1911 
THE RUR.AI* NEW-YORKER 
1261 
Calendar 
1911-1912 
The KarBraK 
CaSendar 
The BIGGEST Calendar 
Ever Made. 
5 .BEL. LONG 
Four 7x9 Photo Reproduc¬ 
tions of thoroughbred live 
stock from originals by 
one of the most famous 
artists— of world wide 
fame. You can have one 
of these Calendars abso¬ 
lutely free, and you place 
yourself under no obliga¬ 
tions by replying to this 
advertisement All that 
is necessary Is for you to 
fill out and mail the cou¬ 
pon bolow today. 
We send this beautiful 
and artistic Calendar, (GO 
Inches long and 8 Inches 
wide). Absolutely Free 
and postage fully pre¬ 
paid in order that your 
attention may be called to 
our famous 
KineTenSK 
A DOLLAR PACKAGE 
of which is a sufficient quan¬ 
tity to make 
4 Pails or ICO Pounds 
of the Best 
Stock Tonic, Condi¬ 
tioner, Regulator or 
Condition Powder 
on Earth. 
Hie whole itory in a Nut Shell: 
KlneTeniK is the most 
carefully prepared Stock 
Tonic, Regulator or Condi¬ 
tioner on the market with 
the Filler and Salt left out. 
It is a carefully com¬ 
pounded prescription, re¬ 
flecting experience, exper¬ 
iments and actual tests of 
the most successful Farm¬ 
ers, Stock Raisers, Veter¬ 
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Chemists ot tho world, in¬ 
cluding the results obtained 
by tho Agricultural Experi¬ 
ment Stations. 
It comes to you in con¬ 
centrated form and all you 
have to do is to mix it with 
Balt and middlings, bran, 
corn meal, oil meal or any 
other ground feed you may 
bo using to get tho host 
Stock Tonic, Conditioner, 
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now paying. 
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xnoro about 
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DEALERS: Onr line is sold 
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Accept no Substitutes 
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KineJiniK ■ 
Chemical Company 
Wei lthofo,Pe. 
H.F. Bash,Gen. Mgr. KarBraK Chemical Co. Dept. 542 .Weflsboro, Pa. 
Send me absolutely free and postage fully pre¬ 
paid, your 6 foot KarBraK Calendar. 
Name ..... 
P.O. . 
R.F.D . 
County . State .. 
Have you ever used KineTeniK? . 
I own...Horses...C owb...Hoq 8 and™™t . acre farm 
240 Page Book On 
Silos and Silage 
I0‘ 
Most complete work on this subject 
published. Used as text book by 
many Agricultural Colleges. Gives 
the facts about Modern Silage Meth¬ 
ods—tells just what you want to 
know. 240 pages—indexed—over 40 
illustrations, a vast amount of useful infor 
mation boiled down for the practical farmer 
2 m 11s „ H .° w to Make Silage”—“How to Feed 
Silage”— How to Build Silos”—"How to Main¬ 
tain Soil Fertility by Silage System.” A11 about 
Summer Silos” and the Use of Silage in Beel 
Production. Limited Revised and Enlarged 
Edition now ready. Send for your copy before 
too late. Enclose 10c in coin or postage stamps 
and mention this paper. 
Silver Manufacturing Co„ Salem, Ohio 
Silo Profits Book Free 
Proves that you lose big profits till you get a 
Lansing Silo. Head what Experiment Sta¬ 
tions say. lteadaboutsuperiorma- 
terlals we use. Then you’ll 
know why mosteareful,money- 
making farmers have chosen 
p88S 
Lansing Silos 
Made of Soft Cork Pine and 7 other good 
woods. Steel Hoops end Drew Lugs, Continu¬ 
ous Doorwey, with Ladder Front. Many other 
important advantages. Booat your profits. Start 
at once. Mail postal now for our book. Address 
Severance Tank & Silo Co., 
* 329 Lansing, Mich. 
Dept. 
THE UNADILLA SILO 
Is superior to any other offered. 
A practical Silo for a sensible 
farmer. Write for our 
“TWENTY-FIVE REASONS” 
why it is the best. 
We also manufacture Farm 
Water Tubs and are New Eng¬ 
land representatives for Papec 
Cutters and are in position to 
quote low prices upon receipt of 
inquiry. Extra discount for 
early orders. Agents wanted. 
THE UNADILLA SILO CO., Inc., Box B, Unadlila, N. T. 
MILZL 
New York exchange price $1.81 per 40- 
quart can, netting 3% cents to shipper in 
26-cent zone who have no additional sta¬ 
tion charges. 
