344 . 
the old building have withstood 
equally well the ravages of 
weather. It is a striking exam¬ 
ple of paint’s wonderful pro¬ 
tective qualities. The way to 
'prevent decay, is not to let it 
start. That’s what good paints 
do. Of greatest importance : the 
economical time to paint, is be¬ 
fore it is needed, not after. 
Lowe Brothers paint is sold 
by the one best dealer in each 
town. 
^JLOWQ j&rGitiers Company 
510 EAST THIRD STREET, DAYTON, OHIO 
Boston New York Jersey City Chirago Atlanta Memphis Kansas City 
Minneapolis Toronto 
Factories; Dayton Toronto 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
February 20, 1921 
HE WORKS orTOU LOSE 
SAVE-THE-HORSE will save you loss by 
curing, while he works. Ringbone, Thoropin, 
SPAVIN —or Shoulder, Knee, Ankle, Hoof 
or Tendon Disease—even the old, so-called 
incurable cases. Over 300,000 satisfied users 
and 27 years of success testify to its positive 
dependability. Sold only under our signed 
MONEY-BACK Guarantee to cure—we take 
the risk. Use it once and you’ll always depend 
upon SAVE-THE-HORSE,' Saves many times its cost 
in the first emergency. 
Write today for FREE sample of GUARANTEE and 
96-page BOOK on how to locate, understand and treat 
all lameness; also expert veterinary advice, all FREE. 
TROY CHEMICAL CO.. 324 StateSt., Binghamton,N.Y. 
Druggists everywhere sell SAVE-THE- 
HORSE with Signed Guarantee, or we 
send it direct by Parcel Post Prepaid. 
MINERAL' 
in us? 
over 
HEAVER 
COMPOUND 
Booklet 
_ Free 
$3.25 Box truarantcftd to crfve satisfaction or money t>acx. 
SI. 10 Box Sufficient for ordinary cases. (Includes War Tax.) 
MINERAL HEAVE REMEDY CO., 4G1 Fourth Are., Plfisburnh Ta 
Agents Make Big Money Selling Our 
Write today for catalog and big commis¬ 
sion proposition. NAPPANEE LUMBER 
& MANUFACTURING CO., NAPPANEE, IND. 
SILOS 
For Sale-Dairy, FrL'it.Poultry and Boarding House 
in the CatsklUs. Any size ar the light price. 
I a I m o henry RAUCH, tt<)4 Hillside Ate.. Junntien. I.. I.. V Y. 
Virginia Farms and Homes 
FREE CATALOGUE OF SPLENDID BARGAINS 
R. li. CHAFFIN & CO., Inc., Richmond, Va. 
I 
When you write advertisers mention 
The Rural New-Yorker and you'll get 
a quick reply and a “square deal." See 
■guarantee editorial page. 
jji uumu 
Learn one of the 
host paying businesses I 
in the country, and learn | 
it in the Largest and Best 
Equipped Automobile 
Tractor School in the 
The demand for men who 
how in this well-paying 
ness is almost unlimited. 
and 
East. 
know 
busi- 
AUTOMOBILE 
& TRACTOR SCHOOL 
will teach you quickly and thoroughly 
Uy the most practical method. “Learn 
by Doing’’ i* our motto. We have 
sufficient equipment to enable each 
student to do with his own hands the 
actual work on all kinds of automobile 
engines and chassis and all the latest 
tractors. 
Send for our FREE 36-page catalog. 
It will tell how you can fit yourself 
for this business. Address Dept. K. 
PETZ AUTOMOTIVE SCHOOL 
8 to 14 N. 20th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
THE GENUINE CHAMPION 
Improves Milk Quality 
This milk cooler halts bacterial growth, 
removes odors, insures uniform product. 
Saves its cost in one week. Recommended 
by leading producers. Write for special 
offer. Folder free. 
CHAMPION MILK COOLER CO. 
Dept j- Cortland, N. Y. 
Virginia Farms £? v a 
Killing Lice on Cattle 
Last year we gave a report of the 
experiments made by Prof. G II Lamson. 
