528 
■Che RURAL NEW-YORKER 
sanl 
PROTECT YOUR 
increase yoar profits, comply with thet 
tary demands of health eothorities, milk 
companies, etc., and at a saving of time, 
cost and labor! 
Make your stables, dairies, poultry houses and 
cellars, bright,cheerful and free from lice, mites 
and the germs of infectious disease! Instead of 
using whitewash and then a disinfectant, ^se 
E.“ 
W 
It ditinfectM and paint* at the same time. 
It is a finely powdered mineral pigment com¬ 
bined with a germicide 20 times stronger than 
ure carbolic acid, but absolutely non-poisonous. 
7ill not harm man, beast or fowl. _ 
Ready to apply as soon as mixed with Mid water 
—no waiting, straining or bother as with white¬ 
wash. Can be applied with either brush or spray¬ 
er Dries a clear white. Will not blister, flake or 
peel off. Nodisagrreeableodor. If your dealer can¬ 
not supply you,send us yourorderand hisjiame. 
10 lbs. (10 gals.), $1.00 and postage. 
20 lbs. (20 gals.), $2.00 delivered. 
60 lbs. (60 gals.), $4.00 delivered. 
Trial package, enough to cover 260 sq. ft. and 
descriptive booklet, 26c postpaid. 
Carbola Chemical Company 
7 East 42Dd St. Dept. R New York City 
HOLSTEINS 
High 6rade HOLSIEIH CALVES XmSedTft 
each. A fOv^urebred heifer and bull calves. Ship 
anywhere. H. Wood, Cortland, Nevr York 
Holstein-Friesian Bull Calves vviite*fOT 
special offer. GATES HOMESTEAD FARM, Chittenanaa.N.Y, 
Holstein Bull Bargains & SK," 
lbs. milk. S. U. Heist, Center Square, Penna, 
HOLSIEIH BULL CALF SS'd 
butter, 7 days; sired by grandson of the great 
King of the Pontiacs. Price, S90. Send for Pedi¬ 
gree. J. D PENNOCK, 2002 W. Genesee St, Syracuse, N.Y. 
Holstein Bull Calves fjf®. 
lb sire, A. R. O. dams. Easy payments. Don’t use 
scrubs when choice ones like these sell so low. Send 
for pedigrees. CluverdaleFBm),Charlotte,N.Y. 
A Grandson of the Famous $50,000 BULL 
King Segis Pontiac Alcarta 
No. 8. Born February 20, a splendid individual, 
about two-thirds white, out of a 22-lb. A. R. O. 
granddaughter of Pontiac Korndyke. His dam 
just completed this record and ought to increase 
it next year. Ten of his nearest tested dams 
average 29.5 lbs. of butter in 7 days. Price $100. 
G. G, BURUNGAME, CAZENOVIA, N. Y. 
I HAVE for sale a bull horn Oct. 20,1916. He is 
a little more black than white; nicely marked, 
very well grown, and almost n perfect individual 
in every way. His sire is Korndyke Pontiac Pet, 
sire of 40 A.K.O. da^hters, and a son of the 37.68 lb. 
cow, Pontiac Pet. 'The dam made 21.23 lb. of butter 
and 457.5 lb. of milk at 10}4 years of age. She has 
five A. R. O. duoffhters, two with 28.87 And 24.7Tb. and Is sister 
to s 26.6 lb. senior three-year-old heifer. This bull Is sruarenteed to 
please. Price $825 F.O.B. ^erbume. Send for pedigree and photo. 
JOHN M. HOWARD SHERBURNE, N. Y. 
East River Grade Holsteins For Sale 
1 00 Extra high grade cows. Fresh and due to calve 
soon. Cows that are bred for milk. Tliey fill 
the pail. Come and see them milked. 
V 2 Reg. bulls, all ages. A few Reg. cows and extra 
high heifer calves, 10 days old. 
JOHN B. WEBSTER 
Dept. Y Cortland, N.Y. 
Phone 14-F-5 Phone 43-F-2 McGraw 
Grade Holsteins for Sale 
9nn ®*tra fancy, well bred and nicely marked cows. 
400 A number are recentl.v fresh and others due to 
freshen soon. Tliey are heavy producers and will 
please you. 
