1520 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
September 25, 1920 
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Behind Every New-Idea 
is a Written Guarantee 
You take no chances when you select a 
New-Ideaforyourhome. Rightback of every furnace 
is our binding written guarantee. If the New-Idea isn’t satis¬ 
factory, your money will be refunded promptly. It’s all written 
in the guarantee. There’s no possibility of any misunderstanding of just what 
is meant. Have the New-Idea dealer show you the guarantee before you buy. 
There are many other reasons why you will want the New-Idea features: 
Exclusive Frameless Feed Door—no loose joints to let dust and gas out 
into the cellar. Cup-joint Construction—joints always tight as furnace 
contracts and expands. Hot-Blast Feed Door—to utilize all fuel burned. 
Gas and Dust-Tight Register—gives you CLEAN, MOIST heat. Burns 
any Fuel—hard coal, soft coal. gas. wood. etc. Write for catalog and 
name of New-Idea dealer in your neighborhood. Expert heating advice free. 
NEW-IDEA 
Pipeless Furnace 
“The One You've Heard So Much About'* 
UTICA HEATER COMPANY 
Also manufacturers of “Superior” Warm Air Furnaces 
and “Imperial” Steam and Hot Water Boilers 
Box 50, UTICA, N. Y. 
Excellent proposition for the right kind of hard¬ 
ware dealers, implement dealers, etc. New- 
Idea dealers are “making good” everywhere. 
20.3 
The Queen 
T HE Jersey has been called the Queen of Dairy Cows. A better name 
would be the Queen of Dairy Profits. 200 years of scientific breed¬ 
ing has made her a butterf at producer without an equal in point of quan¬ 
tity and low cost. Never in the history of dairying have the advantages 
of the Jersey been so important to the farmer as they are today. 
Year after year, records prove Jerseys to be the profit breed. The 
facts are worth a small fortune to any working farmer wise enough 
to be guided by them. Let us send them free. 
The American 
Jersey Cattle Club 
324-G W. 23d St. 
An Institution for the 
JERSEYS 
HAMILTON irDCrVC 
FARM el LK9L I i3 
Several Grandsons of 
FERN’S OXFORD NOBLE 
P 5012 HC—Out of R. of M. Dams. Priced to 
SELL IMMEDIATELY 
HAMILTON FARM. GLADSTONE. N. J. 
Fosterfield’s Herd Registered JERSEYS 
ALL AGES. On account of being unable to see to 
my cattle personally I will make prices that will 
lead to business. CHARLES G. FOSTER, Y. 
O. Boxl73, Morristown, Morris Co., N. J. 
AYRSHIRES 
SOUTH FARM 
AYRSHIRES 
We are offering animals of all ages for sale. 
Let us know your wants. Visitors' welcome. 
GEORGE A. CROSS. Mgr. - Willoughby. Ohio 
JERSEYS 
FOR SALE 
T HREE Registered 
JERSEY Bull Calves 
Sired by Interested Meridale 
King, No. 155548, and out of 
Dams of Exceptional Merit. 
H. C. Shears, Supt., Hyde Park-on-Hudson, N.Y. 
Jersey Bull Calves and Heifers 
Herd Bulls; Champion Torono’s Son 
whose son sold at auction lor $7,500 
0wls-0ver-the-Top and Golden Maid’s 
Victor’s Jolly 
100 Head—No Reactions 
Ulsterdorp.Farms, Highland, N. Y. 
For Sale-Jersey Bulls and Heifers 
From 6 to 12 mos. old. Write, Satisfaction guar¬ 
anteed. BONO FARMS, Troy, Fa. 
Live Stock Questions 
Answered by Prof. F. C. Minkler 
Buying Fall Milking Cows 
Would you advise purchase of 10 cows, 
all to freshen this Winter, with no silage? 
I have oats, corn, buckwheat and clover 
hay. What do you recommend as a good 
grain ration for Holsteins to produce 
maximum flow of milk? Will clover sup¬ 
ply sufficient protein? I can sell Timothy 
liay to buy bran, middlings and oilmeal. 
Will beet pulp take place of silage? Have 
abundant pasture now, but I refer to 
Winter feeding. w. e. d. 
