833 
•Pie RURAL NEW-YORKER 
May 24, 1919 
Johnson’s Radiator Cement blends perfectly with the 
water until it reaches the leaks—just as soon as it comes in contact 
with the air it forms a hard, tough, pressure-resisting substance which 
is insoluble in water and consequently makes a permanent seal. 
Quick—Efficient—Harmless 
Johnson’s Radiator Cement contains no powder, cement 
or anything which can coat, clog or interfere with the efficiency of the 
cooling system. It will ordinarily seal a leak in from two to ten minutes. 
Use Johnson’s Radiator Cement for Automobile and Trac¬ 
tor radiators and for sealing leaks and cracks in boilers and water 
jackets of all kinds. 
Insist upon your dealer supplying you with Johnson’s Radiator. 
Cement. Write for our folder on “Keeping Cars Young”—it’s free. 
S. C. JOHNSON & SON, Dept. RNY Racine, Wis. 
JL. Stop tlfose/ea/fs 
'JOHNSON’S 
RADIATOR) 
CEMENT 
MendsLeaKy. 
Radiators! 
T HE easiest and quickest way to 
repair leaks in radiators, pumps, water 
jackets, hose connections, etc., is to use Johnson’s Radiator 
Cement. This wilj-stop the leaks instantly without laying 
up the car. No mechanical experience is required—all you have 
to do is remove the cap and pour the liquid into the radiator. 
No tool kit is complete without a can of Johnson’s Radiator 
Cement. It overcomes the inconvenience of laying up 
one’s car. A half-pint is ordinarily sufficient for a Ford or other 
small radiator—for larger cars use a pint. 
Johns on's 
Radiator 6 ment 
Necessity has taught the thrifty peasants of Europe the 
golden value of manure. Every ounce is painstakingly re¬ 
turned to the soil, even if it must be done by hand to get good distri¬ 
bution. That is why “Over There” they get such large yields per acre. 
“I bought one of your Man¬ 
ure Spreaders about three 
years ago. I have used others, 
but they are not good spread¬ 
ers like yours. Those two 
cylinders tear the manure to 
pieces and then that distribu¬ 
tor pulverizes it right. It runs 
light and I like it well." 
Henry Olehle. Neb. 
"I have used one of your 
Spreaders for four years and it 
has given the best satisfaction. 
We spread manure every day 
during winter and even when 
weather conditions are very 
unfavorable. I would not give 
your machine for any other 
make ot spreader that I have 
ever seen. I consider it the 
best paying in vestment a farm¬ 
er can make.” 
C. M. Hatch. Ohio. 
•‘Last Winter my son pur¬ 
chased one of your spreaders, 
though I had an old one that I 
thought he could get along 
with. I know of no better way 
to tell you what I think of yours 
than to say that It is just as 
far ahead of my old one as the 
old one was ahead of the fork 
and wagon. Every farmer 
should have one. ‘ ’ 
Marion Sears. Indiana. 
Original letters on file. 
Addresses upon request. 
“Over Here” we have not been forced to raise 
as many “bushels per acre,” but modern machin¬ 
ery enables us to produce more “bushels per man.” 
Progressive farmers who realize the value of 
manure and leading authorities agree that one 
of the best paying machines for the farm is the 
Saves time, spreads even and wide, pulverizes 
thoroughly and distributes the manure just right 
to get its full value. One man with the New 
Idea can do more and better work than several 
with pitchforks. 
The New Idea Spreader has been widely 
imitated but an imitation is never more than 
an imitation. To get the best spreader get THE 
ORIGINAL—the New Idea—the machine that 
revolutionized old-fashioned methods, that has 
always been the leader, that has stood every test. 
Sea the wide spreading New Idea at your dealers. Look 
him up or write us for his name. We will send you our 
booklet, ‘‘Helping Mother Nature,” which gives much valu¬ 
able information. Send for a copy today. 
NEW IDEA SPREADER COMPANY 
Spreader Specialists. (5) Coldwater, Ohio 
THE FAMOUS “101 RANCH” ENDORSES THE NISCO 
Gentlemen: Bliss, Okla., December 15th, 1918. 
We are very much pleased with the three NISCO Spreaders. We have U9ed several other makes but seeing your 
advertisement decided to investigate your spreader. After looking them over, we ordered three of them and have them 
working every day along with three others 
Yours pulls much easier and does much better work than the others. We are pleased to recommend your NISCO 
Spreaders, as we are convinced that they are the best we have ever used. Yours trtly 
MILLER BROS., ”101 RANCH.” 
The largest diversified Farm, and Ranch in the United States. 
The Wool-eating Habit 
Most poultrymen have boon troublod 
by a fow “feather eaters” in the flock. 
These birds have picked up the bad habit 
of pulling feathers from the other liens. 
