956 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
Way 1G, 1920 
the Separator with the MILLION DOLLAR BOWL 
T HE first impression you get when you see 
an EMPIRE-BALTIC is— simplic¬ 
ity. Almost automatically the design which 
brought efficiency brought simplicity also. 
For efficiency demanded compactness and freedom 
from “ginger-bread work"— a machine that could be 
used and misused without affecting its efficiency in 
skimming. The EMPIRE-BALTIC, the Separator 
with the Million Dollar Bowl, is the product of 
years of study and experiment by a score of the 
foremost separator engineers. It sets a new standard 
of separator performance. 
The Million Dollar Bowl is self-centering and 
self-balancing; practically no vibration; and 
so does not agitate the milk; it skims clean 
all the time; it is easy to turn, frictionless; 
once adjusted it is adjusted for life; its discs 
are interchangeable — a great convenience 
in cleaning and 
assembling. It is Ajar*, 
the last word in fcjajjfl 
Bowl construe- , // MV 
tion — Simple, 
efficient, con- j a V 
venient and prac- '*?w 
tically everlasting. gKjpwp* 
4 % a You II hnd other sep- 
*4 arators as good looking 
as the EMPIRE-BALTIC— 
no manufacturer has a corner on 
Rood looks. You’ll find other Separators made, like the 
EMPIRE-BALTIC, out of the best materials obtainable—any¬ 
one can buy the best grades of materials. But you’ll find only 
one Separator with the Million Dollar Bowl — on exclusive 
EMPIRE-BALTIC feature—fully covered by basic patents. 
Clip and mail the coupon below. 
EMPIRE CREAM SEPARATOR CO., Bloomfield, N. J. 
Manufacturers of Empire Milkers and Gasoline Engines 
S Chicago, Syracuse, San Francisco and Toronto, Canada 
EMPIRE CREAM SEPARATOR COMPANY 
Box 102-S, Bloomfield, N. J. 
Gentlemen: 
Kindly send me literature regarding the Separator with the Million 
lEMPIRE-BAlJtC 
Town .- ■ 
Your ‘Dealer’s Name■ 
Tlio“Family Coat of Arms’* 
of the leading line of 
Dairy Machinery—EMPIRE 
Figure the Difference in Cost 
A few years ago it was possible to hire com¬ 
petent farm help for $30 or $35 a month. It 
wasn't necessary then to checkup on everything 
that the hired man did, so long as he was busy. 
Today your hired man iscosting you from $150 
to S160 a month, 'lake pencil and paper and 
figure it out for yourself. Figure up what it 
costs you to board and room him, to do his wash¬ 
ings and other things, to say nothing of the 
wages you are paying him. 
You can’t afford to have your high priced hired 
help doing the muuy little jobs that are a part 
of the daily routine on every farm. You can well 
afford to have your hired man milking the cows 
or plowing the corn but you ore losing monev 
when he is pumping water by hand, grind ingfet-d, 
running the sheller and doing other little jobs. 
Let a Galloway farm engine do them. Release 
your help for work that is more importent—more 
productive. You’ll save big money in a year’s 
tirns. The engine will more than pay for itself. 
from Factory—Easy Payments 
Direct 
Shipped direct from the fuctory on Galloway’s factory to farm plan. The sav¬ 
ing goes into your own pocket. You have your choice of five easy buying plans— 
cash, bank deposit, half cash-half note, full note, or installment. Seleot the 
plan which suits you best. • 
\Airiffa ? e *' Galloway’S great engine book. See for yourself 
ww I itu • \M%nay how Galloway engines solve the labor problem on the 
farm. There is a size for every farm need. Shipped complete and ready to run 
from nearby points. Saves you money on freight. Write today for low prices on 
all engine sizes and descriptive literature. 
WILLIAM GALLOWAY. President 
THE WILLIAM GALLOWAY COMPANY 
275 Galloway Station WATERLOO, IOWA 
F =~-” 
When 
L 
=*s 
quick 
you write advertisers mention The R. N.-Y. and you’ll get a 
reply and a “square deal.” See guarantee editorial page. 