1 no large, well bred two and three year old heifers 
I UU bred to good registered II. F. bulls. All stock sold 
with a full guarantee. Special price on car load lots. 
F. P. SAUNDERS S SON Sprinodale Farms, Cortland, N.Y. 
Phone 116 or 1476 M 
Spot Farm Holsteins Vlo" 
X Holstein helf«rcalves,$16 to 
$20 each, express paid in lots of 
6. 2 carload high grade Hol¬ 
stein heifers, $36 to $75 each. 1 
[carload of high grade Holstein 
kows,close springers.$85to$100. 
11 carload or registered cows, 
$2(K) each, due in March. 6 reg¬ 
istered heifei-s, due in March, 
$160 each. ISrepstered heifers, 
8 to 16 months old, $80 to $125. 
15 registered bulls, $25 to $100. 
J. C, REAGAN, TULLY, N. Y. 
Purebred Registered 
HOLSTEIN 
CATTLE 
*123,000 has been expended in the past 
eight years, by the Holstein-Friesian Associa¬ 
tion of America, in advertising the merits of 
the great " Black and White ” breed. To the 
farmer who owns Holstein cattle, this far reach¬ 
ing publicity work is a positive benefit. The 
continually increasing interest in Holstein 
cattle throughout America makes for an ad¬ 
vance in values, and the breeder of Holstein 
cattle, wherever he may be, reaps greater 
profits on the rising market prices of his stock. 
Send for FREE lUuslraUd ‘Detcriptive Booklet* 
Tha Holstein Friesian Association of America 
F. L. Houghton, Sec*y, Box 105, Brattleboro, Vt. 
Draft Horses in New York 
New York State has a Draft Horse 
lireeders’ Cluh, the secretary being K. E. 
Horton of Johnson City, N. Y. This clni) 
is trying to interest farmer.s in breeding 
draft horses of good size, and also trying 
to improve the quality of the animals used 
for breeding, and it is meeting with goo<l 
success. For a time farmers argued that 
the automobile and the motor truck would 
put the horse out of business. This, 
however, has not happened with the bet¬ 
ter class of animals, and it is not likely 
to happen in the immediate future. A 
large share of the farm work must still be 
done by horse power. The day of the 
.small hor.se or the chunk has undoubtedly 
gone by, but the big horse will .still be a 
feature, and a profitable one in the future. 
Mr. Horton semis us the picture shown 
merly wet and usually a deep mud. I 
have’ filled in with cinders; making the 
yards comparatively dry. Now for three 
years have had no sickne.ss among the 
hogs. JOHN H. WISXER. 
Windsor County, Vt., “ The Jersey Isle of 
America” 
When on March 10th the Jersey breed¬ 
ers of Windsor ('onnty. Vt., organized at 
White Iliver .Tunction, there was held 
a meeting that, in some particulars, can¬ 
not be duplicated in any other section of 
the T'nited States. With but a few day.s’ 
notice given by the county agent, there 
gathered from nearby towns about 00 Jer¬ 
sey breeders. About HO of these paid 
dues, signed the constitution and became 
charter members of the AVindsor County 
.Tensey Breedens’ Association. We claim 
there are more good Jer.sey cows in Wind¬ 
sor county than in any other section of 
the United States of equal area. Nearly 
every farmer has one or more registered 
.Tenseys; there are many large herds of 
A Trio of Purebred Belgian Draft Horses 
on this page. This shows a purebred Bel¬ 
gian stallion, a purebred Belgian mare, 
and their colt, all raised on a farm in 
Broome County, N. Y. This colt is a 
three-year-old. He weighs 1,080 pounds, 
and is used in a team with either the 
mare or the stallion. The mare on the 
left has given four colts in five years. 
Probably this one is the best of .the lot. 
All this shows what can be done on .a 
New York State farm with good stock 
and a fair amount of capital. It is good 
business to produce your horse power for 
farm work, and it would surely give any 
farmer great satisfaction to produce live 
stock of this sort. It is not a business, 
however, for jieople who expect to jiro- 
diice this kind of an animal from worn- 
out or undersized horses, or from inferior 
breeding stock. 