This sometimes leads to serious conse¬ 
quences. Whenever such feather pulling 
draws blood the hens will frequently keep 
at the victim until she is killed or serious¬ 
ly hurt. This habit is usually confined to 
a few birds. Prof. Glover of tin* Col¬ 
orado Experiment Station tells of the 
habit of eating wool which is reported 
among flocks in Western Colorado : 
“This is a most unusual condition and 
is not common in this country. A few 
lambs begin in midwinter to gnaw the 
wool of their mothers, beginning usually 
on the tail, thighs, or abdomen. By Spring 
the habit has spread until most of them 
are eating the wool from the backs of 
each other. Because of this habit they 
become more or less unthrifty, and some 
of them die from the presence of wool 
balls that have accumulated and occlude 
compartments of the stomach or the intes¬ 
tines. 
“Apparently wool eating is mostly a 
habit which is . acquired by imitation in 
consequence of the tedium of being re¬ 
stricted in their environment. Neverthe¬ 
less it is serious, and may result in the 
complete undoing of the flock. The habit 
can usually be removed by isolating the 
wool-eaters as well as their victims. Some 
authorities maintain that the disease can¬ 
not be ascribed entirely to habit, but that 
there is a deficiency in certain nutritive 
substances, especially minerals, in their 
food, and that this, combined with being 
confined in narrow quarters, is the real 
cause of the disease.” 
A Woman’s Garden 
(Continued from page S8G) 
added the totals and tabulated the results, 
the expense, value of the crops, etc. It 
may interest the would-be farmerette. 
Another year I shall take even more 
pains with the accounting department, 
and not list part of the beans by quarts 
and part by pounds. There are other 
iissets besides those listed, which cannot 
be estimated by dollars and cents. When 
I began to be a farmerette I was a ner¬ 
vous wreck. I was at odds with all men. 
Life was a nightmare and death a de¬ 
sirability. Now my hermit-like life on mv 
half acre has developed health and 
strength, and I can do my day’s work 
with the best and sleep the sleep of the 
just. For all of this I can thank the 
benevolence of the head of the banking 
house who provided the domicile and the 
land. To sum up the experiences of the 
last two years, I have not found much 
money in fanning as yet. though when my 
asparagus, currants, raspberries and other 
small fruits get into bearing perhaps I 
shall be more prosperous. But there are 
other rewards that make up for the hard 
work and the privations; the love of na¬ 
ture that familiarity with it gives, health, 
joy and a contented spirit. 
Expense 
Manure spread in 1917, one cord.. 
Plowing in the Fall of 1917. 
Manure in 191S, one cord. 
xfertilizer . 
Lime . 
Seeds and plants. 
Poisons— 
Pyrox .$1.40 
White arsenic.3S 
Corrosive sublimate.13 
Black Leaf 40.25 
Labor, 1918— 
Harrowing .$1.50 
Setting stakes and pea 
brush . 1.00 
Spading and small jobs... . 3.80 
Making hotbed. 1.85 
Value of crops taken from perma¬ 
nent beds . 
Value of crops grown from seeds.. 
PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOlNT 
Expense .$30.40 
Profit and loss. 39.66 
$7 00 
3.50 
8.00 
2.35 
.00 
4.70 
2.10 
8.15 
$36.40 
0.27 
69.95 
$76.12 
$76.12 
Product.$76.12 
From the vegetables raised in this 
garden I canned 180 pint cans by the 
cold pack process, which 1 valued as be¬ 
ing worth...$76 40 
At a cost for canning expenses of.. 0.94 
Making a profit of.$00.40 
Of these cans, enough were sold to 
cover the entire expense of the garden 
and also of the canning expense, with a 
profit left over in addition to the vege¬ 
tables left for my own use and for that 
of my poultry. 
Another year there will lie less expense, 
as 1 have all tin 1 bean poles left and to¬ 
mato stakes, as I will need no work done 
on the hotbed, and as I shall need less 
manure, and also have some poisons left 
over. I also have a 11 the seed corn, seed 
beaus, and squash seed that I need. My 
garden for 1919 is plowed at a cost of $3. 
and I expect to have a half crop of as¬ 
paragus. as it will be the third year, and 
i Iso a larger crop of currants and rasp- 
uerries. CLEMENTINA D. NAllMKK. 
51 assachiisetts. 
Great Hog Proitts 
GALLON 
Hustles Heavy Hogs to Market 
Cuts your feeding costs. Have bigger 
pigs, tatter hogs. Get them ready tor 
market in far less time. You can do it. 
Prove at our risk that Milkoline is the 
surest farm money maker known. 