Whether or not it would pay for you 
to buy 10 cows due to freshen in Septem¬ 
ber and attempt to produce milk at a 
profit during the Winter without silage 
or clover hay, would depend upon a num¬ 
ber of factors. If you can do the bulk 
of the labor yourself, and have had ex¬ 
perience in selecting, feeding and main¬ 
taining dairy cows, you ought to be able 
to get considerably more than a new 
dollar for an old one for the Wi ter’s 
work. On the other hand, a dairyman 
who has to purchase dairy cows and, in 
addition, rely upon his feed dealer to pro¬ 
vide the bulk of the concentrates sup¬ 
plied, even with the price of milk in¬ 
creased as promised, has, I am sure, the 
chances against his succeeding under pres¬ 
ent conditions. After all. it is a matter 
of the particular conditions that surround 
and affect your own problem. It is i os- 
sible to produce milk economically with¬ 
out silage, provided you have the grains 
identified. No doubt your production 
would be substantially increased through 
the addition of silage, or even by substi¬ 
tuting beet pulp for the silage. Never¬ 
theless, there are a number of dairymen 
who are making milk at a profit without 
the use of any succulence at all. It 
would not do to rely exclusively upon 
your clover hay to produce sufficient pro¬ 
tein for feeding your dairy cows in milk. 
It would be necessary for you to purchase 
some oilmeal, gluteu. or cottonseed meal 
to supplement the oats, coru and buck¬ 
wheat. The following mixture is recom¬ 
mended : 400 lbs. of ground oats, 200 
lbs. of bran. 300 lbs. of cottonseed, 300 
lbs. of oilmeal, 400 lbs. of corn, 400 lbs. 
of buckwheat. 
It is not necessary to feed the wheat 
bran in case you have an abundance of 
clover hay and oilmeal could be used ex¬ 
clusively in case the price of cottonseed 
meal seemed out of proportion. At the 
present moment oilmeal is more econom¬ 
ical to buy than cottonseed meal, and gen¬ 
erally it yields more satisfactory results. 
You cannot afford to buy excessive 
amounts of either wheat bran or wheat 
middlings for feeding dairy cows, for 
neither of these products yields protein at 
a low unit cost. 
Moistened beet pulp is perhaps the best 
substitute for silage, yet for average pro¬ 
ducing cows it is considerably more ex¬ 
pensive. It has been demonstrated that 
corn will yield more matter per acre than 
is provided by any other of our available 
crops, and where this is put in silo and 
fed under farm conditions it is clearly the 
most economical source of digestible 
uutrieuts. Whether or not it would pay 
you to feed moistened beet pulp would 
depend upon the condition of the animals 
as they came into Winter quarters and 
the yield of milk they were producing. 
High producing cows require succulent 
feed, yet those in the lower classes that 
yield comparatively small amounts of 
milk per day are not usually responsive to 
such succulence. 
Grain with Silage 
What proportions of gluten meal and 
oilmeal should be used with the following 
for dairy cows on silage: TOO lbs. of 
eornmeal, 200 lbs. ground oats. 100 lbs. 
bran? R-b. 
In a ration containing 100 lbs. of corn- 
meal, 200 lbs. of ground oats. 100 lbs. of 
bran, I should add 150 lbs. of oilmeal and 
100 lbs. of gluteu. I am assuming that 
you have some silage that would add con¬ 
siderably to the carbohydrate, and that 
the roughage would consist of some le¬ 
gume hay, such as mixed clover or mixed 
Alfalfa. If you are feeding Timothy hay 
and do not have access to silage or succu¬ 
lence. then it would be to your advantage 
to increase both oilmeal and corumeal by 
50 lbs. 
HOLSTEINS 
Purebred Holstein Cows 
Return $1.54 for One 
dollar of Feed 
Even though you may regard your farm 
as a diversion or your hobby, you would 
doubtless prefer to see it self-supporting, 
and perhaps still take greater pride in it. 
for that very reason. Here are two or 
three facts! Holsteins are the largest, 
most vigorous, most even-tempered, the 
easiest-eared-for breed, and the greatest 
yielders of milk in the world. Their milk 
is the most evenly balanced in fat. sugar 
and proteids, and for that reason easily 
digested. It is everywhere recognized by 
the medical profession as absolutely the 
best for infant and invalid feeding as well 
as for general use. A herd of Holsteins 
will give you on the average $1.54 for 
every dollar’s worth of food they eat. 
Send for our free literature and look it 
over. Perhaps you will be interested in 
buying Holsteins. 