J;\, in killing lice on cattle. This matter 
from Bulletin Xo. !>7 of the Connecticut 
Experiment Station at Stores I’. O. is 
now reprinted to answer numerous ques¬ 
tion*. It is the most practical discussiou 
of the matter we have ever read, and 
every stockman should study it. Many 
of our readers write telling how their 
cows suffer from the annoyance of lice, 
and how the owners are sit their wits’ end 
to find it practical remedy. After testing 
liquids and sprays and powders and dusts, 
Prof. Lamson advises raw linseed oil. A 
On and near James 
_ _ er. All sizes 
and at moderate prices. Stock and tools included on 
manv of them. Descriptive list on application. 
G. IS. IIUOKF.Ii, - Sunny Side. Virginia 
New York State FARMS IRllrSttZ 
making farms for sale. We have a size, location and 
price to please von. Stock and tools included on many of 
them. MANDEVIILE REAL ESTATE AGENCY. Inc., Dept. I. Olean, N Y. 
Where io Apply Oil lo Destroy Lice 
fat or oil is a natural enemy of the louse. 
Prof. Lamson finds that there is a marked 
difference in tin' season when lice abound. 
When tin- oily skin secretions are most 
abundant the lice are greatly reduced in 
numbers. When the skin dries, as in 
Winter, the lice abound. The breeds of 
cattle also differ in their liability to car¬ 
ry lice. For example. Jerseys and Guern¬ 
seys, which have naturally an oily skin, 
are not so badly infested as other breeds 
which have less skin secretion. Perhaps 
it was this fact which led to the experi¬ 
ments with linseed oil. It has been found 
that when this oil is brushed and rubbed 
F arms AND homes in Delaware where file climate is pleas- 
ant. the lands productive ami prices reasonable. For in¬ 
formation write STATE BOARD 0E AGRICULTURE, Dover, Delaware 
Brushes for Applying Oil 
into the hair on certain parts of the body 
(he lice are kept under control. The pic 
ture given above shows where the oil is to 
be applied, the shaded parts indicating 
where the lice are mostly found. This 
means around the horns, along the neck 
and shoulders and around the tail and 
rump. The brush shown in cut above is 
used for applying the oil; it is simply 
rubbed into the hair. It takes about five 
minutes to oil a cow with this treatment, 
and costs about five cents a cow for each 
treatment. The few “don’ts” connected 
with the treatment are given as follows. 
It is a simple and sensible treatment: 
To avoid the danger of scurfing or 
burning of the skin, observe the following 
directions: 
Do not rub the skiu too vigorously 
when applying the oil. Do not allow the 
animals that have been treated to go out 
in the strong sunlight until at least 32 
hours after applying the oil. Do not ex¬ 
ercise the animal after the treatment. Do 
not use the boiled or refined linseed oil. 
Kerosene for Mange on Cats 
A. .T. W„ Massachusetts, asks for a 
cure for mange in cats. I lost a good 
many cats, both old and young, with what 
they called the mange, or would have to 
kill them. 
Then a liveryman told me to take ker¬ 
osene and apply to the affected parts. 
This I did, and I think one treatment 
made a cure. My cate were affected 
around the eyes and ears and in the face. 
Their skin would get all dried up and 
crack. I should advise A. J. W. to try 
kerosene or coal oil. but not to use too 
much at first. I used this on my cat five 
years ago. I have seen no mange since. 
Pennsylvania. W. U. 
PROVE at our risk that you can 
easily save one-third on high priced feed, 
cut 10 to 30 days off the feeding period and 
have healthier hogs by feeding MILKOLINE. 
Iliffo ninhdihn Milkoline hasabaseof 
A1US UigeSUlHl pasteurized and steril¬ 
ized, modified Buttermilk. It is guaranteed 
not to contain any sulphuric acid or anything 
injurious to hogs or poultry. It helps tone 
up the system, making hogs less subject to 
disease, practically insuring gains of 2Va lbs. a 
head per day. 