Live Stock Questions 
Answered by Prof. F. C. Minkler 
Heifer with Scours 
I have a Jersey heifer two years old 
that 1 bought about two weeks ago. She 
had the scours when I got her, and her 
bowels are exceptionally loose yet. She 
lias a very keen appetite for grain feed, 
hut minces over corn fodder and hay. She 
is very thin, but her eyes look bright. I 
am anxious to bring her around, as she 
comes from a very good cow. J. it. C. 
New Jersey. 
In order to correct the laxative condi¬ 
tion that you describe in your Jersey 
heifer I would suggest that she be denied 
all grain for one full day. At the end of 
this period she should lie given a dose of 
Epsom salts, say three-fourths of a pound 
in a pint, of molasses diluted with a quart 
of water. Follow this with a grain ration 
consisting of equal parts of oats, bran 
and cornmeal. and let her have all of the 
Timothy hay that she will eat. The 
chances are that you will have to keep 
her on a limited diet for perhaps a week, 
after which time the grain can be in¬ 
creased to normal and the ration stand¬ 
ardized by the addition of an equal part 
of oilmen! or cottonseed meal. Probably 
sin 1 has been poisoned in some way, and 
by reducing the feed and allowing her 
access to only such feeds as I have men¬ 
tioned the trouble will no doubt be abated. 
You do not state what your normal grain 
ration may be*, but if slie fails to respond 
to this treatment it is possible that she 
may have some intestinal infection that 
will require some medical treatment. 
If 
s. 
eor- 
t he 
Hog Cholera Problems 
I am trying to raise some Duroc pigs. 
East Fall I lost a good many by bog 
cholera, but saved much of my breeding 
stock. They were given the double treat¬ 
ment in July, on account of a scare 
caused by hog cholera in a herd some 
miles away. We lost one (big sow in 
Align t, a whole lot in September and 
October, and the serum was given them 
again. Now the veterinary tells me that 
having given the double treatment to the 
breeding sows. I must keep on giving to 
the little ones, lest they take the cholera 
from their mothers, who have it in their 
blood. Is there any truth in this? 
so. how should it be done? n. r,. 
New Jersey. 
Your veterinarian has advised you 
rectly. When once one institutes 
double treatment as a preventive against 
hog cholera and uses both serum and 
virus for inoculation it is cssoutial that 
lie treat every single pig that is produced 
on the premises after the initial injection 
with both serum and virus; otherwise 
infection is bound to prevail and losses 
from hog cholera will occur. It has been 
clearly demonstrated that pigs once 
treated with virus are constantly giving 
of! germs of this disease and that the 
premises quite generally are infected. 
There is a difference of opinion as to 
Whether it is wise to inject nursing pigs 
with serum alone, this being followed 
with serum and virus two or three weeks 
after the pigs are weaned. 1 favor this 
method of inoculation, and am convinced 
that it is more permanent and serves as 
a greater protection than the practice of 
injecting nursing pigs with both serum 
and virus when they are still with their 
mother. The Bureau of Animal Industry 
at Trenton would no doubt be glad to 
give, you any additional details and the 
service, that they are offering upon appli¬ 
cation i 
Preparing for Silage 
I am going to put up a silo 10x30 and 
I wish to know what kind of corn I can 
plant with Soy beans, and how. 1 wish 
to brush off the ears of corn before filling 
silo to have them for grain, and T wish 
to have the Soy (beans to substitute for 
the ears of corn. What kind of corn must 
T plant with the beans, and how? 
Willimantie, Conn. M. L. 
For your section perhaps the best re- 
sults will follow the use of a Hint variety 
of corn, and Luce’s Favorite is perhaps 
the most extensively used variety in your 
State. It will mature under conditions 
that prevail in your district, and it is 
well suited for silage pui poses. I would 
not advise the planting of Soy beans and 
corn in the same area. You will exper¬ 
ience more or less difficulty in harvesting 
the corn, especially if it is weedy. We 
have obtained much better results by 
planting the corn in the field by itself 
and drilling the Soy beans in still another 
area, harvesting them both at the same 
time, and running in one ton of Soy beans 
with each three or four tons of corn. 
