1104 
7** RURAL NEW-YORKER 
September 9, 1922 
both! 
—from ONE plant 
N O need now to pay double for electric light and 
enoinp nnwpr Von <-nn rr^t- 
X ^ engine power. You can get both from one plant 
at one cost with the Fairbanks-Morse Double- 
Duty Home Light Plant. 
At the same time that this remarkably efficient 
plant is storing up electricity in the battery, the 
engine power also will run individual machines or 
a line shaft driving a number of machines. 
Famous “Z” Engine Used 
The Fairbanks-Morse Plant is simple in design, 
carefully built, easily accessible. Requires little at¬ 
tention. There are no hidden intricacies. The fa¬ 
mous “Z" Engine is combined with an equally 
sturdy, dependable generator and a long-lived, 
16-cell, 32-volt storage battery. 
A nation-wide dealer organization assures constant 
maintenance of satisfactory performance from any 
Fairbanks-Morse Product. 
Booklet Sent on Request 
Know all the advantages of this simpler / ')/ 
plant which combines both electric light /*r^Y 
and engine power. Write for booklet. 
FAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO. 
Manufacturers Chicago 
Eastern Branches : New York : Baltimore : Boston 
Double Duty 
FAIRBANKS-MORSE 
HOME LIGHT PLANT 
Also isk for a 
Horn* Waur 
Plant Book. See 
how easily you 
can have running 
water in your 
home. 
is a sugar-cane leeding molasses of the 
highest grade, imported by us direct froru 
the sugar plantations of the West Indies. 
Mixed with roughage and fed to your 
farm stock it will greatly reduce your 
feeding costs. Kane Syro is rich in milk- 
producing fats and will increase j'our 
milk production from 10% to 25%. 
Sugar Content is guaranteed to be 
at least 52%. 
Our Booklet Sent Free if you will 
mention the name of your Feed dealer. 
NATIONAL MOLASSES CORPORATION 
207 Walnut Place :: Philadelphia, Pa. 
S'lloomHoitfe 
Freight Paid to Your Railroad Station, 
AIREDALE Clearance Sale 
All sired by famous dogs. 10 Brood Matrons, 40 
Puppies from 6 wks. to 10 mos. Priced to sell quick, 
State your exact wants. Aug. 5th at Long Branch 
show my Poppies won five firsts and special. 
C. RASMUSSEN R. F. 0 Dover, N. J. 
for this 
7-Room jf 
IOB Sit.K—Some extra good female AD.,_ 
Also a litter of IK1SII TEItlUKRS. rtHcflaie I Up 
Eligible for registration. ME A It, Anieiiln, M 
House 
For Sale Pedigreed German Police Dog Puppies 
of imported stock. JOS. BAKTKE, heeds, N.Y. 
T HIS handsome, modern, two-story 
dwelling shipped freight paid to 
you for $968. Contains big living- 
room, open stairway, dining-room, 
kitchen, pantry, rear porch, three bed¬ 
rooms, bathroom and closets. Full de¬ 
scription in the Free Aladdin Catalog. 
Million Dollar Corporation Guaranty 
CLOSING KENNELS 
Thoroughbred Collies and Airedales 
tion guaranteed. FREDERICK MID01ET0H, Hudson, Mass 
Oolite Pups. The handsome and intelligent 
so Fox Terriers, NELSON iROS Urn,, riij, tv 
Qedlgreed 
• kind. A1 
REGISTERED—OS A PPItOY AL 
If. D. Wuml, Dunleleon. Conn. 
Police Pups 
'OR SALE —Police Dog I 
B. BRADLEY 
up». Highest Pedigree, 
Mat)t»o«. New jEitnrf 
PRICE INCLUDES all high quality 
lumber, millwork, windows, doors, floor¬ 
ing, siding, roofing, interior woodwork, 
glass, nails, paints, varnishes and hard¬ 
ware. Lumber cut-to-fit. Save waste 
on material and labor. Complete plans 
and instructions. We will ship these 
houses anywhere on quick notice. Send 
today for Catalog No. 2242 and com¬ 
plete information. 
