1914. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
-41 r 
SWINE 
Mule-Foot Boar Pigs-”*? X'rSS'sK 
Hams and Kwos. Write for booklet of information 
::i»J }>j it*< h l<> J. N BfPhirwn, Pine View Kurni, Seottsville. A.Y. 
Eureka Stock Farm 
Registered Jersey Cut¬ 
tle. 4 mos. to 2 jrin. 
old. Chester White. I’o 
loud china and Berk¬ 
shire Piprs, all ague. 
Lincoln Buck Lambs. 
Variety of Poultry. 
EDWARD WALTER, OEPT. R, WEST CHESTER. PENNA 
Chester Boars, Brood Sows, Pigs Bethel, vt 
0. L C.’s OR CHESTER WHITES 
All stock brod from large, healthy, prolific parents. 
Quality and breeding guaranteed. A few tine Pall 
Boars. Plenty of Spring Pigs coming. Orderahead 
and get early choice. All stock registered free 
in cither Chester White Record or O. I. C. Swine 
Brs. Assn., and pedigrees recognized everywhere. 
VICTOR FAKlilS, llellviile, Oiange Co., N. Y. 
Q J Q HogS“-' 11 They Ijook, Feed, and 
Ready. 
Brood 
Address, 
Light. Sows Bred, Males 
0 1 f! U/H ITP^— ITav0 a Utter of 11, farrowed 
■ la Ui Vinil LO jnn. 23<i, out of A1 matured 
stock. Price, $10, at S to lit weeks. Registered. A few 
W. II. Turkeys left. WAYSIOE FARM, Chatham, N. J. 
Address, A. L. Pa*e, (Owner), 62 Cortlamit St., N. Y. City 
DUROGS —The Big Deep Fellows 
IT AH GAINS, Fall pigs at $10 to $15. 
3 extra good aged sows to farrow in Spiing. 
SHENANGO RIVER FARMS. Transfer, Pa. 
LARGE BERKSHIRES AT HIGIIW00D 
Bold out of Service Boars and Bred Sows. Will have 
over a hundred young sows for sale, bred for early 
Fall farrow. Booking orders for Jan'y. Fcb’y and 
March pigs. H. C. S H. B. HARPENCIHG. Oiindee, N. Y. 
Springbank Herd Big Berkshires 
I have for sale 5 Bred (lilts to farrow in March and 
April, and 5 young service Boars, weighing around 
J50 lbs. I will book orders for March and April pigs. 
J. IS. WATSON, Proprietor, 31 iirbletiale, Ct. 
FOR PURE BRED TAMW0RTH SWINE 
write or visit WISSTVIKW STOCK FARSI. U. 
F. J>. No. 1, Winston-Siilem. North Carolina 
Large English Yorkshire Pigs ^*10 "three 
for $27. Crated and registered, f- o. b. Hamilton. 
M0RNEYLIGHT FARM, Hamilton, New York. FRANK TOOKE 
Reg. P. Chinas Berkshires, C. Whites. 
Fine, large strains; ail ages, mated 
not a. in. Bred sows service Boars, 
Jersey and Holstein Calves. Collie 
Pups,Beagles and Poultry. Write for 
prices & circulars. Hamilton & Co.. Krcildoun, I’a 
ELLEN WOOD FARM 
BERKSHIRES 
Pig»of both sexes and unrelated trios for sale. Our pigs 
are rich in Masterpiece, Lee and Premier blood. Let 
us furnish you with a foundation herd. Only choice 
animals sold for breeders. 
Write us, or heller vet, pay us a visit. 
ELLENWOOD FARM, R. D. I„ Hatbere, Pa. 
If you want the best hog 
Write ii"* Our farms are devoted exclusively to tl»e 
production of Berkshnes. Breeden* in the foliou inf? 
.States have boon supplied from our great herd: N. Y.; 
Penna., Dist. Col.; Md.; Va.; N. C , S. C.; Gft.; Iji. , 
Ala,; Mias.; Fla.; Teun.; Ky.; Texaa, and Porto Ric<>. 
Berkshires for foundation and 
show purposes a specialty. 
