680 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
April 19, 1924 
OilPull Service 
10- Year Drawbar Service —abundance 
of power for all drawbar work. 
10- Year Belt Power Service —all the 
engine’s “steady” power delivered to 
the belt. 
10-Year Hot Weather Service —Oil 
cooling eliminates overheating. 
10-Year Cold-Weather Service —Oil 
cooling absolutely overcomes freezing. 
10-Year Operating Economy — Oil- 
Pull holds principal Fuel Econ¬ 
omy Records—also low upkeep 
records. Average life, 10 years 
o'MA or more. 
Get Posted on 
OilPull 10-Year Service 
E ‘ us send you facts that 
show why the OilPull 
Tractor works the year 
‘round on the average farm 
for ten years and more. This 
is information every modem 
farmer should have. It proves 
that the OilPull delivers “the 
cheapest power.’* With these 
facts you will know: 
Why the OilPull has abundant 
power—more than the rating in¬ 
dicates. 
Why the OilPull is a wonderful 
belt worker. 
Why the OilPull is 
champion of fuel 
economy. 
Why the OilPull 
operates at lowest 
upkeep expense. 
Why the OilPull is 
an ft all -’round” 
and “all-season” 
tractor. 
Good Machinery 
Pays 
Efficient machinery can eas¬ 
ily double the daily work 
done by one man. Yet only 
4% to 8% of the expense of 
running a farm is for machin¬ 
ery. What else can you buy 
that gives such a big return? 
Get Our FREE Books 
The Rumely OilPull is in 
wider use today than ever 
before and growing . Four¬ 
teen years of daily service 
have proved the soundness of 
Triple Heat Control, Oil 
Cooling, Dual Lubrication 
and other distinctive OilPull 
features. Whether you now 
have a tractor or not, learn 
what the Rumely OilPull 
offers. Send postcard for our 
booklet Triple 
Heat Control 
and our big 
general catalog 
which fully 
describes and 
pictures OilPull 
construction. 
Write us NOW. 
ADVANCE-RUMELY 
THRESHER CO., Inc. 
't (Incorporated) 
Address Dept, zz 
La Porte, Indiana 
The Advance-Rumely Line includes kerosene tractors, 
steam engines, grain and rice threshers, husker-shredders, 
alfalfa and clover hullers, silo fillers and motor trucks. 
Serviced Through 33 Branches and Warehouses 
1 DIRECT FROM FACTOR Y 
SEl.|\ ALL FREIGHT PAID 
tp.. ICORRUGATED — PLAIN — V CRIMP 
SHINGLES-SPOUTING-CUTTER 
^HQ g PITTSBURGH ROOF & FENCE CO. 
Box 1231 —PITTSBURGH, PA. 
WORLDS BEST IRON AND STEEL MARKET 
Galvanized Roofing and Fence 
For Immediate Shipment we offer prime No. 1, 
Galvanized Kooiing and Wire Fence. 
29 gauge Wt. 28 gauge Wt. 
2V,-in. Corrg . $4 58 77 $4.75 81 
Di-in. Corrg . 4.63 77 4.80 SI 
2 V Crimp & 1 stix. 4 83 78 6.00 85 
3 V Crimp & 1 stix. 4.93 79 5.10 86 
Nails, 10c per pound. Leadwashers, 20c pound 
035—35-in., No. 12, Filler Fence. 26c per rod 
635—H 35-in., No. 11, Filler Fence.305-iic “ 
635—9)£ 35-in., All No. 9^ Fence.34^c “ 
80 Rods, 2-point, cattle barb wire. $3.55 each 
80 Rods, 4-point, cattle barb wire. 3.75 “ 
The above price. F. O. B Mill. Quality Guaranteed 
or money refunded. Write for our delivered price. 
Consumers Mfg. & Supply Co., Moundsville, W.Va. 
Best Locking 
Device ° 
Ever Made 
2110 E 
An improvement found only 
on West Bend Barn Equip¬ 
ment. One lever locks in or 
releases from 2 to SO cows 
instantly, and also operates 
cow-stops. Saves thousands 
of steps. Simple, practical 
and indestructible. Used on 
the best dairy farms every¬ 
where. Our steel stalls, 
mangers, pens, litter carriers, 
ventilators, water bowls and 
other dairy barn necessities 
are your best investment. 
Get our ~ ( 
Big, FREE Barn Equipment Book 
Explains entire line, also our special FREE service to 
farmere building new or equipping old barns with the best 
labor-saving devices. Blue prints furnished. Drop us a 
postal for full information. We are helping thousands of 
Camera make more profit out of their barns. Why not you? 
. Write TOD A Y 
WEST BEND EQUIPMENT CORP. 
West Bend, Wig. Syracuse, N. ?» 
Write nearest office—Address Dept. B 
Ridding Hogs of Worms 
(Continued from page 67S) 
light pink with permanganate of potash. 
These cleansing operations are done to 
prevent contamination of the teats with 
discharges from the bowels or genitals 
of the sow. As soon as the pigs are 
nursing well and strong on their legs 
move sow and litter in a cleansed wagon 
to a new or specially cleansed, disin¬ 
fected and whitewashed colony house on 
grass not grazed by swine since it was 
seeded. Then have the sow and her 
litter graze a succession of green crops, 
preferably legumes, from early Spring 
until late in the Autumn and keep them 
absolutely away from all places that 
have been occupied by hogs. During this 
time they are also to be supplied with 
mixed meals and skim-milk and given 
access to salt, slaked lime and wood 
ashes or steamed bonemeal. So managed 
the pigs should keep practically free 
from worms and by Autumn they will 
have grown so large and strong that 
worms after that are not a serious 
menace. Pigs often become infested 
with embryo round worms just after 
birth and these parasites are carried to 
the lungs or other vital organs and 
cause disease which cannot be remedied 
by medicines. 