The Aladdin Co. £■&£« 
FERRETS 5aw.>s 
^ *• * J »***» J ItJ I ,airs or d o z <■ n 
lots. Price list free. Illustrated booklet. 10 
cents. c H KEEFER & CO.. Greenwich. Ohio 
LLEWELLYN SNIUISH SETTI K MILS. IVdlgrM. Eligible for regis¬ 
tration. »4<>to»76. S L SOUTHARD, S fanmui Rd.. Huljrwo.il. ft J. 
lack EiiglUh Ketrlever Pup* for sale. Females, 
males, $10. I. Frantzen, Hopewell Junction. New York 
When you zvrite advertisers mention The R. N.-Y. and you'll get a 
quick reply and a “square deal.” See guarantee editorial page. 
Live Stock Matters 
Conducted By Prof. F. C. Minkler 
Feeding Cows on Pasture 
My Jersey cows have Bine grass pas¬ 
ture and are giving tin or 40 lbs. of milk 
per day. Will you give a suitable grain 
mixture that my herdsman can prepare? 
Massachusetts. a. e. m. 
Jersey cows giving 35 to 40 lbs. of milk 
I per day should be fed from 0 to 10 lbs. of 
grain per day when foraging on blue 
grass pasture. A mixture consisting of 
300 lbs. hominy. 200 lbs. oats. 100 lbs. 
bran. 200 lbs. gluten feed, 100 lbs. oil- 
meal and 100 lbs. cottonseed meal is siig- 
i gested. In addition I should provide 
moistened beet pulp, saturated, if pos¬ 
sible. with molasses water, and allow 
them all the good second or third cutting 
Alfalfa hay that they will consume. 
Feeding test cows is a problem requir- 
1 ing careful attention on the part of the 
feeder, for it is essential that they be fed 
a mixture that combines variety with 
palatibility. one that supplies also a max- 
should mix Ibis with salt, equal parts, 
and keep this combination before the cow 
at all limes. I should continue this ra¬ 
tion for a week or 10 days after the cow 
freshens, after which I should provide 
the following: 25 lbs. of cornraeal, 20 
lbs. of oafs. 15 lbs. of bran. 15 lbs. of oil- 
meal. 15 lbs. of gluten meal. 10 lbs. of 
cottonseed meal. I should feed her 1 lb. 
of this mixture for each 3M* lbs. of milk 
produced per day and. in addition, let her 
have all of the good roughage that she 
will clean up with relish. Much would 
be gained by allowing half the grain in 
the morning and half the grain at night 
and. unless you have beet pulp or man- . 
gels. I should feed the bay twice a day 
as well. The use of moistened beet pulp 
as a succulent would increase the flow of 
milk and bring your ration nicely into 
balance. 
It ought^to be possible for you to bring 
No. this picture was not taken in the Western Stales, but in Caledonia Township, 
Livingston County, Each year tlie Hessian tly takes its toll from the wheat crop, 
some years making heavy inroads. For the past two years the fly has not done so 
much damage in New York State as many years previous. This year there are fields 
which are badly infested, but the crop as a whole is not seriously hit. There may lie 
two reasons given for the falling off of the damages. The first is the help which 
parasitic insects have given in killing the fly. The second is one which cannot he 
overlooked, and that is that farmers as a rule have followed the practice of sowing 
their wheat later in the Fall, thus making it impossible for the fly to find a place on 
which to live, unless if might be on the volunteer wheat scattered here and there 
about the odd corners. E. a. F. 
imum of digestible units, If your herds¬ 
man is not experienced in selecting and 
mixing feeds, better results might: corn* 
from one of the hotter grades of mixed 
feeds that carry say 24 per cent of pro¬ 
tein and not more than 0 or 10 per cent of 
fiber. This can be modified by adding 
corn or oats to meet the condition of the 
cows during their various stages of lac¬ 
tation. , 
Treatment of Family Cow 
I have a Rod Polled cow, now dry. The 
only roughage available is wheat straw 
and a poor grade of hay. What, grain 
should I feed to improve her milk flow? 