This makes a desirable mixture, and it 
is much easier handled. Of course you 
realize that when you take off the ears 
of corn from your silage you are reduc¬ 
ing its feeding value very materially, and 
that Sov beans will not replace the car¬ 
bohydrates lost when tile cars are re¬ 
moved. Soy beaus contribute protein to 
silage when they are harvested, as you 
suggest, while the greatest amount of 
carbohydrate in corn is found in the car 
itself. In order to obtain the best result 
in growing Soy (beans the ground must 
lie inoculated; that is. the seed must be 
treated by (lie culture method, else inocu¬ 
lated soil must be distributed on the area 
intended for growing the Soy beaus. 
Warranted toRive Satisfaction 
Gombault's 
Caustic Balsam 
Has I mitators But No Oompetitors 
A Safe, Speedy and Positive Cure for 
Curb, Splint, Sweeny. Capped Hock, 
Strained Tendons, Founder, Wind 
Puffs, and all lameness from Spavin, 
Ringbone and other bony tumors. 
Cures all skin diseases or Parasites, 
Thrush. Removes all Bunches from 
Horses or Cattle. 
As a Human Remedy for Rheumatism, 
Sprains, Sore Throat, etc., if is invaluable. 
Every bottle of Caustic Balsam sold is 
Warranted to give satisfaction. Price 
$1.75 per bottle. Sold by druggists, or 
sent by express, charges paid, with full 
directions for Its use !*■“ Send for descrip¬ 
tive circulars, testimonials, etc. Address 
The Lawrence-Williams Co., Cleveland, 0. 
£BS0RB1NE 
STOPS 
LAMENESS 
from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone, 
Splint, Curb,-Side Bone, or similar 
troubles and gets horse going sound. 
It acts mildly but quickly and good re¬ 
sults are lasting. Does not blister 
or remove the hair and horse can 
be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with 
each bottle tells how. S2.50 a bottle 
delivered. Horse Book 9 R free. 
ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment 
for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, En¬ 
larged Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins; 
heals Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell you 
more if you write. $1.25 a bottle at dealers 
or delivered. Liberal trial bottle for 10c stamps. 
W. F. YOUNG. INC., 88 Temple St., Springfield, Mass. 
r $3 Package ™ 
guaranteed to givo 
satisfaction or 
monoy rofundod 
$1 Package sufficient 
for ordinary cases. 
Postpaid on receipt of price 
Write for descriptive booklets 
MINERAL'S 
HEAVE 50 
Booklet 
Free 
NEGLECT 
Will Ruin 
Your Horse 
Sold on 
Its Merits 
BEND TODAY 
AGENTS 
WANTED 
yeare 
■COMPOUND 
VINEBAL HEAVE REMEDY CO.. 461 fourth Are.. Pittsburg, P* 
PREVENT 
BLACKLEG 
VACCINATE WITH 
BLACKLEG VACCINE 
(BLACKLEGOIDS) 
BLACKLEG AGGRESS1N 
(GERM-FREE BLACKLEG VACCINE) 
BLACKLEG FILTRATE 
(GERM-FREE BLACKLEG VACCINE) 
WRITE FOR FREE HOOK LETS. 
ANIMAL INDUSTRY 1>HI* AHTMKNT OF 
PARKE, DAVIS & COMPANY 
IIKTUOIT, MICU. 
Fistula & E vu" 
LI 
■ Approximately 10.000 eases arc 
■ aucccafully treated each year with 
Fleming’s Fist of orm 
H No experience necosMary; ••any and tiimp»e; just a little 
■ attention every 6th dny. Price $2.60 a bottle (war tax 
I paldj—monay refunded if It fail*. Send for free copy of 
B FLEMING'S VEST-POCKET VETERINARY ADVISER 
I Valuable for ita information upon diseases of horses 
^^vand cattle. 1D7 pages, 67 illustrations. Write today. 
Fleming Bros., Chemists 
LIGHTNING RODS) 
9 1 per ft. 99% pure copper 
2C Direct to you, no middleman ! 
i If goods when recoived arc not satisfactory 
^return to us, wo will pay freight both vraya. 
I Veil instructions with cadi order. Write us. 
I International Lightning Rod Co. ] 
I Dopt H SOUTH BK.ND, IND. 
