(778 
W* RURAL. NEW-YORKER 
November 20, 1020 
or Daily Gws.Cihvj, 
Swine, Poultry, 
on4 Horses HE 
ET IT 
ere 
\ 
Why TI-O-GA 
Feed Service? 
We advertise TI-O-GA Feed Service because we believe 
that Service which is of real value to the users of our 
feeds is our only justification for being in business. 
To make TI-O-GA Feed Service of real value we have 
made a careful study of feeding problems as they exist on 
the farm. W ith the service of one of the best feed and nutri¬ 
tion experts in the country, we have made use of the best 
scientific knowledge coupled with practical experience, to 
meet those conditions and make feeding more profitable. 
Crops of different nutritive value are raised which bring 
most money when fed on the farm. To classify the differ¬ 
ent kinds of roughage and determine what concentrates are 
needed to supply what the roughage lacks and form bal¬ 
anced rations with them are complex problems which we 
solve for you in a practicable way. 
TI-O-GA 
1 FEED SERVICE 
has classified all roughage into three groups according to 
their nutritive value and furnishes three brands'of TI-O-GA 
Dairy Feed to combine with the respective groups. These, 
when fed as intended, furnish required nutrition at lowest 
cost and insure maximum milk production when changes 
are made in the kind of roughage fed. 
Red Brand TI-O-GA Dairy Feed 
to be fed with low protein succulent roughage: Silage, Pasturage, 
Green Fodder, etc. 
White Brand TI-O-GA Dairy Feed 
to be fed with medium protein dry roughage: Timothy Hay, 
Mixed Hay, Corn Fodder, etc. 
Blue Brand TI-O-GA Dairy Feed 
to be fed with high protein dry roughage: Clover Hay, Alfalfa, etc. 
In each case the cow gets the same amount of nutrition 
in the same nutritive ratio and you get more money from 
your roughage. 
If your dealer does not have the kind of TI-O-GA Dairy Feed to 
balance your roughage, advise us and we will arrange for some nearby 
dealer to supply you. 
T1-O-G A Dairy Feeds are guaranteed satisfactory in every particular. 
Our book on IT-O-GA Feed Service and explanation of how the 
three feeds give the same results, sent free on request. 
Tioga Mill & Elevator Co. 
Waverly, N. Y. 
, WHITE 
brand 
I 
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;:V{ if;.| 
iff • 
Use the TI-O-GA Dairy Feed 
which forms a balanced ration 
with your own roughage. 
4 
I hi \ 
Tho same care/'u/ service is 
furnishod through: 
TI-O-GA Brood Sow and Pig 
Feed. 
TI-O-GA Growing Shoot Feed. 
TI-O-GA Fattening Hog Feed. 
Tl-O-GA Chick Feed. 
TI-O-GA Growing Mash. 
TI-O-GA Growing Grains. 
TI-O-GA Laying Food. 
1 1-O-GA Poultry Grain*. 
TI-O-GA Coif Food. 
TI-O-GA Horse Feed. 
Colonel’* Ration (Full Feed for 
Horse*). 
Milk and Live Stock News 
While there have been several auctions 
in our locality whero sometimes entire 
dairies have been disposed of during the 
Fall months, they have in almost all cases 
been purchased by neighboring farmers, 
and will he producing milk during the 
coming Winter the same as usual. With 
the present reduced price of grain and a 
fair price for milk, I see no reason why 
the usual amount of nvlk will not la; pro¬ 
duced this Winter. The hay crop was 
quite light on many of the hill farms, and 
in some instances iu the valley, but there 
were some farms which produced as large 
a crop as last year. Corn has had a 
splendid opportunity to come to near 
maturity during this beautiful Fall, and a 
large quantity of silage has been harvest¬ 
ed. The potato crop was very large for 
the acreage, but in many fields the rot 
has reduced the final yield to perhaps 
nearly half the normal yield per acre, 
the acreage I believe to be somewhat 
below normal. We have bad one of the 
finest Falls I ever knew for doing work 
and bringing late crops to maturity. 
Practically all crops have been secured 
and Fall' plowing is now in progress. I 
should say that general conditions were 
above the average, and I sec no reason 
why general prospects for fanning are not 
at least normal or nearly so. , 
Tioga Co., N. Y. D. P. WITTER. 
Chickens, 25c per lb.; eggs, 65c; butter, 
65c per lb.; wheat, $2 per bu.; oats, 60c; 
corn, new, $1 per lm.; hay, .$25 to $30 
per ton; pork, 10 to 20c per lb. Apples, 
plenty, selling from 50c to $1 per bu. Seed¬ 
ing was late this Fall, as last harvest was 
damaged very much with the Ilessian fly. 
Corn crop is pretty good. Farm land is 
high in price. Tenants hard to get; hired 
help harder yet to get at $3 to $4 per 
day. The dairy business looks brighter 
for Mifflin County, and a large new con- 
densery opened operations recently in 
Lewistown, the center of the county. 
Mifflin Co., Pa. F.it. n. 
Wheat, $2 per bu. 
70c; corn, 00c to $1.20. 
rye, $1.50; oats. 