She never drinks much when in yard or 
Stable. Would this have anything to do 
With poor milking? 0, n. M. 
Virginia. 
You can scarcely expect your family 
cow to produce milk in a satisfactory 
quantity if you feed her wheat straw and 
a poor grade of roughage. Alfalfa or 
clover hay is almost an essential in feed¬ 
ing dairy cows. It is unusual to find 
cows that do not partake generously of 
pure water, provided if is supplied and 
available when they want if. If this cow 
has access to good water in the pasture, I 
dare say that she drinks plenty of it and 
prefers this to the well water that may be 
provided in the barnyard. Often cows 
refrain from drinking a sufficient amount 
of water in Winter, due to its being icy 
cold. If she is given the refusal, how¬ 
ever. of pure, clean water two or three 
times a day, she will drink enough to sat¬ 
isfy the demands of her system. 
As a suitable feed mixture for use in 
feeding this Red Polled cow, now dry, I 
would suggest the following combination 
to be used during the dry period: 30 lbs. 
of ground oats, 30 lbs. of wheat bran. 30 
lbs. of eornmeal, 10 lbs. of oilmeal. 
I should not use any gluten meal or 
cottonseed meal during the dry period. 
So far as the bonemeal is concerned, I 
this cow np to six gallons, or more, per 
day. It is essential that she be kept in 
good condition during the dry period, 
and there is no objection to her putting 
on considerable flesh during this period. 
Controlling Hog Worms 
I was very much interested in Messrs. 
Hnrpending’s method of eradicating hog 
lice. It. was just what I wanted, as I 
have beeu fighting lice with coal tar dip 
for years, lint never seemed to get rid of 
them. Will Messrs. Ilarpendipg give us 
the best method of gelling rid of hog 
worms? j. r. n. 
Maryland. 
We use a so-called balling gun, made 
purposely for pigs. Capsules can bo read¬ 
ily given with this instrument. We have 
capsules made up by local druggist in two 
sizes, one containing five grains of san¬ 
tonin and five grains of calomel, This 
we give to pigs weighing under 50 lbs. 
The other size 1 contains eight grains each 
of santonin and calomel, and is given lo 
pigs weighing 50 to 100 lbs. Pigs should 
be without feed for 24 hours and then be 
given a capsule each. Care must he ex¬ 
ercised that the capsule does not lodge in 
windpipe. After five hoilrs give a feed 
of skim-milk with about one tablespoon 
of castor oil per pig. more for larger ones. 
After treatment pigs should he placed 
where other pigs will not be infected from 
the voidings. It is well to repeat treat¬ 
ment after 10 days. 
Santonin is very high in price now and 
sometimes difficult to obtain. Another 
effective treatment is as follows: Make 
up a mixture of castor oil one gallon, 
chloroform V4 1b.. oil of wormsccd Vi lb. 
.Mix thoroughly and give hv use of one- 
otince dose syringe as follows: Half 
ounce to 30-lb. pigs, one ounce lo 50-11*. 
pig. after pigs have been starved for 24 
hours. Repeat in 10 days to two weeks. 
For lung worms wo sprinkle feeding 
floor and sleeping floor with strong solu¬ 
tion (5 to 7 per cent) of good coal tar 
product, being careful to keep sleeping 
floor thoroughly impregnated with this 
for some days. After sprinkling, cover 
with very little straw. The object is to 
have the pigs inhale fumes from this solu¬ 
tion. Another good treatment for lung 
worms, and of some benefit in combatting 
intestinal worms, is turpentine. Give one 