Depraved Appetite 
I have a Holstein cow six years old, 
to all appearances in perfect health and 
condition She began barking trees 
when she was six or eight months old 
and has kept it up both Winter and Sum¬ 
mer. She began on locust trees in the 
pasture and when she cannot reach them 
as has been the case this Winter she 
barks apple trees. She has the range 
of a large farm in Summer and also in 
Winter when weather is mild ; has com¬ 
fortable Winter quarters, is fed clover 
hay, corn fodder, roots, etc., salt before 
her at all times and good water. 
Pennsylvania. A. A. M. 
This cow has become an “addict” to 
bark stripping and eating. At first the 
practice is caused by indigestion or a 
craving for some needed ingredient of a 
complete ration not supplied by the feed. 
It may be possible, of course, that the 
cow has still a depraved appetite or in¬ 
digestion for which the salicin of bark 
may be an antidote. Anyhow, the first 
step should be to try a change in ration 
and to supply more mineral matter. Try 
the feeding of a mixture of equal parts 
or quantities of ground corn, oats and 
barley, adding one-half part each of 
wheat bran and oilmeal. Or feed a mix¬ 
ture of equal quantities of ground barley, 
oats and bran along with silage and good 
clover or Alfalfa hay, or of four parts 
of ground barley and three parts each of 
gluten feed and wheat bran. Roots do 
fairly well instead of silage, if fed in 
sufficient quantities to keep the bowels 
active. In the way of additional min¬ 
eral matter add two pounds of either 
steamed bone meal, wood ashes, ground 
limestone or ground phosphate rock 
(floats) to every 100 lbs. of concentrated 
feed prepared and fed. As salt is freely 
supplied it need not be added to the feed. 
Farm animals are especially fond of 
the bark of the poplar (“popple”) tree 
and it no doubt contains a considerable 
amount of salicin. If you can supply the 
stems and branches of that tree for the 
cow to strip of bark that may prove 
beneficial, especially if indigestion is pres¬ 
ent, but we often find that when green 
grass becomes available the craving for 
bark subsides. If you find, on the con¬ 
trary, that it persists, it might be well 
to try the effects of iodine. Dissolve two 
grains of iodide of potash daily in the 
drinking water. If you have drinking 
cups in the stable, dissolving a five-grain 
tablet of iodide of potash in the water 
in each cup every other day will suffice. 
This is also the new and approved treat¬ 
ment to prevent goiter in new born 
calves, as well as hairlessness in all new 
born animals. It need only be done dur¬ 
ing the last half of gestation, but many 
dairymen prefer to continue it through¬ 
out the period. If you think that the 
stripping and eating of bark is merely 
a habit and does not indicate need of 
drugs it would be a good plan to coat 
some of the trees with pine tar, or any¬ 
thing the cow dislikes, until it causes a 
distaste for hark, 
The reliable 
and effective 
remedy for: 
Spavin 
Capped Hock 
Curb 
Splint 
Ringbone 
Thoroughpin 
Quittor 
Wind Galls 
Poll Evil 
Strained 
Tendons 
Fistula 
Sweeney 
Barb Wire 
Cuts 
Calk 
Wound3 
“I always rely on 
Gombault’s Caustic 
Balsam to keep my 
horses sound. Never 
fire any more—use 
Gombault’s instead. 
It does the work and 
the hair grows back 
natural color.” 
Used for 41 years. A million suc¬ 
cessful treatments given each year. 
Directions with every bottle. $1.50 
per bottle at druggists or direct upon 
receipt of price. 
ALSO GOOD FOR HUMAN USE 
An excellent remedy for sprains, 
bruises, cuts, bums, sore throat, 
muscular and inflammatory rheu¬ 
matism, sciatica and lumbago. 
The Lawrence-Williams Company, 
Cleveland, Ohio. 
GOMBAULTS 
Caustic 
BALSAM 
r T , HE place to cool milk is on 
* the farm; Jhe time right after 
milking. Stops germ growth. 
Removes animal and food odors. 
Gives milk a better flavor. 
Makes it last longer. 
The Champion is the most 
practical, reasonably priced milk 
cooler on the market. One milk¬ 
ing saved more than pays its cost 
Champion Sheet Metal Co., Inc. 
102 Champion Building 
CORTLAND, N. Y. 
111111111 
CHAMPION MILK COOLER. 
Stops Germ Growth. 
Approved By The 
U. S. Government 
A. Strainer Funnel. 
B. Sterilized cotton through which 
milk MUST go. 
C. Coarse wirescreen ringforclamp- 
ing cotton pad to bottom of 
funnel. 
D. Wire Clamp. 
THAT'S ALL 
Our Dr. Clark Purity Milk Strainer 
is also endorsed by the Connecticut 
State Dairy and Food Commission, 
Agricultural Colleges, Dairy and 
Food Commissioners, and the small¬ 
est as well as the largest dairymen 
in the country. 
Why? Because they know that the Dr.Clark 
will do what no other strainer can do—re¬ 
move every last bit of sediment, no matter 
how fine, from milk. They not only know 
it —but we guarantee it on your herd or 
any other. 
For ordinary herds, use 10-qt. size; for large 
herds, the 18-qt. Inexpensive and lasts a 
lifetime. If your dealer can’t supply you, 
write 
PURITY STAMPING CO., 
Dept. A 243 Champion St.. 
Battle Creek, Mich. 
