mm 
1802 
Jht RURAL. NEW-YORKER 
DAIRY CWS 
100 Lbs.Net 
An n 
ji^ft^TEED ANA^foJi 
T° E WTQN hoi UNOER 
W NOT uuo» 
A Balanced Feed 
—Based Upon a Knowledge of the Needs of the Cow 
That’s why you get more milk—because Larro isn’t a one¬ 
sided ration but a nutritious balanced feed. 
Larro comes to you as a scientific mixture of just these ingredients— 
cottonseed meal, corn gluten feed, linseed oil meal, dried beet pulp, 
standard wheat bran, standard wheat middlings and a little salt—all 
compounded upon a definite knowledge of the needs of a cow. 
Pick Out One Cow to Provo the 
Larro **More Milk” Guarantee 
December 6, 1919 
How to Make Good Dairy Butter 
(Continued from Page 1796) 
business when it is at a miximum. The 
possibility of his enlarging his business in 
the future should be borne in mind, as 
should the fact that with proper cooling 
facilities it will at no time be necessary 
to churn as often as once a day, and prob¬ 
ably not oftener than once or twice eaea 
week in Winter. To get the best results 
the churn should be filled only half full. 
Hence, if a man was producing 16 gal¬ 
lons of cream a week, and was churning 
twice a week, he would need at least a 
20-gallon size churn. Better be a little 
large than too small. 
Ailing Animals 
Answered by Dr. A. S. Alexander 
Drying Off Cow; Dishorning 
1. I have a cow about three years old. 
She is now giving between 1 y 2 and two 
gallons of milk a day. She is due to 
freshen in two months (second calf). 
Ought I to dry her off or keep on milking 
her? 2. When could I cut her horns off 
with safety? n . l. b. 
Ohio. 
- .1- The cow should be milked up to 
within six weeks or so of calving and then 
be dried off in the usual way. 2. Do not 
dishorn her until she has fully recovered 
from calving. 
Pick out one cow—any cow you chooae 
—and let the gain in her milk yield prove 
the Larro guarantee. 
First carefully record the production of 
the cow for a week. Next beein to give 
her Larro (slowly at first allowing her 
a week to gradually make the change) 
and after that make another record of 
her production—comparing the total 
with the fijpire established before you 
started feeding Larrol 
If you aren’t getting more milk than you 
were before or if for any other reason 
you are dissatisfied take the two empty 
sacks and any Larro you have left back 
to your dealer and your money will be 
refunded immediately. 
If your local dealer does not have Larro 
in stock get in touch with us at once. 
DEALERS: Write for Proposition 
The L&rrowe Milling Co., 603 Larrowe Bldg., Detroit, U.S. A. 
Lambs Dying 
Can you tell me what is the matter 
with my lambs? They seem perfectly 
healthy when they go to the field in the 
morning, but at night I find one dead, or 
nearly so. I have lost three, but no sheep. 
New York. p. w. s. 
It would be impossible for anyone to 
give a confident opinion as to the cause 
of death in these cases. Sudden change 
of feed, or bloat from wet clover or Al¬ 
falfa would be likely causes. An investi¬ 
gation should be made and a post-mortem 
examination might enable a veterinarian 
to determine the cause of death. 
TAHROWTI 
products! 
£T*7 
THE READY RAIiON FOR DALEY COWS 
Hero la the attach¬ 
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detached in 15 seconds—no bolts, nuts or 
screws—and does not interfere with the 
regular use of the car. 
The ELMCO Auto Pood Orlndor replaces the 
pulley on tho power attachment, and couples 
direct without troublesome belts. Grinds all 
your feed—either coarse or fine—at 30 
bushels per hour without strain or damage 
to the engine. Indestructible steel burrs. 
These two machines save you hours of time 
and dollars of money. Makes life easier 
and profits better. 
Send today for name of nearest distributor 
and big Free circular with pictures and full 
description of tho ELMCO Ford Belt Power 
and Grinder Attachment, ELMCO Handy 
Concrete Mixer, and other money-savers. 
