1013 
RURAL NEW-YORKER 
November 27, 1920 
Eft 
ftlfe® <§®w 
The 
DE LAVAL 
MILKER 
Pulso-Pump 
(.The Pulso-Pump is not shown 
in the part of the Milker installa¬ 
tion pictured here. It is placed 
toith the power in any conven¬ 
ient part of the barn ) 
The De Laval Pulso- 
Pump produces the vacuum 
which draws the milk from 
the cows, and it also con¬ 
trols the action of every 
Udder Pulsator. 
nis combination in one unit of the vacuum-producing 
and the pulsation-controlling features of the Pulso-Pump is 
a decided forward step in milking machine construction. 
The mechanism of the Pulso-Pump is entirely housed in to 
keep the oil in and the dirt out; it runs in oil, evenly and quietly. 
The De Laval Milker is a distinctly different type of milk¬ 
ing machine. It is alternating, positive, uniform and gentle in 
action—andrequiresnoadjustmentofany kind. It is faster, more 
reliable and more sanitary than any other method of milking. 
Write to nearest De Laval office for Milker 
Catalogue, mentioning number of cows milked 
THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO. 
165 Broadway 
NEW YORK 
29 East Madison Street 
CHICAGO 
61 Beale Street 
SAN FRANCISCO 
ABSOHBINE 
** TRADE MARK BEG;U.S!PAT. Of F. 
Reduces Strained, Puffy Ankles# 
Lymphangitis, Poll Evil, Fistula, 
Boils, Swellings; Stops Lameness 
and allays pain. Heals Sores, Cuts, 
bruises, Boot Chafes. It is a 
SAFE ANTISEPTIC AND GERMICIDE 
Does not blister or remove the 
Bair and horse can be worked. Pleasant to use. 
02. SO a bottle, delivered. Describe your cate 
for special instructions and Dook 5 R free. 
ABSORBING, JR., tntlieptic liniment for mankind, re¬ 
duce, Strain,, Painful. Knotted. Swollen Vein,. Concea* 
trated—only a few drop, required at an application. Price 
#1.25 per bottle at deiler* or delivered. 
W. F. YOUNfl, INC.. 88 Tamala at., SprinffUid. Mask. 
MINERAL' 
in use 
over 
HEAVER 
.COMPOUND 
Booklet 
Free 
NEGLECT 
Will Ruin 
Your Horse 
Sold on 
Its Merits 
■ END TODAY 
AGENTS 
WANTED 
$3.25 BOX' 
gurairtaad to glv# 
satisfaction or 
an assay refund sd. 
$1.10 Box sufficient 
for ordinary cases. 
Price include* war tax. 
Postpaid on receipt of price. 
Write for descriptive booklet, f 
SINEBAl HEAVE REMEDY CO., 4G1 Fourth An., Pittsburg, Pa 
GwylaCOii tiirm 
I9USE-CHASE 
“The Final Answer to 
the Louse Question” 
Absolutely kills the lice on your cattle, 
swine, poultry, horses and sheep. Money 
back if it fails. Used and recommended 
by state colleges and thousands of breeders. 
Safe, easy and economical to use. Price 
$1.00 per pkg., from your dealer or write : 
GRAYLAWN FARMS, Inc., BoxK-9, Waterbury, Vi. 
POSITIVELY GUARANTEED 
I •l1Nlttt1lllflllllllllllltlllillUllllllllltlllllltlllltlltllMlllllllllllllllllllllll!llllmllllmlllltltlllllllllt|uzfml; 
DIGESTER TANKAGE 
FOR HOGS 
| Write for prices, feed- 
| ing directions, etc. 
1 IDEAL RENDERING CO. 
NORTH WALES, PA. 
*KAM 
ifiintimnnmiinnnTiiiniiiinniiuniiniiiiinniniiiin—iiiinmniiiiiinii 
WILSON CELEBRATED MILLS. 
No. 1 Mill for grinding Dry 
Bonea, Oyator Shells, Grit and 
Grain for poultry. 