The sale is announced of the seven- 
weeks old bull calf Aaggie Cornucopia to 
W. M. Miner, of Chazy, N. Y., for $10,000. 
The calf’s dam is the champion Aaggie 
Cornucopia Pauline, sire Colantha Johanna 
Lad, both owned by D. W. Field, of Brock¬ 
ton, Mass. Mr. Field paid $8,000 for Co¬ 
lantha Johanna Lad. 
I am much interested in your “Milk” 
column, as that is my business here. In 
fac„ northeastern Ohio is adapted to dairy¬ 
ing more than anything else. Milk is be¬ 
ing contracted here by milkmen at 13 cents 
fron. May 1 to October 1 and 15 cents 
from October to May per gallon. It retails 
for seven cents now and all our agreements 
with milkmen are on six cents basis this 
Summer, and if they keep it up to seven 
cents retail this Summer tney pay us 15 
cents, same as in Winter. Cream is only 
65 cents for 24 per cent, so milk is the 
most profitable here, although there is a 
creamery in Conneaut that pays Elgin 
prices for butter fat and gets quite a little 
back from railroad wtiere it cannot be 
handled every day. They run a wagon out 
twice a week and collect it. All cows are 
grades. Ilolsteins predominating, no pure¬ 
bred cattle here at all. Fresh cows high, 
$40 to $75, according to quality, r. h. t. 
Ashtabula Co., O. 
The supply of milk for the Boston mar¬ 
ket is very short, the present Winter, some 
cars only carrying half a load. In this 
vicinity several large dairies are selling 
out their cows, some at auction, others at 
private sale. At one auction several cows 
sold for between $80 and $90. Heifers to 
drop first calf in two to four months sold 
around $40 each, and some even better. 
Most of these people have not sold their 
places, but are going to drop the milk pro¬ 
ducing business for a time, or until the 
situation looks better. They will sell hay 
chiefly for a year or two, and raise chickens 
and pigs to some extent. Hay at one of 
these sales brought $18 per ton in the 
barn, and as there was supposed to be about 
50 tons, this made quite a handsome fig¬ 
ure, probably more than it would have re¬ 
turned in milk, and far less trouble. The 
contractors are finding all the fault they 
can, and occasionally throwing off a dairy 
to scare the rest. The Whitings, one of 
the largest milk contracting firms in the 
city, have purchased or leased the St. Al¬ 
bans creamery in Vermont. The territory 
adjacent and contributory to this is very 
large and is said to De able or can be 
brought to produce about ten carloads of 
milk a day, which, under the Whitings rule, 
may be at any time needed, turned into the 
Boston market. The Hoods have for some 
time been getting more territory in northern 
Vermont, New Hampshire and western 
Maine. Everything seems to be working 
to decrease the supply in Massachusetts. 
Secretary Wilson in his annual report of 
crops mentions milk, and states that in the 
78 cities investigated by the Department, 
the farmer receives scant 50 per cent of 
the price paid by the consumer. From Bos¬ 
ton milk the farmer certainly does receive 
a scant 50 per cent. Common milk sells 
at 9 and 10 cents per quart, of which the 
farmer receives from 4 to 4% cents on the 
average, if he goes not get any cuts. Spe¬ 
cial milk sells at 12 and 15 cents. E. P. 
DE LAVAL 
an honest capacity 
Cream Separator 
All separators are rated at so many pounds 
of whole-milk per hour. 
DE LAYAL machines range in capacity from 
1350 to 135 pounds of whole- 
milk per hour, and the price 
depends largely upon capacity. 
We make the claim that 
under any and all conditions 
a DE LAYAL machine rated 
at 450 pounds capacity will 
skim as much whole-milk in 
an hour as auy “would-be” 
competitive machine rated at 
600 pounds per hour, and we 
have proved this statement so 
often in actual contests, that it has come to be 
an accepted fact by all well-informed dairymen. 
Every DE LAYAL separator is tested for 
capacity before it leaves the factory, and we 
guarantee every machine to separate its full 
rated capacity. 
Before you buy a Cream Separator 
See and try a DE LAVAL 
Have one set up at your house and test it 
alongside of any other machine you like for 
capacity, cleanness of skimming and ease of 
operation. We don’t ask you to buy a 
DE LAVAL upon “claims.” We do ask you 
to be sure and give it a trial before you 
purchase any separator. 
Catalog and full particulars of our “free trial 
plan” gladly mailed upon application. 
The Foley Milk Commission Bill. 
