TRAOE MARK REG.U.S.PAT. OFF 
GET IT PROM TH£ 
Jfi&CtPPrOlRECL 
October 28, 1022 
Color Your Butter 
Live Stock Matters 
By Prof. F. C. Minkler 
“Dandelion Butter Color" Gives That 
Golden June Shade and Costs 
Really Nothing. Read ! 
Before churning add one-half teaspoon¬ 
ful to each gallon of cream and out 
of your churn comes butter of Golden 
June sdiade to bring you top prices. 
“Dandelion Butter Color" costs nothing 
because each ounce used adds ounce of 
weight to butter. Large bottles cost only 
.'55 cents at drug or grocery stores. Purely 
vegetable, harmless, meets all State and 
National food laws. Used for 50 years 
by all large creameries. Doesn't color 
buttermilk. Absolutely tasteless. 
Wells & Richardson Co.. Burlington. Vt. 
Winter Ration for Butter 
Will you give me a Winter grain ration 
for two cows, one Holstein, one Guern¬ 
sey, from which we are making butter. 
We have about one ton of clover hay. 
same qirintiti rf pea-vine hay, plenty of 
sweet cornstalks and Timothy hay. I 
wish co use ground oats as a basis. 
New York. F. o. K. 
A suitable Winter ration for two fam¬ 
ily cows from which you expect to make 
butter and market milk would be pro¬ 
vided by combining the. following ingre¬ 
dients in the suggested proportions: 
Ground oats, 35 lbs.: wheat bran. 15 
lbs.: cornmeal. 10 lbs.; linseed meal. 12 
lbs.: cottouseed meal, 12 lbs.; gluten feed. 
16 lbs. 
I should allow one feeding of Timothy 
hay and one feeding of clover bay per 
day. and use the sweet cornstalks during 
the middle of the day for them to pick 
over during their idle hours. Feed 1 lb. 
of grain for each 5L. lbs. of milk pro¬ 
duced per day. and let them have all of 
the roughage that they will dean up with 
relish. 
In the absence of mangels, turnips or 
some succulent feed of this character, I 
should feed 5 or 0 lbs. per day of dry 
beet pulp. This can be moistened 12 
hours before each feeding and will provide 
succulence that will increase the pala- 
ability of the other ration and keep the 
milk flowing in a constant stream. It is 
necessary to keep salt before the animals 
at all times and, if desired, 1 or 2 per 
cent of this mineral can be mixed with 
the grain ration. 
Keep Your Stock Healthy 
MINERAL# 
^COMPOUND 
Mr help to free them from worms. Sprinkle it ^1! 
W over the roughage and mix it with the con- 
j f centrates. It will keep them sleek and healthy, cut ^ 
y your feed bills and greatly increase y° ur profits. ^ 
Double Diamond Feeding Molasses 
v “Makes Poor Feed Good and Good Feed Better” 
Double Diamond is a pure cane molasses guar- Jn 
! anteed to contain at least 55% combined sugars. ^Fjl 
§ ^ tfia * convince y° u oF its superior quality. || 
K |] k We will ship y 
NEGLECT! 
Will Ruin 
Your Horse 
$3 Package 
guaranteed to glv® Y v,,.] 
satisfactiono: V 
money rofimde.l. P i'Mjfi 
$1 Package sufficient jj M ' 
for ordinary cwsoi» ly 
Postpaid an receipt of Orfce. 
Write<p" , ''scrlptl»e booklet 
CO. <81 ''earth Ave.. Plttsburah. Pa 
. . „ as of Double Diamond 
Feeding Molasses, in a strong wooden keg for 
only $1, plus freight. Send $1 today. 
k Let us send you “Feeding Hints That A 
V Bring Dollars” —free. Write for it. M, 
flL Ask. for quantity prices on Double ' 
Ink Diamond Feeding Molasses. mf* 
E2||k DUNBAR MOLASSES AND 
SYRUP COMPANY, Inc. 
Established in 1865 ^ 
80-A Wall Street W' - ~ 
New York City 
Grain for Winter Feeding 
At present prices of grain, what would 
be best to buy for Winter feeding of 
dairy cows, flip roughage being a good 
quality of hay and silage? Would it be 
injured by keeping from now until Win¬ 
ter? E. s. B. 
Connecticut. 
We advocate the feeding of grain to 
dairy cows throughout, the entire year. 
If one limits the use of concentrates to 
their lactation period and forces them to 
subsist on roughage or oven pasture alone 
during the Summer, this reacts during 
the next lactation period. Where dry 
cows arc- fed grain during their rest 
period it enables them to fortify their 
system with minerals and to put on flesh 
that easily melts when the milking func¬ 
tion begins. It is common knowledge 
that dairy cows going dry during the 
Summer and having access to pasture 
grass will store an abundance of calcium 
and phosphorus so essential for milk 
production during the lactation period. 
As to whether it is good judgment to 
buy feeds at this time to carry on through 
the Winter is a debatable subject. No 
one knows what prices will prevail for 
feeds one, two or three months hence, 
and it is a gamble that every dairyman 
must decide to make at his own risk. 
Under present prices corn, oats, gluten 
and bran are the most economical sources 
of digestible nutrients. Cottonseed meal 
and linseed meal are proportionately 
high. I believe that if the protein car¬ 
riers decrease somewhat in price the car¬ 
bohydrate feeds will increase in propor¬ 
tion and that in the end there will not 
be very much variation in the actual cost 
of complete feeds. At the present 
moment the market is strong. There is 
a scarcity of certain basic feeds owing to 
the impossibility of getting cars to move 
and merchandise the surplus. A mixture 
consisting of 250 lbs. of cornmeal or 
hominy. 150 lbs. bran, 150 lbs. oats, 125 
lbs. linseed meal, 125 lbs. cottonseed 
meal, 200 lbs. gluten feed is suggested, 
this to be fed with a good grade of silage. 