PhoephaLe Mills, Croon Bone 
and Clover Cutters, Feed 
‘Mixers for Poultry Feeding, 
Mills of nil sizes for all pur¬ 
posed. Hand and power. 
Write for illustrated Cata¬ 
logue nnd prices. 
WILSON BROS. 
Box 15 Easton, Pa. 
Reichard’s Meat and Bone Tankage 
is absolutely indispensable to Growing Hogs, because it furnishes 25% Bone 
Phosphate in addition to large amounts of animal Protein and Fat, which 
Nature demands in building up Frame Work and Muscular Tissue. 
Made of selected materials and sold at a reasonable price. For descriptive 
literature, prices and other information, address, 
ROBERT A. REICHARD 
19th & W. LAWRENCE STS. ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA 
Dairymen and Oleo 
No More for Me 
I have just finished reading what 
E. L, S. bad to #say about oleo on page 
1708, also your reply, and though it is 
past my bedtime, I feel compelled to write 
you and say that though he or she is 
“lined up" with the enemy, I am on the 
other side. I have felt the same as 
E. L. S. for some time, and could not 
see why I should pay 70c for one pound 
of butter when I could get two pounds of 
“nut butter” for the same price, but have 
felt guilty every time I have bought any. 
I make cream and sell to retail trade at 
$1 per quart for 85 per cent cream, and 
begrudged paying 70c for butter, but I 
am happy to tell you that no more oleo 
is going to be found on our table. If 
the dairymen do not help each other we 
cannot hope to win out. s F. wardneb. 
Why Not Use Oleo? 
I have just read your editorial on 
page 1708 in regard to dairymen using 
butter substitutes. I am not just at 
present using “nut oleo,” but we have 
done so sometimes, and may do it again. 
I know the theory is all to stand up for 
each other in our own lines; but if a man 
could feed his pigs something cheaper 
than corn, should he hold to corn to help 
keep up a good demand for corn? And 
must a farmer wear all-wool clothes, even 
if he cannot afford to do so, in order to 
help the sheepman get a good living price 
for his wool? Can’t a farmer wear can¬ 
vas shoes? When it comes to our pocket- 
books, we cannot go by sentiment wholly, 
nor is it treason to wear shoddy cloth if 
we must. Now give me what is coming 
to me and I will try to swallow it. 
Connecticut. Joseph bakeb. 
What a Dairyman Thinks 
As I was reading The R. N.-Y. last 
night I saw something that made me 
mad. It was where E. L. S. was te’Vn" 
about producing milk and then turning 
around and buying oleo. He says he will 
continue to use it while present conditions 
prevail. I wonder if E. L. S. realizes 
that it’s just such men that are making 
conditions what they are at present? It 
does beat all how some men will cut their 
own throats. Perhaps it is a good thing 
we do not all look at things just alike; 
if we did, I am sure some people would 
be put out of business. Only a few days 
ago I went into one of the stores 1 in our 
town, and my wife was with me. We in¬ 
tended to do quite a lot of trading in 
clothing and so on for Winter. As I was 
standing at the counter waiting some 
came in to trade, and some bought oleo. 
While I was standing waiting I began to 
get mad, and the more I thought of it the 
madder I got. I called my wife over near 
me and said: “We’ll go home.” But 
she said she had not done her trading. I 
said we would not do gny there. After 
we got out to come home I explained to 
her why I left. “Now,” I said, “it’s just 
like this: Those people are doing busi¬ 
ness in a farming town, and they expect 
the farmers’ trade, hut if we had a couple 
of jars of butter in our car that was not 
sold, those people would not handle our 
butter, but they will sell all the oleo and 
other substitutes they can to put us farm¬ 
ers out of business, eo I made up my 
mind we would go home and send away 
for what we wanted. In that way our 
money goes right out of our own town, 
which I think is not right, but I have 
seen country merchants play that old 
trick till I am sick of it, and just so long 
as they try to do me, I will pay them 
back in their own coin.” o. w. u. 
Stringy Milk 
Can you tell me why milk and also 
the cream on it should turn stringy as 
early ae 12 hours after milking? Cow 
appears in good condition, perfectly 
healthy; no offensive taste to either milk 
or butter. n. A. n. 