THE BLUE RIDGE BERKSHIRE FARMS. Asheville, N. C. 
BERKSHIRES 
We hnvo a number of very fine hoar pigs for sale at 
attractive prices. They are the height of breeding, 
type and quality. It will pay j< u to get our prices 
on these choice pigs before you 1 uy elsewhere. Now 
is the time to put a fine sire at the head of your 
herd. Prices and itH-irriptiuns sent upon request 
TOMPKINS FARM, - Lansdale, Pa. 
ID O Gr S 
PHI I 1C Dll DC — Natural drivers. Also English 
uULLIL rUlO Bloodhounds. Nelson's. Grove City. Pa 
Why Own an Airedale SlU’.SlI 
ing for an all-around Hog. Pedigreed Pups for sale. 
VV. A. I.OWKKK, Burlington, New Jersey 
PdA-IR-X cattle 
15 UERNSEYS—BULL CALVES. Ma.v Rose brooding and 
U some from A. R. cows. One old enough for service. 
His ilam made over 600 lbs. fat. A. it. Iiuif Leghorn Eggs 
for hatching. $1.50 per 13. W. It. Ul'Ml* H*, Eay.Uetllle, N.Y, 
THE TOMPKINS CO. BREEDERS' JOURNAL, with sale-list 
‘ of pure-bred stock. 2octs per year. Copy free. 
We havo some very good offers in Holstein anil Jer¬ 
sey cattle. German Coach Horses. Shetland Ponies, 
Southdown owes and Cheshire gilts A two-year 
Berkshire hoar, registered, $25.00. TOMPKINS CO. 
BREEDERS' ASSOCIATION. Box B. Trumansburo, N. Y 
HIGH GRADE 
HOLSTEINS 
The best are the cheapest. Why not have 
that kind? We have 2110 largo, well bred 
cows that are heavy producers. Some fresh 
and others due within 00 days. Tubercu¬ 
lin tested. Come and see them. 
F. P. SAUNDERS & SON, Certland, N. Y. 
A Good Animal Should Never Possess a Scrub 
Owner. 
“I am very careful to whom I sell my 
calves,” remarked a successful Ohio 
breeder a few days ago. “I have been 
laboring for a number of years to build 
up a purebred herd of efficient producers. 
The cows evidence their breeding in 
their performance at the pail. My herd 
has a good reputation, and I want to 
keep it good. It would be unbusiness¬ 
like for me to sell a bull calf from one 
of my best cows to some scrub farmer 
who would rear the calf on whey, keep 
him all Winter on poor hay in an air¬ 
tight stable, and turn him out in the 
Spring with his herd looking like a scare¬ 
crow. The calf would be stunted, he 
would fail to make good, and then the 
farmer arid bis nearest neighbors would 
point to this bull as coming from my 
herd. That is the reason why I am care¬ 
ful about the man to whom I sell my 
stock. I want them to return him a 
profit and I look to it that he is mentally 
equipped and his farm is sufficiently 
equipped to insure the best results from 
ray stock. 
“This is only a business proposition,” 
he added, “in building up and maintain¬ 
ing of your herd. See the right man 
gets your stock.” Walter jack. 
Building a Milk House. 
I wish to build a milk-house in which 
to separate milk by band separator, and 
will build it by side of water trough, into 
which water comes from pipe 200 feet 
from spring. I shall let the water flow 
into milk-house and use ice to keep cream 
a few days. Which is the better way, 
to put ice in water trough where cans 
stand or put ice only above cans? I 
thought of putting trough below level of 
floors iu milk-house, let water flow in and 
put ice in water if necessary, as I have 
a houseful of ice. Will build house of 
boards with concrete foundation and 
floor. I intend to sell cream to ice cream 
factory. c. r. b. 
Pennsylvania. 
Your plan of building a house of wood 
with concrete foundation and floor is a 
good one, and I would suggest making a 
tank of the desired size in the floor of the 
milk-house, but enough higher than the 
water trough outside so that the water 
from the spring will ordinarily flow 
through the tank to the trough. In this 
way you will get cold water direct from 
the spring for use in cooling the milk, 
but I should also arrange for a by-pass 
for the water directly to the outside 
trough, so that when ice was used in the 
cooling tank the water from the spring 
need not be allowed to constantly run 
over it and waste it. The ice will be 
used most economically by putting it into 
the tank with the cream cans. 
