A Promise 
to Dairymen 
The quality of Larro will never be 
loivered so long as Larro is made . 
Regardless of what changes take 
place in the price of ingredients , 
Larro will always remain the same! 
L c 
ONG ago we decided upon this policy, and wrote this pledge 
into our manufacturing creed. 
There were two reasons for this decision—we knew it to be 
correct, both in theory and practice, and we knew we could keep 
the promise. 
Years of experiment and practical feeding have proved that a 
dairy feed must be more than just “a good feed.” It must also 
be absolutely uniform and its formula must not be changed. 
Sudden changes in feed—putting in more of this, or less of that, 
the substitution of poorer ingredients, imperfect blending or 
mixing—result in lower milk yield and smaller profits for the 
farmer. 
Your cows do not eat a printed formula. They are not concerned 
with price changes. Whether the market is high or low, they need 
a feed that will build condition and keep milk flow at its peak 
The Larrowe Milling Company is able to keep its promise of 
uniformity and unchanging formula because it has the experience 
and equipment to manufacture a feed that never varies. It has a 
formula that can be depended upon to produce milk profitably. 
This formula will never be changed unless the Larro Research 
Farm proves that a better one has been found. 
LARRO is more than a good feed; it is always the same feed. 
We repeat that we shall continue to manufacture LARRO on this 
basis—the basis of more profit to those who buy it. 
THE LARROWE MILLING COMPANY 
DETROIT, MICHIGAN 
arror 
024 
THE SAFE RATION FOR DAIRY COWS 
American Agriculturist, November 29, 1924 
Holiday Cookery 
('Continued from page 372) 
soak into it; then lower the heat and bake 
rather slowly. 
Mince Meat 
1-2 pound meat 
1 pound of apples 
1-2 pound raisins 
1-2 pound currants 
1-8 pound citron 
1-2 cupful sugar 
1-2 tablespoonful cin¬ 
namon 
Boil the meat and cool. Pare and core 
the apples. Force the meat and apples 
through the food grinder. Wash the 
currants, raisins and citron and cut in 
tiny pieces. Moisten with water or fruit 
juice. Cook gently until the meat and 
apples are tender, adding the spices during 
the cookery. To make mince pies, line 
a pie tin with plain pastry, fill with mince 
meat, and cover, with pastry and bake. 
1 teaspoonful cloves 
1 tablespoonful mace 
1 1-2 teaspoonful all¬ 
spice 
1 1-2 teaspoonful nut¬ 
meg water or fruit 
juice 
SHORT SEA TRIPS 
Norfolk, Va. 
Virginia Beach, Va. 
Richmond, Va. 
Washington, D. C. 
via OLD 
DOMINION 
LINE 
C OMBINING the delights of 
a bracing ocean voyage with 
interesting sightseeing ashore. 
Returning All Water or Rail 
An Ideal Autumn and Winter Outing 
Steamers sail 3 P. M. every Tuesday, 
Thursday and Saturday. Frequent 
additional sailings from Pier 26, North 
River, N. Y. Phone Walker 2800. 
J. J. Brown, Gen. Pass. Agent 
Gen. Offices, Pier 25, No. River, N. Y. 
v’/' 
[EARN AUCTIONEERING Term opens December ist. 
Students have advantage of International Live Stock. 
Show for live stock judging. Write today for large free 
Catalog. JONES NAT’L SCHOOL OF AUCTIONEERING, 
CAREY M. JONES, PRES. 32 N. Sacramento Blvd., Chicago, III 
■N PiFLEAHD 50 BUCKSHOTS 
This Dandy Powerful Rifle and 
Buckshots is yours for selling only 
_ packs fancy Post Cards at 10c a pack.^SENT 
^POSTPAID. Extra Prize' for promptness. .WetrusJ 
. write today. sun MF6. CO. DopU361 ^ 0HICA60 
SAW 
As Low as $10’ 
Buy your saw direct atlowest factory priceB. 
Guaranteed staunch, durable and depend* 
able. Cost as little as $10. 
Hertzler&Zook 
Portable Wood 
I Saws firewood, lumber, lath, posts, etc. 
1 Ripping table can be attached. Lowest 
priced practical saw made. Other styles 
and sizes at money-saving prices. Made of 
■- , , best materials. $10,000.00 
IViUaranteed /f“\ bond backs our guar¬ 
antee! Write today for 
FREE CATALOG showing 
all kinds saws, engines, 
feed mills, concrete mixer 
and fence, Ford&Fordson 
Attachments, etc. Full of 
surprising bargains. 
HERTZLKR & ZOOK CO. 
Box 44 Belleville, Pa. 
KITSELMAN FENCE 
"Saved $22.05,"says I. F. Fisher, New 
Bethlehem, Pa. You, too, can save. 
We Pay the Freight. Write for Free 
Catalog of Farm, Poultry, Lawn Fence. 
KITSELMAN BROS, Dept.JJ03MUNCIE, IND. 
Let’s Have a Christmas Pageant 
(i Continued from page 373) 
crate our service: ‘ I will take the 
cup of salvation and call upon the 
name of the Lord, I will pay my 
vows unto the Lord now in the 
presence of all His people.’ We 
consecrate our wealth, ‘As the 
wise men presented unto Thee 
gifts of gold and frankincense and 
myrrh, so we give our gifts to 
Thee, remembering how Thou 
hast said ‘It is more blessed to 
give than to receive.’ ” 
N The woman steps forward and 
speaks, consecrating youth and 
love. “We also consecrate our 
youth, ‘They that seek Thee 
early shall find Thee.’ We there¬ 
fore come now to dedicate to 
Thee the strength of our Youth— 
We consecrate our love—“We 
love Thee because Thou hast 
first loved us.’” (They both 
withdraw to left of stage.) 
D. Small children (12 in number) 
enter to music by couples from 
back of auditorium, up side aisle. 
They kneel around manger look¬ 
ing at Babe while chorus softly 
sings “Away in a Manger.” At 
the end of the song, the children 
rise and present gifts by couples. 
1st Couple (laying hands on 
heart)—“I will praise Thee with 
all my heart.” 
2d—“Open Thou my lips and 
my mouth shall show forth Thy 
praise.” 
3d (Pointing to feet)—“Yea 
and Thou shalt be called the 
Prophet of the Most High, to 
guide our feet in the way of 
peace.” 
4th (Pointing to lips)—>“Be¬ 
cause Thy loving kindness is bet¬ 
ter than life, our lips shall praise 
Thee.” 
5th (Holding out hands)— 
“Thus will I bless Thee while I 
live—I will lift up my hands 
in Thy name.” 
6th (Pointing to eyes)—“Unto 
Thee do I lift up mine eyes.” 
E. Children join hands around man¬ 
ger and recite in unison, “Suffer 
little children to come unto Me 
and forbid them not, for of such 
is the kingdom of heaven.” 
(Children withdraw to right of stage and sit 
down in front of other participants.) 
Episode IV. Larger children representing 
all nations. 12 or more in number. 
Enter to music from back of audito¬ 
rium and come up side aisles. They 
surround manger and recite in 
unison: 
“He shall have dominion from sea 
to sea and from the river unto the 
ends of the earth.” (They with¬ 
draw to left and remain standing.) 
Grand Finale. Children rise, and all 
join in chorus: “Oh Come, all ye 
Faithful.” At end of chorus, ac¬ 
tors march down side aisle, led by 
children. 