Last week we referred to a bill at Al¬ 
bany to establish a milk commission. This 
is Assembly bill 375, and was introduced 
by Mr. Foley. From its title the bill pro¬ 
vides for the regulation and control of 
dealers in milk, and has little if anything 
to do with the producer. There are to be 
three members of the commission appointed 
by the Governor, by and with advice and 
consent of the Senate. The Governor may 
remove any commissioner for inefliciency, 
neglect of duty or misconduct in oince. 
The commission is to supervise the sale of 
milk in the cities of the first class, which 
means New York, Buffalo and -Rochester. 
The commissioners to receive $5,000 per- 
year, with actual expenses reimbursed. The 
commission has power to call witnesses, to 
compel them to testify, and can examine 
the books and papers of anyone engaged 
in the sale of milk. Their powers are 
clearly defined as a general supervision of 
all milk dealers and of present corporations 
engaged in the business of buying, selling 
or delivering milk or in the milk business 
in the three cities named. The commission 
can investigate and ascertain from time to 
time the purity, quality, value and price of 
milk. It has power to fix standards of 
quality and purity. It also has power to 
inquire into the values and price of milk 
of the different standards, and can fix the 
maximum price that can be asked or de¬ 
manded from consumers by any person or 
persons selling milk in the three cities 
named. It may inspect the property, build¬ 
ings or plants of any milk dealer or person 
engaged in the production or sale of milk, 
and examine all books and papers of per¬ 
sons thus engaged. It also has power to 
issue licenses to milk dealers in the three 
cities. Each milk dealer must pay to the 
commission a fee of $25 as a license for one 
year. The commission shall have power to 
revoke or cancel any license for a viola¬ 
tion of the law. Complaints as to quality 
and price of milk may be made in writing 
by the mayor of the city, the president of 
the board of aldermen or by a consumer, 
aud the commission shall investigate such 
complaints for cause. The bill provides 
that any milk dealer, officer or agent who 
fails or neglects to comply with an order 
from the commission shall forfeit the sum 
of $500. The bill is drawn in such a 
way that the powers of the commission ap¬ 
pear to be well defined and strong. It 
will be noticed, however, that the bill sim¬ 
ply refers to the price paid by .the con¬ 
sumer, and has apparently nothing to do 
with the price which milk dealers are to 
pay to the farmer for a fair quality of 
milk. When the commission idea was first 
suggested the strongest argument for it 
was the suggestion that such a body should 
have power to state not only the price to 
be paid by the consumer but a fair price 
to be paid to producer. While this bill ap¬ 
parently takes care of the consumer in 
the three large cities, we do not see that 
the milk farmer or the dairyman would 
be any better off as the result of this 
law, and in this seems to lie its weakness. 
THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO. 
165-167 Broadway 
NEW YORK 
42 E. Madison Stroel 
CHICACO 
Drumm & Sacramento Sis. 
SAN FRANCISCO 
173-177 William Straat 
MONTREAL 
14 a 16 Prfncesa Street 
WINNIPEG 
IOI6 Western Avenue 
SEATTLE 
GREEN MOUNTAIN 
SILOS 
Three bearings all around 
each door like a safe or re¬ 
frigerator door. Hoops are 
stronger than others. Staves, 
doors and fronts soaked in 
preservative If you wish. 
Green Mountain Silos differ 
from other round silos. 
Free catalogue gives details. 
Post card will bring it. 
..CREAMERY PACKAGE MFG. CO., 
338 West Street, Rutland, Vt. 
mROSS SILO 
The only thoroughly manufactured 
Silo on tho market. Full length stave. 
Continuous door frame complete with 
ladder. Triple beveled silo door with 
hinges. Equipped witn extra heavy 
hoops at bottom. 
AIR TIGHT 
Makes winter feed equal to June 
grass. THE ROSS will more than pay 
for itself in one season. Write to¬ 
day for catalog which gives facts that 
■Will save you money. Agonts wanted. 
The E. W. lioss Co.(Est.l850) 
’ ** Si'KI.NUFIELD. OHIO 
AJAX FLAKES 
The World's Record Feed 
Is the Greatest Milk Producer and Most 
Economical Dairy Feed on the Market. 
The Facts About Ajax Flakes are;— 
It holds the highest digestible analysis of all feeds. 
It contains 31 per cent protein and 11 per cent fat. 
It surpasses all other feeds in food value. 
It holds more World’s records for production of milk 
and butterfat than any other feed. 
What AJAX has done for hundreds of others, it 
will do for you. 
Write for booklet and full particulars. 
CHAPIN & CO., Dept A, Buffalo, N. Y. 
