828 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
Juno 24, 
1922 
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1 A 
f Profit-Maker 
f with Roller Bearings 
a and a Much Lower Price 
s s 
"Y A T HEN the new-design International 2 
ii \/\/ Manure Spreader came on the market in 5 
2 ¥ * large numbers about two years ago, it 
immediately met with such an enthusiastic 
H? demand that dealers could not begin to fill 
orders. This machine marked a great advance ^ 
|k in good spreader building and the farm public 
S3 was quick to realize it. 
Stop at the McCormick-Deering dealer’s 
~ store and find out the reason for this pronounced & 
s success. Study in detail these great features: 2 
^ 1. Roller bfearings at seven points. 
Si 2. Power delivered from both wheels. 
3. Double ratchet drive with six feed speeds. as 
4. Short turn front axle; no pole whipping. 
5. Rear wheels track with front wheels. 
se 6. Tight bottom. ■ 
5= 7. Two beaters and wide-spread spiral. “ 
8. All-steel main frame. 5= 
b The International Manure Spreader is a S 
wealth producer; it will return extra bushels 2 
from the same land; it will return its price over 2 
5 and over and add to your bank account. “ 
■* And its price has been cut down to an “ 
attractive low figure. That is another detail 2 
gg you will find to be true in connection with the 2 
International at the store of your McCormick- * 
2 Deering dealer. s 
s » 
s International Harvester company 1 
CHICAGO 
OF AMERICA 
'iNCO»f»o*Art:o» 
USA 
ia, 
rip* 
muse 
over 
MINERAL^ 
.COMPOUND 
FOR 
Booklet 
Free 
NEGLECT^ 
Will Ruin 
Your Horse 
Sold on 
Its Merits 
SEND TODAY 
AGENTS 
WANTED 
MINERAL REMEDY CO. 461 Fourth Are 
$3 Package 
guaranteed to give 
Natlufac Honor 
money refunded. 
$1 Package sufficient 
far onlltinry cute* 
Postpaid on receipt of price. 
Wrltefnrdescrlptl** booklet 1 
Pltlsburgft, Pa 
m 
SELDOM SEE 
a big knee like this, but your horse 
may have a bunch or bruise on hie 
ankle, hock, etifle, knee or throat. 
will clean it off without laying up 
the horse. No blister, no hair 
gone. Concentrated—only a few 
drops required at an application. $2 .50 per 
bottle ilcllretrd. Deicrlbc your c*ae tor ipeclll Initrnctloni, 
end Book & R tree. ABSORBING. JR., the »titl- 
•cptic Imlinent tor mankind, reducer Painful Swelling*. 
Enlarged Claud*. Wen*. Brultr*. Varlcoie Velnat allay* 
Pain and inflammation. Price £1.2£ a bottle al dniiiiiuto or 
delivered. Liberal trial bottle ooatoald (or 10c. 
W. F. YOUNG, INC., till Tompio St., SDrlngflold, Ma»*. 
24 
95 Jhn&dcafi, HQ 
Upward 
CREAM 
SEPARATOR? 
On trial. Easy running, otmUy eliamed. 
Skims warm or cold milk. UilTercut 
from piiituro which chows larger ca- 
- pacity machiuea. Get our plan of easy 
MONTHLY PAYMENTS 
and handsome free catalog. Whether 
dairy i;t large or small, write today, 
American Separator Co. 
Box 7070 Baiubrldti*, N. V, 
CDDAV Before They Go 
Or KMT Out to Pasture 
Cows in the pasture 
fighting flies lose money 
where they should make 
it. Spray your stock with 
SOBOS-SO 
KILFLY 
It keeps flies off and keeps 
cows contented. It saves and 
makes money when used on 
horses, mules and cows. 
So-Bos-So is the old reliable. 
Known for over 22 years to 
thousands of farmers. Harm¬ 
less, Effective, Guaranteed. 
Get it from any good dealer, 
or send $1.35 for prepaid, guar¬ 
anteed trial gallon, or $5.5u for 
5 gallons. 
THE H. E. ALLEN 
MFG. CO., Inc. 
Box 1 
Carthage, N. Y. 
for ITonvrd, Cough*, Distem¬ 
per, ImiiKesUun. Use two 
eaim for UWVM—If not sat¬ 
isfactory, money back. Ono 
can niton luflldent. $!.'.!!> 
or by mull. 
Toledu, 0, 
Live Stock and Dairy 
Preserving Butter for Home Use 
Is there anything in the medicinal line 
to keep butter from getting strong, any 
solution we might make and pour in jars 
with water ami then lay prints In? 
West Virginia. j. n. n. 
When proper attention is given to a 
few important details, butter can lie 
stored at home for future consumption. 
The butter should be made from cream 
which lias not become over-ripe, and 
which possesses a clean acid flavor. Any 
olT flavors present in the cream are very 
apt to become intensified in the hotter. 
Kxtremo care should he exercised, too, in 
working the butter. The salt should he 
evenly distributed and the but ter worked 
free of all water or buttermilk. 