In any event, do not keep the grain 
from your dry cows. A mixture consist¬ 
ing of equal parts of oafs, bran, corn and 
oilmenl makes the best combination for 
dry cows. 1 should not feed a great deal 
of silage to cows during the dry period, 
but I should let them have all the clover 
or Alfalfa hay that it would be possible 
for thorn to get under their skins. 
Materials of this character are rich in 
mineral matter and are a real insurance 
policy against deficiencies in a ration. 
unbars, 
Engine 
Book r! 
i FREE^i 
Gombautt’s 
Caustic Balsam 
An absolutely Safe and reliable 
HUMAN and VETERINARY 
liniment, counter-irritant and blister 
, VETERINARY HUMAN 
For Curb, Splint, For Muscular and 
Sweeney, Capped Hock, WaPr&B jfr Inflammatory 
Strained Tendons, Rheumatism, Sciatica, 
Founder, Wind Puffs, »» Tk Sprains, Sore Throat, 
Fistula, Spavin, wi lj. Chest Colds, Lumbago, 
Ringbone. 111 " WLg fiA Burns, Bruises or Cuts. 
Whether you are the owner of race-horses or work-horses, you can 
prolong their usefulness by the use of this time-tested remedy. 
Price $1.50 per bottle at druggists or sent by 
parcel post on receipt of price 
THE LAWRENCE-W1LLIAMS CO., Cleveland, Ohio 
As a human remedy wherever external treatment is indicated it is invaluable, soothing and healing 
& ..-r. T<'ll> how t’ make dozens or 
motor nail household ropalr* 
easily, quk'kly nod economical)'. 
Write for this hook end learn lion- 
SMOOTH-ON IRON CEMENT No. 1 
run savo you Hinny dollars. Sold l>y Hardware 
and (lenm-Aj Stores, In 6-ox., 1 Ih._ 
undo-lb. tins. Also in largerslzes. 
SMOOTH-ON MFC. CO. -= 
Dept. 30-T 1*0- flU 
JERSEY CITY. N. J„ U. S. A. I 
SELDOM SEE 
a big knee like this, but your hors* 
may have a bunch or bruise on his 
ankle, hock, stifle, knee or throat. 
Upward 
On trial. Easy running, easily cleaned. 
Skims warm or cold milk. Different 
from picture which shows larger ca¬ 
pacity maotiim-U. Get ourplan of euay 
MONTHLY PAYMENTS 
and handsome free catalog. Whether 
dairy is large or small, write today. 
American Separator Co. 
Box 7075 Beinbrldgo, N. Y, 
FUR COATS. W RAPS. ROBES. RUGS 
made from hides foranyY skin vaith hair on 
S TYl I sit garments, w arm 
nnil diimblr, made to 
order from llOltSiC, COW 
or ftir bearing nmniiil*. 
Glove* and caps from the 
trimming. Save Mi to 7 .W. 
He tan tlo-ln- j nil vtrarlli.iti. 
Fur s*nn ml* reiwired nnd 
remodelled, 
Mill *2-p. UTAUIfllF. 
How lo pretmro akino; 
shows oil lee, Hire*, price;*, 
l*i oiii| it. reliable Ht-rvlec 
I mm specialist, in fur tan¬ 
ning, manufacturing und 
taxidermy. 
Have Lots of Hot Water — 
Feed Stock Warm Food 
P‘»r poultrymon. stockmen, dairymen, sugar-makers, 
r* - ' fruit gr"wuni snd butcher*. 
S— 3 FARMERS’ FAVORITE 
FEED COOKER 
v Conk* of wurma food for stock und 
■ r; | r - 1 * 1 I • rupte lint W,it.-r; 
BOIL: ditpHiKhiul thr y eur 'round. 
Lni t.6 I'veryUilfiK from mb* to < Imtikf 
fJwuq or L'rig >n**ka. Kequlri** no •prrtnl 
1 v.jk ty plarn or fuiirulalion. 
A fade in Ci u‘t$9—PS oat*. M 100 
A YCjijfef-y catHUsilu, Smut for litsrahur* 
(inft jirirm and irmnry back offer. 
CHAMPION MILK COOLER CO. 
^ Dept, 201 Cortland, N. V. 
Mucceusor to Lewis Mf«. Co, 
KITSELMAN FENCE 
F “Saved 24c per Rod/’ writes William 
Henry .RJpley, Ohio. Ton- ton,can save. 
We Pay the Freight Write for Free 
Catalog of Farm, Poultry. Hawn Fence. 
KITSELMAN BROS. l»ept.-;::a MUNCIE, IND. 
574 N s, 
West Avo. 
Rochester, N, V, 
' Rochester 
Fur Dressing Co 
THE BEST BUTTEK, Hit lean Time of Work 
l HE FENNER CHURN (hums, wash¬ 
es, salts and works tbn hutn-r without 
r..inc*vin« frciTo th/- churn ot la-tnte Imn 
illud will. tulle . or blitter worker* You 
t.iki- || from churn rrady lo park. N-* ox 
Itouurn toatmoat>hi-rv. Csuoeit,, 13gala, 
t" 100 Vais. S’-I'i thru rlualm ut Ulroct. 
Wttli. fur hr.., booklet ritURlnKSON 
When y on write advertisers mention 
The Rural New- Yorker and you'll act 
a quick reply and a "square deal." See 
qua 'antee editorial paqc. : : : 
BROS., 703 Waltmiu BUI,.. Jamstlawn. N. V 