Guaranteed Trial Offer ^^illn^LTfa 
barrel, or a barrel. TakoSOdays —feed half to your 
bogs and poultry. If not absolutely satisfied return 
the unused part and we will refund every cent you 
paid us — no charge for the half you used. 
MHIrnlino has a base of Pure Modified Buttermilk 
liiillYUillW to which essential fats and acids ere 
added. Milkoline comes in condensed form. Will 
keep indefinitely in any climate. Will not mould, 
sour or rot. Flies will not come near it. 
o follnn ForfeedingmixonepartMllkollne 
a. UdllUll with 60 parts water or swill and 
feed with your usual grain feeds. It helps keep hogs 
healthy, their appetites keen and makes more pork per 
bushel of grain. Stop buying buttermilk of uncertain 
quality. Use Mllkolino and you will always be cure 
of uniform acidity, and at a cost of 2c a gallon or less 
when fed as directed. Many users say Milkoline 
saves them one-third on feed bills because it makes 
their hogs and poultry assimilate all their feed. 
1 AfUiOZ. Prnfit W.H.Graham,Middleton,Mo.. 
JLdtUU/O rruill writes that he got an extra .$120 
worth of pork from $30 worth of Milkoline in a sixty 
day feed. He made an actual test of this lot of hogs 
in comparison with another bunch. We could quote 
hundreds of testimonials, but the best proof is that 
we legally guarantee Milkoline to be satisfactory or 
refund your money, ( you are the judge) and refer yon 
toS. W. Blvd. Bank of Kansas City, Mo., and R. G. 
Dunn & Co. MILKOLINE Is just as good tor 
Poultry as for Hogs. 
Order from Nearest Dealer or Direct from this Ad 
Send check or money order and ask for free booklet, 
“Hustles Heavy Hogs to Market.” 
6 Gals, at Creamery $1.60 per gal.. ............$ 7.80 
10. 1.25 per gal.12.50 
16 *. l.lOpergal.16.50 
32 “ ** “ 1.00 per gal.32.00 
65 . .90 per gal.49.50 
No chare* for kora or barrel*. Price* F. O. B. 
Noareat Doalor or Kanaaa City, Mo. 
THE MILKOLINE MFG. CO. 
347 Creamery Bldg. 
KANSAS CITY. MO. 
Distributors: 
Anderson & Borok, Fishkill, N* Y. 
W. J Blanchard, 880 Plymouth St..Abblngton, Maas. 
Frank S. Jones, 305 Lanvalo St., Baltimore), Md. 
REAL BUTTERMILK 
2V2C ga’lton 
“ Makes ’Em Grow Fast ” 
Feed Your Hogs and Poultry 
SEMI-SOLID BUTTERMILK 
It gets them to market earlier—keeps 
them healthy—and saves high-priced 
grain. Semi-Solid Buttermilk is pure, 
sterilized and pasteurized creamery but¬ 
termilk—with nothing but the water re¬ 
moved. Don’t accept substitutes or 
“modified buttermilk” containing sul¬ 
phuric acid. 
SAVES GRAIN —SAVESTIME—SAVES MONEY 
Use Semi-Solid Buttermilk regularly. 
Keeps fresh any length of time. Abso¬ 
lute guarantee on every barrel. Put up 
in SOO-lb. barrels equal to 1,000 gallons 
of buttermilk. 
Manufactured by 
CONSOLIDATED PRODUCTS CO., LINCOLN, NEBR. 
Send Your Order to 
I II MPCTnn St Pit 33 South Front Street 
. 11. nth I UK Ot l/U., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 
Shear 200 to 400 Sheep a Day 
with a Stewart Little Wonder. It consists of 
2 Stewart Power Shearing Ma¬ 
chines; 2 Stewart wide shears; 
12 combs (lower knife); 24 cut¬ 
ters (upper knife). 
1 power grinder for sharpening 
contbs and cutters. 
1—2 h. p. Little Wonder Gasoline 
Engine—high tension magneto. 
Engine may be used for other work after 
shearing. Price of complete outfit as de¬ 
scribed above $163.20. If not convenient 
to remit in full send 10% with order and 
pay balance on arrival. Return for full 
refund including freight, if not satisfied. 
CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHIFT COMPANY 
Dopt. C-I4I, 12th St- and Central Avo., Chicago, III. 
KEEP LIVESTOCK HEALTHY 
BY USING 
Kreso Dip No. 1 
(STANDARDIZED) 
Easy to use; efficient; economical; kills 
parasites; prevents disease. 
Write for free booklets on the Care of 
Livestock and Poultry. 
ANIMAL INDUSTRY DEPARTMENT OF 
PARKE, DAVIS & CO. 
DETROIT, MICH. 
JUDGING FARM ANIMALS, by C. S. 
Plumb; $2.25. A Practical Manual on this 
subject. For sale by Rural New-Yorker 