“ Barney” the Big Hog 
The big hog shown at Fig. 211, page 51.'\ 
was known as “Barney,” and he snrely 
made a record. “Barney” was a registered 
O. I. C. White and was butchered Dee. 7, 
1916, at the age of 80 months. Hi.s 
dressed weight was 95-8 pounds and he is 
called the largest hog ever produced in 
Rensselaer Co., N. Y. “Barney” seems 
to have been one of the orphans at the 
Troy Orphan Asylum farm, and if the 
human orphans make any such record it 
is certainly a successful institution. 
The following facts about Barney are 
furnished; 
We feed our hogs principally on swill 
from our own institution, and from the 
Emma Willard School (one of our nearest 
neighbors). The swill is gathereil every 
day. During Summer w'e let him get 
thin, in Fall began putting flesh on him 
gradually with the swill, and then to fat¬ 
ten him fed him 600 pounds of whole rye 
ground. He was not really fat when 
butchered. It would have been easy to 
have brought his weight up to 1,000 lbs. 
or over, but feed was so high-priced we 
killed him to save the feed. He was al¬ 
ways one of the best dispositioned ani¬ 
mals I ever saw. Dec. 8, 1915. we butch¬ 
ered a sow two yeare old that dressed 807 
lbs. She had a larger frame than “Bar¬ 
ney.” We have young stock coming in 
that will, we expect, attain a good weight 
by time we wish to kill them. The hog.s 
are fine shape, short noses, long deep 
bodies, and are much admired by every 
one that sees them. 
Barney was purchased when six or 
eight weeks old. The sows are not pure¬ 
bred, but are high grade. We have had 
purebred sows and still have some of their 
blood, but twice we were nearly cleaned 
out with cholera. The hogyards were for- 
registered Jerseys exclusively, and the 
grade herd that does not have a good 
jiurebred registered sire at its head is 
hard to find. For ‘these and for many 
other reasons, we are calling our county 
the ‘Mersey Isle of America.” We have 
the goods, we are constantly improving 
them, and we are always glad to show 
them; consequently, we are not afraid to 
advertise. 
The .Terse}’ represents our ideal as an 
“all-around” dairy cow. Her qualifica¬ 
tions for holding this po.sition are as fol¬ 
lows: She does not confine herself to 
quantity of production, but she combines 
both quantity and quality ; which should 
be a very important fact from the stand¬ 
point of the consumer of dairy products. 
Then from the standpoint of the dairy¬ 
man she is the cow that gives the largest 
return for each dollar’s worth of feed con¬ 
sumed. In other words, she is the most 
economical producer. To verify this lat¬ 
ter statement all that is necessary is to 
investigate the public competitive tests of 
the various dairy breeds held at St. Louis 
and other expositions. This matter of 
economical production is quite a large 
item with dairy feeds at present prices. 
The Jersey is also a cow of strong con¬ 
stitution, she is hardy and can stand our 
cold climate and long Winters; neverthe¬ 
less she is one of the quickest to respond 
to good care, good feed and all the little 
extras that might be classed, by some, as 
luxuries. S. J. v. 
So. Royalton, Vt, 
Controlling a Bull 
What is the law in regard to allowing 
a scrub bull to run in a pasture adjoining 
a pasture in which registered cow. are 
kept? My cows are registered, and 
there are five pastures joining mine in 
which scrub bulls are kept, and the men 
simply laugh at me when I talk with 
them in regard to their hulls. E. M. P. 
New York. 
Of course, a man has a right to pasture 
hi.s own stock on his own land if the stock 
is not diseased so as to be a danger. You 
cannot compel him to keep purebred stock 
if he does not want to. This question 
would be decided under the fence laws, 
and section 865 provides: 
If any person who is liable to contrib¬ 
ute to tiie erection or repair of a division 
fence, shall neglect or refuse to make and 
maintain his proportion of such fence, or 
shall permit the same to be out of repair, 
he shall be liable to pay the party injured 
;ill such damages as shall accrue thereby. 
Thus if a scrub hull got through the 
fence which the neighbor neglected that 
neighbor would be responsible for the 
damage which would be the difference in 
value between a grade and purebred calf. 
April 7, 1917. 
ANTI-COW KICKER 
Money refunded if not satisfactory 
THE MOORE BROS. OF ALBANY 
NEW YORK 
GUERNSEYS 
For Sale-Reg. Guernsey Bulls wo^’odandG^y.®"! 