The hotter should lie packed in pound 
or two-pound crocks which have been pre¬ 
viously scalded in boiling water. Pack 
the hotter firmly in the crocks and leave 
no air spaces. Wrap each crock of but¬ 
ter with a piece of muslin which has been 
previously boiled. Place the crocks con¬ 
taining the butter in a larger crock which 
lias been sterilized with boiling water and 
allowed to cool in a (‘lean place. Over 
the crocks containing the butter pour 
brine of such strength that it will float 
an egg. To every 3 lbs. of salt used I lb. 
of sugar and Pj lb. of powdered saltpeter 
should be added. The brine mixture 
should la* boiled, skimmed and allowed to 
cool before using. 
When the crocks arc not at hand the 
bill tor may be made in prints or roils, 
which should he wrapped in butter-cloth 
or parchment paper and immersed in the 
above brine. 
Si ill another method, which is some¬ 
times used in preserving butter, is that 
of “sailing it down.” 
Select a crock or stone jar suitable in 
size and thoroughly scald it and allow to 
cool. 
The hill ter is packed in the crock in 
layers of about. 4 in. each. Between each 
layer is place a light covering of the fol¬ 
lowing mixture: One pound loaf sugar, 
3 lbs. sail and Vj Hi. pulverized saltpeter. 
A space of about 3 in. should he left on 
top and covered with a strong solution 
of brine. Of the two methods, the former 
is probably the better. ,i.\v. u. 
Butter-making Notes 
To prevent a butter howl from crack¬ 
ing put in a large pan or tub, cover with 
water and soak at. least two weeks. If 
you need the howl to use, take out, wash 
and scald, and when done with it return 
to the water. That seasons it. 1 keep 
rny cream in the kitchen wlmre it is 
warm, and when it is sour f put it near 
the healer and let stand till the next 
day, and get finite warm ; keep it well 
stirred, and have little I rouble with tin* 
churning. The secret of making good 
butter is in taking pains. Working but¬ 
ter three times i find is (he best way. 
Work it up, let it stand two or three 
hours, then work again ; the Iasi time 
pack. Work with the hollow side of the 
ladle towards you; do not rub, but chop. 
Rubbing the butler makes it on Ivy and 
spoils the grain. Work till the salt is all 
dissolved and the brine is all out, and 
the butter will keep and will not have any 
white spots in it. N. n. c. 
Fine Experience with the Milk Diet 
T would like to tell you of our won¬ 
derful experience with the “milk only" 
diet for our eight-year-old daughter. She 
was miserable, had a nasty cough, no 
vitality at all. I was reading Tiik R. 
N.-Y. one day and saw one of the articles 
on the milk diet, so decided lo Iry it, as 
she was very finicky in eating. I made 
her fast for several days, keeping her in 
bed, then started with a glassful of pure 
raw sweet milk every hour, increasing 
until at the end of two months she was 
gelling six quarts of milk daily. Sin* was 
as lively as a nickel, full of pep, cough 
gone. If we would ask her how she felt 
she would say “Like knocking the bouse 
down," and, wonder of wonders, had 
gained 12 lbs. It was hard work for me. 
I had to keep reminding her “Time for 
milk." She would he so busy playing 
she would forget, but T Ibink it worth 
more than all the trouble to see her so 
well and so happy, and nut the forlorn 
mite she was. Another star added, in 
our minds, to the list of helpfulness of 
Tiik R, N.Y. I would recommend the 
milk only diet quick as a wink for any 
run-down condition. Jilts, s. 
Maryland. 
Feeding Beef Cattle in New York 
Last Fall we put in at our farm 50 
bead of Texas Hereford calves, about six 
months of age, We were told that these 
Texas calves could not he fed in New 
York sufficiently to finish them, and they 
could not be marketed against the corn 
belt competition for any sort of price. 
We fed these cattle through and pul them 
on the Buffalo market Monday, May 20. 
They weighed a little less than 100 lbs. 
when they arrived at our place, and they 
made an average of a liltlc less than 800 
lbs. for two carloads at Buffalo, and were 
fed from November 0 until May 20, at 
which date they were loaded and shipped. 
Tin* price realized was not only the 
highest price of the day, $0.40 per 100, 
but was the highest price that has been 
paid for cattle in Buffalo yards since 
January I We have not yet received 
report of the dressed weight, but. the 
writer saw the carcasses in the cooler of 
the packing company at Buffalo, and they 
were the best things they had in the 
cooler. They should make a very fine 
percentage dressed. 
These cattle were fed on feed of our own 
raising, other than that, we did not have 
quite enough corn to finish out, and 
bought:. They were fed corn silage of our 
own products, which was very rich in 
corn, being yellow (lent corn, mixed liny 
and Alfalfa. We ran hogs after them in 
the lots, and have realized 375 loads of 
manure from the feeding pen. 
fc. 11. PATTEB80N. 
Chautauqua Co.. N. Y. 
