&i6e RURAL NEW-YORKER 
1367 
Winning 100% Efficiency While 
80% on War Work 
Soon after the great war started our 
Company made a decision about as follows: 
“Until this thing ends, and ends right, our 
place is in the service. Nothing else mat¬ 
ters much until it’s all over ‘Over There.’ ” 
So we went to it—shrapnel and high ex¬ 
plosive shells for our Allies and, later, for 
the U. S. A. Eighty per cent of our manu¬ 
facturing energies were concentrated on day 
and night war work. 
But during all this time every atom of 
the inventive genius that had made the 
“United States” separator highly efficient 
was working to make it infinitely better. 
We have won our goal. Important re¬ 
finements and improvements were accom¬ 
plished. In the past eighteen months the 
Government has issued to us no less than 
seven exclusive patents. 
There can be but one answer — the 
United States Disc Separator will sell and 
stay sold wherever dairy cows are raised for 
profit. Such sweeping points of merit can¬ 
not fail of recognition. 
The “United States” has changed—for 
the better. Our peace-time job will be to 
keep this machine so efficient that when a 
better separator is made, it will be a 
ITEB 
VPISC SEPARATORS 
Things You’ll Notice Every Day You 0\m a “United States” 
Get these three points fixed Now; others later 
FIRST- —One-piece frame construction. Means 
long life—it is made to grow old gracefully. 
SECOND —Interchangeable discs that even a 
child can clean and reassemble with case. 
THIRD —Low Crank Speed—larger sizes only 42 revolutions per 
minute means 20 to 30 per cent less energy to the operator. 
Find the **United States** dealer; let him demonstrate this wonderful machine point by point* 
• Meantime, write for full descriptive literature* 
Vermont Farm Machine Company 
CHICAGO 
BELLOWS FALLS, VT. 
PORTLAND. ORE. 
SALT LAKE CITY 
I 