THE HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN ASSOCIATION 
105 Hudson Street 
Brattleboro, Vermont 
200 
BLACK and WHITES 
AND 
RED and WHITES 
200 
We buy and sell the very best cows obtainable, and 
solicit trade from buyers who want the best, covs 
weighing from 1000 to 1300 lbs.: some are fresh, bal¬ 
ance from 1 to 10 weeks away. It you want the best 
we want your business. And we can please you. We 
buy and sell continually and have 200 to selectfrom. 
F. L. PALMER & SON Moravia, N. Y. 
REGISTERED AND 
GRADE HOLSTEINS 
Get busy, you calf club pro¬ 
moters. I have 50 registered 
Oieifer calves, 3 to 10 mos. old, 
$1 OO each for the lot: choice, 
$1 26 . 20 registered and high 
cows, heifers and bulls, car of 
any age that you;«■ ant. % 
Holstein heifer calves, 320 
each, express paid, in lots of 5. 
JOHN C. REAGAN. Tully, N.Y. 
HOLSTEIN -FRIESIAN 
CATTLE 
Registered heifer and bull calves of 
excellent, breeding at farmers’ prices, 
Also a few choice fresh and springer 
cows. Write year wants. 
R. H. BEARD & SONS, Cortland, N. Y. 
DOUBLE KING SEGIS BREEDING 
Here is a show bull born in March whose 
aire is a son of KING LYONS, out of a 
85-lb. daughter of KING SEGIS. 11 is dam 
is by a son of KING SEGIS PONTIAC 
ALCARTRA, who combines in the closest 
degree the blood of all the great found¬ 
ation bulla. 
Write for prices and pedigrees 
Q. G. Burlingame, R. F. D. No. 2. Cazonovia, N. Y. 
Reg 
. Holstein Bull Call |® 5 * >ilcely n,arked 
ood breeding. Keg 
Heifer Calves, $50 upwards. Grade Holstein Heifer 
Calves. $15 to $25. HENRY K. JARVIS, Port Byron, N Y. 
Purebred Reg. Holsteins breeding. High Grade Hol¬ 
stein calves, either sex, $25 each. F. H. WOOD, Cortland. N. 1. 
H olsteln-Krleslan ll.lfer and Hull CnlTes. Pure bred register¬ 
ed and high grade. Splendid individuals and breeding. 
Heg. Puroc Pigs. 6RQWNCR0FT FARMS. McGrjw. Corilaml Co., HI. 
Reg. and HIGH GRADS COWS 
the kind that show a profit above high-priced Feed and 
Labor. K A KLINGER, Mousey, N.Y. “I'hone Ooun." 
F OR SALK—Highly bred registered Holstein and 
Guernsey young bulls at reasonable prices. Apply 
KLLIIKt.lt FA KM, Mountain liule, Sullivan Co., N. Y. 
MILKING SHORTHORNS 
"MILKING SHORTHORN BULL BARGAINS.” 
Blossom's Signet, July 30; dark roan; dam 
Rose Blossom out of Lucky Girl II. of M.; 
5,334 llis.; 2 vr. old; sire Marsh Hill Glenside. 
Price $50. 
Lyndon Signet. July 17: handsome road; dam 
Pride of Lyndon 54th; sire Marsh Hill Glenside. 
Price $75. 
Thorndale Signet, June 30; white; dam Rose 
Thorndale by Roger Countryman 2d; sire Marsh 
Hill Glenside. Price $100. 
Loobagh Waterloo, Oct. 25, 1919: roan; dam 
Glenside Waterloo. R. of M. for 3 consecutive 
vears; sire Imported Loobagh Wellington '-d, 
out of Ilainbleden Daisy 13th; av. 10,000 lbs. 
milk for 3 consecutive years. Price $125. 
Marsh Hill Glenside. May 30. 1918: roan; dam 
Oxford Beau tv bv Bonny Baron, grand champ- at 
Vt. State Pair: sire Glenside Signet out of im¬ 
ported Milkmaid; 11.320 lbs. milk; by General 
Clay. Price $200. EVERETT COX. 
Lowell, Mass. 
Milking Shorthorns KS 
for milk and meat. The Durham cow of our foieratlif >■ 
Inquiries invited. WALNUT GROVE FARM. Wastungtonville, N- >■ 
When you write advertisers mention 
The Rural New-Yorker and you II get 
a guick reply and a “square deal, oee 
guarantee editorial page. - 
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