University Tested 
of Dairy Husbandry at Missouri University, 
conducted a scientific test which showed that 
MILKOLINE fed hogs made a profit of 82.57% 
more than those not fed Milkoline. W. H. 
Graham, Middletown, Mo., said $30 worth of 
Milkoline made an extra profit of $420 in 60 
days. Lee Jackson. Wappingers Falls, N. Y., 
says Milkoline is great for shoats and sows. 
Milkoline 2c a Gal. in condensed 
form, and when fed as directed costs only 2c a 
gallon. It is guaranteed not to Bpoil, rot, sour 
or mould. Keeps indefinitely in any climate. 
Flies do not come near it. The prices are as 
follows: 6 gal. $7.50; 10 gal. $12.50: 15 gal. 
$16.50; 32 gal. $32.00; 55 gal. $49.50. 
9ft Hit; Trial Try Milkoline at our risk 
11 la* for 30 days—if not satis¬ 
fied that it Is the best farm money tnaker and 
saver you ever saw it costs you nothing. Sim¬ 
ply send check or money order for any amount 
today, feed one-half to poultry and hogs in a 
30 day test; then if not satisfied return unused 
part at our expenseiand we’ll immediately re¬ 
fund every cent you paid us. You are the Bole 
judge, and have everything to gain and noth¬ 
ing to lose by making this test. Our interest¬ 
ing and valuable booklet. "How To Hustle 
Heavy Hogs To Market" will be sent free on 
request—your name on a card will do. 
BIG BOOK FREE! SSSK&KS,# 
and we’ll send an interesting booklet telling 
how Milkoline will increase your poultry and 
bog profits. Write us or our nearest distrib¬ 
utors today. 
MILKOLINE MFG. CO. KtnJas 0 ^™ 8 ^., 8 .^. 
DISTRIDVTKD BY 
Anderson & Scofield, Fishkill, N Y. 
Gerhart & Pagels, Trenton, N. J. 
Joseph Breck & Sons Corp., Boston, 9. Mass. 
Just write on a postal. Send 
me your NEW Bargain Fence 
Book and Latest Low Factory 
Prices." It will come by next mail, 
free postpaid. I’ll also send you a 
sample to test. Then you will know 
why the BROWN FENCE LASTS 6 
TIMES LONGER THAN OTHERS. 
John Bruce, Cauthron, Ark., writes: "I put up 
140 rods of your fence seven years ago and it is 
nice and bright yet. Other fence I built about the 
same time is nearly ruined by rust. 
That PROVES my quality — the book 
PROVES my prices are lowest and 
WILL SAVE YOU A LOT OF MONEY 
on the first cost. The long life of Brown 
Fence makes a still greater saving. You can t 
afford to buy a rod of fence beiore getting my 
big 96-page Bargain Book. It is full of fence- 
buying pointers you will be glad to get. 
DIRECT freight 
FROM FACTORY PREPAID 
You know what Brown Fence costs 
you laid down at your freight station. 
Catalog shows 150 styles—Hog, Sheep, Cattle. 
Poultry and Lawn Fencing. Also Gates, barb 
Wire, etc.— all at prices way below all com- 
letition. Get my book and sample, both free, 8 
it Kim (15) 
Fence & Wire Co. 
Cleveland, Ohio 
before you buy. 
The Brown 
Dept. 659 
The finest and most complete line of Lawn 
Fence in the Country-at Factory Prices. 
Billie bad been studying bis grand¬ 
father’s face, which was very wrinkled. 
"Well. Billiekin.” said the old gentleman 
jocularly, pinching the little boy’s rosy 
cheek, "do you like my face?” ‘‘Yes, 
grandpa." said Bobbie. "It’s an awfully 
nice face, but why don’t you have it 
ironed?”—Pittsburg Press. 
The Farmer His 
Own Builder 
By H. Armstrong Roberts 
A practical and 
handy book of all 
kinds of building 
information from 
concrete to carpen¬ 
try. Price $L50. 
‘ For sale by! 
THE 
RURAL NEW-YORKER 
333 W. 30th St., N. Y. 