E. F. ELMBERQ A CO. 
80 Main St. Parkersburg, Iowa 
When you write advertisers mention 
The Rural New-Yorker and you’ll get 
a quick reply and a “square deal.” See 
guarantee editorial page. : : : 
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Separators are cuarantoad m J 
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and on a plan whereby they earn their 
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brings Free Catalog Folder. Buy from the 
manufacturer and aave money. 19J 
•Ubaugh-Dover Co. 2 t 7 t Marshall bi.cmcuo 
As low OH 
$10 
( For Hertzler k 
Zook Portable 
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Money refunded if not aatia- 
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Box 3 BollovlHo, Pa. 
Fistula 
Approximately 10,000 cases are 
successfully treated each yea r With 
Fleming’s Fistoform 
cperlence necessary; easy and almpie; lust n little 
tion every 6th day. Price $2.60 a bottle (war tax 
l! 
IS 
I No experience necessary; easy and sfmpie; just 
■ attention every 6th day. Price $2.60 a bottle (a _ __ 
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I FLEMING’S VEST-POCKET VETERINARY ADVISER 
9 Valuable for its information upon diseases of horses 
^Land cattle. 197 pages, 67 illustrations. Write today. 
^FlemingBros., Chemists va** 1 cK«5*SJml 
Delivered prices quoted on 
request. 
THE E. BIGL0W CO., New London, 0. 
SmokeTfour Own 
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A 6-Years’Success 
Don’t sell all your hogs and pay big butcher bills. 
Save enough for your own use ana smoke hams, 
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Can be operated in and out-doors. Buns on sawdust, 
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SMOKE house 
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GET FREE BOOK 
which tells when to butcher, about 
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258 McClun St. Bloomington, III. 
NOTICE 
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V oRKEK In Ohio. Prefer men who have horse or nuto. Address 
J. c. MULHOLLAND, General Delivery, Columbus, Ohio 
The Rural New Yorker, 333 W. 30th St.. Now York City 
Heaves 
We have a horse that has heaves. He 
is seven years old. fat but lazy. He has 
awful coughing spells and sometimes there 
is a dripping from his mouth when he 
coughs. He rubs hie neck and side of 
his head and has had two boils on his 
neck in the last few months. Some 
glasses were lost in the hay and they 
went through the cutting box and one 
piece was found in his feed box. I have 
though perhaps some got in his throat 
and hurts him. h. r. 
New York. 
Wet all feed with lime water. Feed 
oat straw or oat sheaves in Winter and 
green grass in Summer in preference to 
hay. Do not allow any bulky feed at 
noon if he has to work hard, and do not 
work him just after a meal. Night and 
morning give half an ounce of Fowler’s 
solution of arsenic and increase the dose 
gradually, if necessary, until he may 
take up to one ounce at a dose. Stop the 
medicine gradually, when no longer need¬ 
ed. taking 10 days or more to the process. 
Equine cough syrup may be given for the 
cough, if that persists when the treatment 
we have suggested has been given for 
some time. 
Spavin 
Is there a cure for a bone spavin with¬ 
out the horse being kept idle? W. M. 
New York. 
Lameness from spavin cannot be re¬ 
moved with certainty unless a prolonged 
rest is allowed. Treatment causes union 
to take place among the small bones of 
the hock joint that are affected by the 
exostosis and exercise defeats such a pur¬ 
pose. If you care to give full particulars 
about the ease we shall be glad to indicate 
the proper treatment. 
Blood in Milk 
Can you advise me what to do for a 
four-year-old heifer which commenced giv¬ 
ing bloody milk from one teat after being 
fresh about four months? Heifer is 
Guernsey and has good care. z. T. 
New Jersey. 
In such a case the cause of blood in the 
milk almost invariably is a growth in the 
duct of the teat; but in a few cases an 
attack of mammitis (garget) is the cause. 
If the growth is close to the tip of the 
teat it readily may be removed by opera¬ 
tion, but if it is high up the milk secre¬ 
tion in that quarter might as well be 
dried off, for an ordinary operation usual¬ 
ly fails or causes disastrous mammitis; 
while the correct operation of cutting 
through the walls for removal of the 
growth is somewhat formidable and ex¬ 
pensive. It can only be done by a trained 
surgeon, and he has to take great care 
not to cause infection. 