New York. 
The cow is seldom to blame in such 
cases, as bacteria in the milk utensils, 
or getting into the milk, causes the 
stringy or ropy condition. To determine 
this, however, set a- sample of milk from 
each quarter of the udder in a separate 
sterilized vessel. In this way it will be 
possible to determine if one quarter of 
the udder is giving gargety milk which 
affoc f "d all of the milk with which it is 
mixed. In that event it would be best 
to dry off the milk secretion in the af¬ 
fected quarter, or to allow a calf to nurse. 
If the milk is found to be sound when 
drawn from the cow again, set a num¬ 
ber of samples of it in separate sterilized 
vessels and into each in turn put some¬ 
thing that possibly may carry the infec¬ 
tive bacteria. For instance, put a little 
wash water into one and into another 
water from the cooling tank, and into 
others dust from the stable, udder, milk- 
house, etc. If the source is thus fouud; 
remove it. and afterward more carefully 
sterilize all milk utensils. a. s. A. 
Some one asked a Long Island man 
whether he found that poultry,keeping 
paid. “I can’t say that it pays me,” was 
the reply, “but I think that it nays 
my boy Harry.” “How’s that?” “Well, 
you see, I bought him the fowls. I have 
to pay for their keep and buy the eggs 
from him, and he eats them.” 
SILOS 
S END for the Globe Catalog 
now and learn why the Globe 
Silo so quickly earned an en¬ 
viable reputation. 
One reason is its extension roof 
which enabled owners to "use 
every foot of silo they paid for. 
A few feet of an extra, scientifi¬ 
cally built roof made a full silo 
possible, after silage settled. 
Write today for catalog, prices and 
special discounts on early orders. 
Good agents can have open 
territory. 
Globe Silo Co. 
2-12 Willow St., Sidney, N. Y. 
CRAINE TRIPLE WALL 
Why It Has 
Three Walls 
The Three Walls of the CRAINE 
SILO insure strength and perfect 
silage. 
Two walls of wood 
with the grain crossed, 
and a layer of imper¬ 
vious Silafelt between, 
make a strong, hand¬ 
some silo. There are 
no iron hoops or lugs. 
CRAINE SILOS serve 
a lifetime, because 
each square inch of 
silo is strongly sup¬ 
ported against strain 
from any direction. 
Rebuild your old 
stave silo the Crainelox 
way at about one-half 
the cost of a new silo. 
Send for CRAINE 
SILO literature and 
special discounts on 
early orders. 
Craine Silo Company 
Box 110, Norwich. New York 
RAW HU 
Eggg^S>ervice| 
We never consider the mailing of our check 
the end of any transaction. The trapper 
must bo satisfied. That is why shippers 
have been dealing with us lor ten years. 
—> Proof that we Satisfy-*— 
Mr. Warenofp : Received check yesterday for $50.00 
in payment for furs. Same is satisfactory. Your grades 
exactly like mine. Will hare another shipment soon. 
H. C. Jknninob. Eighty-Four, Pa. 
CDCC Write for p: 
rnCC to yourself. 
tol. Warenofl & Co., Inc., lml XX\\V£* u 
You ow* it 
Write now. 
Wo pay highest cash prices for 
all staple furs—Skunk. Mink, 
Muskrat, Ksccou n. Rod Fox. 
Fancy furs a specialty, includ¬ 
ing Oliver and Cross F o x, 
Fisher, Marten, etc. Est. 1870. 
Our continued prompt returns and liberal policy are now 
bringing us shipments from all North America, Alaska 
to Mexico. Send for free Price List. Address 
M. J. JEWETT a SONS, REDWOOD, N. Y- Dept. IS 
JOIN THE 
Quicksteppers 
Set Page 1805 
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Copy and instructions for clas¬ 
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of copy must reach us on Thurs¬ 
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Notice to discontinue advertise¬ 
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nesday morning in order to prevent 
advertisement appearing in follow¬ 
ing week’s paper. 