Shorthorn Sale 
The Shorthorn consignment, sale June 
I at Canandaigua, N. Y„ was a success. 
The average for the sale was $121.0!), 
Hie hulls averaging $110.00 and the heif¬ 
ers $122.05. The heifer, Roan Cherry, 
bred by Donald Woodward of Le Boy, 
topped the sale al $240. 
Tin* New York State buyers were: 10. 
P. Bradley. Atwater, two; J. It, Davis, 
Cayuga, two; It. II. Fcarcy. Canandaigua, 
two: William J. Dellier, Auburn, two, 
M. \Y Montnuyc. Canandaigua. Stuart 
A. .Montanye. Canandaigua; Charles 
Moore, Stanley; John Moore. Canan¬ 
daigua; F. A. Seeley, Canandaigua, two; 
J. 10. Short, CliflOn Springs, Beorr.e 
Suttlc. West. Bloomfield: William I 1 ’. 
Thorne, Skancntcles, jind Donald Wood¬ 
ward of Le Roy. Others went to Penn¬ 
sylvania and Ohio, the Otis herd. Wil¬ 
loughby, Ohio, and Alvin Thomas, Alva, 
Pa., four. Martin Cone exhibited his 
roan calf, Primrose Roan Clay, weight 
I, 825 lbs., as a two-year old. He is by 
the world’s heaviest, bull, Olenside Roan 
Clay, and out of a cow milking 52 lbs. 
a day. The Canandaigua Eastern States 
sale will become, an annual affair, co¬ 
operating with the Pennsylvania annual 
Male al Troy, Pa. 
At Troy, Pa., 71 head were sold at an 
average price of $304, I he top price, 
81.500, being paid by Frank Morse of 
Troy for Dlenside Royal Coin, the four- 
year old herd sire consigned by John 
Lnppert of Williamsport. This boll is by 
Dlenside Joe Johnson, and mil of Im¬ 
ported Lady Favorite, with a milk record 
of over 1 1,000 lbs. The top price oil fe¬ 
males was $825 paid for the young cow, 
Lucy Cranford, with heifer calf at foot. 
II. K. Toper of Walnut Drove Farm. 
Wasliingtonville, N. Y.; K. M, Bull of 
Torohill Farm, Monroe, N. Y,; J. II 11 os- 
teller of Belleville, Pa,; Western Peni¬ 
tentiary, Bellefoute, Pa.; W. II. Conyng- 
liam of Wilkes*Bum*. Pa.; Donald Wood- 
wan] of Le Roy, N. Y.; Mrs. L. I >. May 
of Dlenside Farm. Branville Summit. Pa., 
and Harry W. Draker of Marxhallville, 
<)., Were tin* most extensive buyers. 
Cattle Club Show 
The Pavilimi-Wyoming Better Cattle 
Club will hold ail exhibit of their stock 
on July 20. 1H22. 'Phis exhibit will he 
held just south of Pavilion on the State 
road from Rochester lo Warsaw. Bond 
speakers will he on hand. Among the 
sneakers is Prof. 10, S. Savage. The cat¬ 
tle will lie judged by able judges, and 
prizes awarded to the winners. Then 
some of the stock will be sold at public 
sale. HAUL WHEELER. 
Pavilion, X. Y. 
Adopting a School Teacher 
(Continued from Page 820) 
civilize some children in her own town 
that never would get it any other way.” 
Oil. yes, 1 knew how Aunt Mari’ would 
say that, with her old jaw set, and her 
sharp eyes piercing. 1 understand how 
Jen Perkins would not have dared say 
no. Yes. I quite understand what, it 
meant for the school teacher to have vali¬ 
ant old Aunt Mari’ adopt her. and with 
her Ihe school and education of the chil¬ 
dren in her district. And although I 
was shouting a “hurrah for Aunt Mari’!" 
in my heart, I was also laughing inwardly 
at. tin* picture of the marshalling of pub¬ 
lic opinion in the matter of the truant 
officer, with Aunt Mari’ inarching at the 
head. 
Slu* was laughing, too, and now she 
Kind : “Well, you ought to hear .Tim 
Rathbone swear lie’ll never In* truant of¬ 
ficer again. I rather think we’ll get 
somebody elected next March meeting 
that will expect to do something.” 
At this moment the car came back for 
me and l had to leave. Aunt Mari’ hob¬ 
bling to the door and calling after me: 
“(loudness, 1 ain’t told you half of what 
we’ve done. I haven’t told you about 
getting, for mice, enough good text-books 
for Ihe children. They'd been shoving 
off the old. ragged, out-of-date hooks on 
the rural schools until I got busy. ft 
made me so mad when Miss Rice showed 
me what they have, and new hooks in the 
village schools! And I haven’t told you 
what we did about those horrid, dirty old 
toilets, (Hi. say!" she shouted after me 
as I got into the car, “you stop in the 
next time you come around the mountain 
and I’ll tell you some of the things we’re 
!lo hi a to do. We haven't half started 
yet!” 