M. B. D. 
Grade Calf. 
I have bought a Guernsey bull calf 
whose sire was a registered bull and 
whose dam was three-quarters purebred. 
What part Guernsey may I call the calf? 
a. j. T. 
The calf takes half its breeding from 
each parent. From the bull it takes 
half Guernesy blood and from the dam 
three-eighths. It is therefore seven- 
eighths Guernsey. 
Profitable Ptgs. —These figures on 
the loss and profit of three pigs born 
April 1, 11)13, and sold Nov. 11, 1913, 
may interest, and show there is a profit 
in pigs even if all feed that is given them 
is purchased: Porn April 1, 1913; were 
with mother until June 11, when she was 
sold for $45, live, the butcher taking her 
at the barn. Grain and feed purchased 
January 1 to November 1, $39.82; sold 
November 11, 1913, weight alive 900 
pounds. $100; profit, $00.18. They bad 
the run of a small orchard back of the 
barn during the Summer, and after the 
first of May. There are less than two 
acres in the orchard, which is in grass. 
They could not begin to keep grass down, 
and it was cut by machine in July and 
left on the ground as a mulch. They 
could root and dig i.ll the} wanted, but 
after the drought came in June they did 
not dig much, as the earth was too hard. 
They were fed twice a day, a warm slop 
of two parts red dog middlings and one 
part eornmeal, what they could eat up 
clean at time of feeding. To each 12- 
quart pail of the slop was added a small 
handful of bone flour, ditto of charcoal 
and salt. Those last items I consider 
very important, the bone meal helps 
make bone, the charcoal keeps the stom¬ 
ach sweet, the salt is a mineral and helps 
also. HORACE B. PARKER. 
Massachusetts. 
| ; DAIRY CA TTIjE 
—-GUERNSEY-j 
THE UTILITY COW 
W IIO makes every pound of feed 
into dairy products. Yellow 
milk rich in butter fat. Yellow cream 
and butter. Let us tell you about her. 
GUERNSEY CATTLE CLUB 
PETERBORO, N. H. 
] Horses aucl IVEules 
Buy a Pure Bred Draft Stud Colt 
With our system of helping you with attrac¬ 
tive advertising matter you can easily prove to 
your neighbors the advant¬ 
ages of breeding to a good 
horse. Onr prices for colts 
are very low for we must 
keep 'em moving. They'll 
double in weight and value. 
And there’s big profit in 
breeding big drafters. Get 
Bent Investment into the game. We’ll help 
nii tiie you. Write today. Dept. No. 2. 
Over *200 hood all ngres—I'errheron, Belgian, Suffolk 
Cl .1 dosdul*. 
Largest breading establishment in the Fast—1700 iicro*, 
ADIRONDACK FARMS, Glenn Falls, N. Y. 
Maple Row Stock Farm- Registered Ayrshire Cattle 
Choice Bull Calves from first-class milkers. Also a 
few cows and heifers. White Beautys, Nox-em-all, 
14071, and O'Carston of Finlayston, 14G78, at head 
of herd. I 1 ’. II. Cookingliani. Cherry Creek. N Y. 
FOR SALE—Otterkill Farms Ayrshires 
Ayrshires stock of various ages, all well bred, the 
siro imported two years ago and was hi ed by Robert 
Wallace Aucheahrain of Scotland. All stock to bo 
satisfactory or no sale. Price to suit the buyer. 
Addreas Rudolph lies*, WnsliingfoiiTlIlo, Oranue Co., N. Y. 
Purebred Registered 
HOLSTEIN 
CATTLE 
The Wisconsin Farmer notes that fewer 
and fewer of the Wisconsin farmers are con¬ 
tent to milk and care for cows that are aide 
to produce only about 150 pounds of butter. 