Chene breeding HAYES C. TAYLOR. P. 0. Fmbreeville. Pi . 
GUERNSEY BULLS ffiSK 2 
PricBS Reasonable. SUNNY BROOK FARM, Smithtown,N.Y. 
GUERNSEY BULLS send tor sale Ji^. 
Edwin B. Matixe - Coatesville. Pa. 
Guernsey BULL CALVES For Sale Registry .stock. 
JAS. E. van ALSTYNE, Sunnyside Farms. Kinderhook. N. Y. 
Guernsey BullCalves Zl tom'fex: 
ceptionally well-bred calves out of A. R. dams witli 
high records. An opportunity wortli investigating. 
Prices reasonable. STANNOX FARM, East Holliston, Mass. 
Registered Guernsey Bulls for Sale ate "prices 
No. 35053— Cbenille. dropped August 7,1915. Sire, 
Cbene’s Majesty, a fine grandson of Governor of 
tbe Cbene. Dam, Grisaille of Riverside Farm, 
averaging 6% butterfat. No. 43639— Althea’s 
Samson, dropped October 31, 1916. Sire, Polly a 
May King. Dam. Grisaille’s Althea, out of Gri¬ 
saille of Riverside Farm by Ohene’s Blajesty. 
E. C. Peets, Manager, KESZUCKWAND FARM, Sharon, Conn. 
— are the 
Most Economical Producers 
of butter fat and butter. '■®' 
suits of the Pan American Dairy Breed test 
scribed in our I)eautiful free booklet The 
Story of the Guernsey.” Write for it. 
JERSEYS 
Registered Jersey Bull Calves For Sale 
sired by Tovono Pogis of Hood Farm ami out of 
high-prodncingcows. Prices reasonable,quality con¬ 
sidered. William Berry, Valley View Farm, De Lancey. N.Y. 
Fosteriield’s Herd Reg. Jerseys 
FOR SALE 
COWS, HEIFKK.S and CALVES. Address 
Charles 0. Faster,P.O. Box 173, Morristown. Morris Ca..N J. 
Eureka Stock Farm 
We now offer 9 Registered Jersey Heifers, 2 to 
18 inos. old; 3 Hulls, 2 mos. and 2 yrs. old: 3 
Cows, 4 and 8 yrs. old; all of .St. Lambert, Flying 
Fox and Nolile of Oaklands breeding. Also 60 
Chester White Pigs, 10 wks. to 7 mos. old. eligi¬ 
ble to registry. Write for Circular and Prices. 
Edward Walter, Dept. R, West Chester, Pa. 
«< 
QUALITY”- 
FOR SALE 
Jersey Bull Ce.a', D in iths old. 
Dam’s authenticated record, 
826 lbs. 1-oz. butter; grandam 744 lbs. 13-oz.; 
great-grandam 612 lbs. 2-oz. Sire’s dam, 608 
lbs. 7-oz., test began at 13 yrs. 7 mos. of age; 
grandam 737 lbs.; 14 in his pedigree in 
Register of Merit. He’s a good one. Address, 
E. W. MOSHER. Brifhtude Farms. AURORA, N. Y. 
MERIDALE 
JERSEYS 
F or sale—G randsons of Inter¬ 
ested Prince 58224 (Imp.), who has 
40 daughters in the Register of 
Merit, including Passport, the world’s 
record Jersey milk cow. These young 
bulls are excellent individuals, well 
grown, and out of Register of Merit 
dams. For booklet and pedigrees ad¬ 
dress 
AYER & McKINNEY 
300 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Penna. 
Is that great hal f of your herd, the sire, 
a half that will show thousands of 
dollars of profit? Or is lie “just a bull"? 
Run no risks. Invest where you know 
the breed pays and where the registry 
stands for purity of type and special, 
concentrated purpose. 
Buy a Jersey Bull 
Introduce the blood that proves out in 
steady, persistent milk flow, in animals 
that mature early, live long, live any¬ 
where, eat mo.st anything and produce 
most economically, the richest of milk. 
Read the ads of Jersey breeders in this 
paper—write them for prices. Send for 
our free book ‘‘Story of the Jersey”, and 
plan now to build a herd you’ll be proud of. 
The American Jersey Catt’e Club 
330 West 23rd Street - New York City. 
