a 
sponge or brush, Dr. Hess Dip 
and Disinfectant to the animal 
body. There’s scarcely an ani¬ 
mal parasite, skin disease, or in¬ 
fection that Dr. Hess D. and D. 
will not remedy. Guaranteed. 
DR. DESS & CLARK Ashland, Ohio 
A max sat in a fashionable coiffeur’s 
shop with his little daughter while Ms 
wife was having a marcel wave put in 
her hair. Stroking her father’s gleaming 
head, the child suddenly piped: “No 
waves for you. daddy. You’re all beach !’’ 
—De Laval Monthly. 
Cheap Power Is No Longer 
a Problem 
In the OilPull the problem of producing cheapest power for 
farm work has been solved, by combining the Four Vital 
Factors. These are: (1) Lowest Fuel Cost. (2) Lowest 
Upkeep Expense. (3) Longest Life. (4) Reasonable Price. 
As proof, the OilPull has the following 
records to its credit: (1) Holder of all 
National Fuel Economy records for 10 
years. (2) Investigations show upkeep 
cost of only 50% of the Government’s « 
national average. (3) OilPulls average 
10 years and more of service. (4) 
Reasonable Price. 
In no other tractor will you find these rp ♦ -i 
four combined. JL T1J316 
OILPULLJR ACTOR Heat 
“The Cheapest Farm Power” Coiltrol 
OilPull success is due to many things, . . 
but of chief importance IS TRIPLE kerosene contains 
HEAT CONTROL-a perfected sys- /£]& ex¬ 
tern of oil burning that positively gets pensive gasoline. The 
., , - , , J 2? problem 19 to Ret the 
the power out of cheap kerosene. Con- hidden power out of 
trols motor temperatures. Never too SSmTowni 
hot. Never too cold. ib a scientific system 
of oil burning that 
Makes possible our unqualified guarantee to positively DOES get 
bum kerosene successfully under all condi- the power out. 
tions and at all loads up to its full rated brake Free Booklet 
horse power. ^ ^ ^ 
See the Advance-Rumely dealer for demon- 6 today C ° ^ 
stration. Mail coupon for copy of our special 
booklet on TRIPLE HEAT CONTROL. j 
Advance-Rumely Thresher Co., Inc. 
LaPorte, Indiana 
Serviced from 30 Branch Offices 
and Warehouses. The Ad¬ 
vance-Rumely line in¬ 
cludes kerosene tractors, 
steam engines, grain 
and rice threshers, al¬ 
falfa and clover h tillers, 
husker shredders and 
farm trucks g 
P Advance¬ 
'll tnely Thresher 
, Inc., Dept.ZZ 
• Nearest Branch 
Office 
S Please send free copy 
+ of booklet on Triple 
f Heat Control. 
'Name —..... 
f Address... 
ADVANCE-RUMELY 
Live Stock Matters 
By Prof. F. C. Minkler 