During two weeks last Spring 145 Wisconsin 
dairymen purchased registered purebred Hol¬ 
stein sires in order to improve their herds. 
Every wherethe more progressive dairymen 
are alive to the necessity of using bred-for- 
production sires in order to bring up the 
butter-fat yield of their cows to a profitable 
figure. 
Send for FREE Illustrated Descriptive Booklets 
Holstein-Friesian Asso., f. l. Houghton, sec’y 
Box 105 Brattleboro, Vt. 
50 STALLIONS 
and MARES, $250 to $1000 each 
Write for my Illustrated 
Circular telling why I can save 
you money on the purchase of a Per- 
cheron or Belgian Stallion or Mare. 
A.W.Green,Middlefield,0. 
R. R. Sta., E. Orwell, on Penna. Ry. 
Midway between Ashtabula &Warren 
FOR SALE-TWO FRENCH COACH STALLIONS, i’rice, 
r pair, $275. Pure-bred. Two Percheron stud 
yearlings. W.W. NTKCK, Chagrin Falls, Ohio 
KENTUCKY JACK AND PERCHERON FARMS— 2fi0 head of 
” big hone Kentucky Mammoth jacks. Pereherons 
and saddle horses. Special prices in half-car and ear 
load lots.Write your wants or visit onr farms. 2,500 bush¬ 
els Of bluegrasa seed. COOK* BROWS, Props., Lexington, Ky. 
S* II EEI? 
sALE- Twen, y' Five ( 25 ) Reg. Hampshire Ewes 
with fine lambs by their side. 
II AS LETT I5KOS., - Seneca, New York 
nnRCCT RAM-Thoroughbred. For sale or ex- 
UUnOLI nHBn change. To nrevent inbreeding. 
2 years old. J B. BROWN, Bridgehampton, L. I., N. Y. 
r^/stIr™ Hampshire Down Yearling Ewes 
born in Jan. & Feb., 1913. Wm. C. Whipple, Purchase, N Y. 
-—-- 80—Imported—80-- 
Percheron and Belgian Stallions and Mares 
on sale. My exhibit comprises the largest number of big. beavy-boned, 2000 to 2400 lb. stallions 
to be found in the United States. The 
Cedar Rapids Jack Farm is the jack 
metropolis of the world. Ail nations 
buy jacks here. The majority of the 
best mules in the United States are the 
results of tbe past twenty years im¬ 
provement inaugurated and carried 
on here. Write for catalogs. Come to 
me when you need stock. I will make 
it wortti your while. 
W. L. DeCLOW. Stallion and Jack 
Importing Farm, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 
THE BEST IN THE WORLD 
BREEDERS’ CONSIGNMENT SALE 
CO’S 17th PUBLIC SALE 
Syracuse, N. Y. March 25-26, 1914 
(tuberculin tested") 
HE offerings will include sons and 
daughters of such great bulls as King 
of the Pontiacs, Gordon Glenn Pon¬ 
tiac, Sir Prilly Walker, Sir Korndyke 
Pontiac Pleione, King Hengerveld 
Homestead Fayne, King Segis Pon¬ 
tiac, King Hengerveld Aaggie Fayne, 
Pearl of the Dairy’s Joe De Kol, Changeling Butter 
Boy, Pledge Spofford Calamity Paul, Lord Nether- 
land De Kol, Dutchland Colantha Contest Boy, 
Prince Hengerveld Fayne, Sir Lilith Posch,Viscount 
De Kol, Oakland Mutual Friend, King of the 
Hengervelds, Sir Waldorf Lad, Woodcrest Nig 
De Kol, and others equally as good. 
Many of these have large official records, in fact there will be 
more large record animals than were ever offered in a public sale. 
Also Johanna King Segis, son of the 40 lb. cow Johanna 
De Kol Van Beers, as well as several other very choice ones. 
Bulls that are fit to head any herd in the World. 
Sale Held in New Sale Pavilion 
Auctioneers Kelley, Haeger & Mack 
FOR CATALOGUE ADDRESS 
LIVERPOOL SALE & PEDIGREE CO., Sale Managers 
LIVERPOOL, N. Y. 