, 25. Milk at ship¬ 
ping station, $3.88 per cwt.. 4 per cent 
test. Milk at creamery, $2.80 per cwt. 
(natrons get skim-milk .in return) ; eggs, 
70c per doz.; potatoes, 80c per bu.; ap¬ 
ples, 50 to 75c ner bu. Hogs, dressed, 
$20 per cwt.; chickens. 22 to 25c per lb., 
live weight. Farmers ray $3 per day and 
board for corn-husking; or 10 to 15c 
per shocks, without board ; buskers hard 
to get. The crops without exception are 
good. Corn and potatoes aro above nor¬ 
mal. A. F. R. 
Berks Co., Pa. 
Wheat, $1.00 per bu.; corn, $1; oats, 
50c; anplos a good crop, 75c a bu. at the 
orchard ; country butter, 60 per lb.; eggs. 
62c per doz.; old bens, 25c per lb.; young 
roosters. 20c. Milk for September, $3.06 
per cwt. for 4 per Cent test. They take 
the average number of pounds for Octo¬ 
ber. November and December as their 
basis for the remaining nine months, for 
which they pay milk prices; for the over¬ 
run of the average they pay only butter 
prices. Potatoes sold at $1 a bu. shortlv 
after Iwing raised; rotted badly. Six- 
week-old p>gs. $1 to $6 apiece. Wheat 
was a good crop; oats also, but much 
was left in the fie'd owing to wet 
weather; both good in Duality. Corn fair. 
87 per cent, of crop. The general outlook 
for ns is on’v fair. Putting in long da vs 
is the only way to get the work done. No 
help to be had. The only help is for one 
farmer to help the other out. W. ir. A. 
Juniata Co., Pa. 
This is not a very large locality for 
dairying. There is no milk shipped with¬ 
in 30 miles. This is mostly a lumbering 
country. Farmers make butter and it is 
sold to the stores and families in the v : l- 
lage. Tho separated milk is fed out to 
pigs and calves. Each farmer has from 
one to three pigs, and stock runs from 
three to 15 head, about four to eight cows, 
and the rest young stock. There was a 
fair crop of hay and oat fodder: no silage 
raised here. The farmers are killing off 
about one-third of their stock, and will 
have about enough hnv to e«»vv tk'-m 
through. They feed quite a little grain, 
all being shipped in here, as we are 1 R 
miles from tho donot. Corn and meal 
sells for $3 55 per cwt. Potatoes are the 
best cash crop the people have here; tips 
year about one-third of crop was rotten 
We get 65c per lh. for our butter, and 
eggs at present are worth 75c per dozen. 
T am about the only one here who shins 
meat or butter or eggs away. I buy from 
some of tho farmers and then with mv 
own T ship to New York, but express 
rates and commission rates are Inch, so T 
do not make much. Beef is selling he*e 
for 16c per lb., dressed, and hard to sell 
for that. Bast year is about the first year 
we ever shipped potatoes away: there 
were about 1,500 bu. shipped. They are 
$1 50 per bu. here tnw, almost everyone 
holding them until Soring, as we got $1 
per bu. here last Spring for them. Tiny 
is selling from $25 to $30 a ton here now ; 
mostly loose hay: little pressed. E. M. 
Hamilton Co., N. Y. 
“Auntie, did you ever get a proposal?” 
“Once. dear. A gentleman asked me over 
the telephone to nrnrrv him. hut he had 
the wrong number.”- New Haven Regis¬ 
ter. 
Unadilla 
Convenience 
The Unadilla Silo is not 
only a perfect silo, but con¬ 
venient to use. No one 
knows better the value of 
the unique Unadilla ladder 
than the man who has had 
to be without it. 
Those who have used Unadillas 
would never be without its con¬ 
veniences, which can only be had 
in the Unadilla. 
Send for the big, well illustrat¬ 
ed Unadilla Catalog. Write for 
our special discount for early 
orders and open territory where 
good agents are wanted. 
Unadilla Silo Co. 
Box C Unadilla, N. Y. 
Genuine 
Aspirin 
Name “Bayer" means genuine 
Say “Bayer"—Insistl 
Say “Bayer” when buying Aspirin. 
Then you are sure of getting true “Bayer 
Tablets of Aspirin”—genuine Aspirin 
proved safe by millions and prescribed by 
physicians for over twenty years. Ac¬ 
cept only an unbroken “Bayer package” 
which contains proper directions to relievo 
Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, 
Rheumatism, Colds and Fain. Ilandy tin 
boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Drug¬ 
gists also sell larger “Bayer packages.” 
Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufac¬ 
ture Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. 
Butter and Cheese 
MADE AT HOME 
ON THE FARM 
will relieve the Milk Situation 
CHR. HANSENS 
Rennet Tablets and 
Cheese Color Tablets 
Butter Color and 
Buttermilk Tablets 
(Lactic Ferment Culture in tablet 
form for preparing a starter) can be 
obtained from your grocer or druggist 
or direct by mail from the manufacturer. 
CHR. HANSEN'S LABORATORY 
Little Fall*, N. Y. 
Write us for information 
[ 
When you write advertisers mention 
The Rural New- Yorker and you'll get 
a quick reply and a "square deal.” S< 
guarantee editorial page. : 
oe 
