Promise 
to Dairymen 
The quality of Larro will never be 
lowered so long as Larro is made. 
Regardless of what changes take 
place in the price of ingredients, 
Larro will always remain the same. 
ONG ago we decided upon this policy, and wrote this pledge 
JL-* 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 %ed.” It must also 
be absolutely uniform and its formula must not be changed. 
Sudden changes in feed—putting in more ox 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 1 igh 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 ibraiuh because it ha^ the experience 
and equipment to manufacture ~ feed chat never varies. It has a 
formula that can be depended vmon 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 
POST YOUR FARM 
KEEP TRESPASSERS OFF 
W E have had a new supply of trespass signs made up. This time 
they are of extra heavy linen on which the lettering is printed 
directly. There is no card facing to be water-soaked by the rain 
and blown away by the wind. We have had these new signs made 
up of extra heavy material because severe storms will tear and 
otherwise make useless a lighter constructed material. We unre¬ 
servedly advise farmers to post their land and the notices we have 
prepared comply in all respects with the law. The price tc sub¬ 
scribers is 95 cents a dozen, the same rate applying to larger quant¬ 
ities. 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST 461 4th Ave., New York City 
This Engine FREE 
For AWhole Month 
Send No Money 
Your request to trv this OTTAWA Engine 
is all we ask. Don t send a penny. Try 
eng-lne 80 days. The*. make small monthly 
payments. Sent direc-t -r 
One "year "to *pay t 
FREE BOOK to . R now Better 
® j ".t"” Engines tells why thou- 
U3 ° e OTTAWA instead or other 
ykystart easler # and economical 
xo run. Send your name on card today. 
— ■—“ — wm 'it. 1 u vvubj . 
OTTAWA MF6. CO., p.di 781-C Magee Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
SWAM POST HOLE & WELL AUGER 
Most easily operated and fastest earth anger made. 
See your hardware or implement dealer. Look for 
3 k J 6 J”V dle'casting! S 'Not sold 
l Writafforeasydipping 
i booklet on posthole diggers, hay knives, barn scrapers, 
1 etc - IWflN BROS., 1505 Prairie Ave., South Bend, Ind. 
KITSELMAN FENCE 
“I Saved 26Ke a Rod," says J. K. 
Londry, Weedsport, N. Y. You alsosava. 
yy° Pay tho Freight. Write for Free 
__Catalog of * arm, Poultry, Lawn Fence. 
KITSELMAN BROS. Dept.S03MUNCIE. IND. 
American Agriculturist, December 27, 1924 
New Jersey Agricultural Week 
January 13-16 
T HE agricultural interests of New 
Jersey have seen to it that every 
phase of the business will be represented 
at -the New Jersey Agricultural Week, 
which will be held in Trenton, January 
13 to 16 . Agricultural Week includes 
everything from the Annual State Agri¬ 
cultural Convention, which elects two 
members of the State Board of Agricul¬ 
tural to the annual meeting of the New 
Jersey Federation of Town and Country 
Church Workers. In between those two 
organizations there will be represented 
the Federation of County Boards of Ag¬ 
riculture, the various livestock associa¬ 
tions, the poultry producers, beekeepers, 
alfalfa and potato growers, and horticul¬ 
turists. All told there are fourteen or¬ 
ganizations that will conduct their an¬ 
nual meetings or important business con¬ 
ferences during the convention. The 
program has been so planned to be of in¬ 
terest to operators of every branch of 
farming. Never before has the State 
Department of Agriculture offered farm¬ 
ers such a varied farm program with fea¬ 
tures to interest every member of the 
farm houshold. 
Farm Products Show Bigger Than Ever 
The State Department of Agriculture 
has completed arrangements for the An¬ 
nual Farm Products Show, which will 
be held in the Second Regiment Armory. 
The show will consist of the corn show, 
the potato show, commercial apple show, 
poultry show and milk show. The bee¬ 
keepers and breeders of dairy cattle will 
have booth promoting interests in their 
respective subjects. The country church 
people will have their famous little 
brown church, to say nothing of the 
other' enormous demonstrations and ex¬ 
hibits that will be included. 
Agricultural week will start with the 
meeting of the New Jersey Association 
of County Boards of Agriculture on the 
afternoon of the 13 th. In the evening 
the members of the Federation will hold 
their annual banquet, as will the mem¬ 
bers of the New Jersey Baby Chick As¬ 
sociation. 
Governor Silzer to Open Convention 
_ Governor Silzer will open the conven¬ 
tion on the morning of January 14 with 
an address of welcome in the Assembly 
Chamber of the State Capitol. President 
S. Frelinghuysen of the State Board 
of Agriculture will preside. Other prom¬ 
inent speakers present at the convention 
on Wednesday will be George E. Ro¬ 
berts, vice-president of the National City 
Bank, New York, and the Hon. Edward 
C. Stokes, ex-governor of New Jersey. 
On Wednesday evening the Federation 
of County Boards of Agriculture will 
meet to he addressed by George E. Ro¬ 
berts, who will speak on “The Post-War 
Crisis and Recovery.” H. C. McKenzie, 
Director of Research in Taxation of the 
American Farm Bureau Federation, will 
speak on “Rural Tax Problems of New 
Jersey.” 
On Thursday, the various agricultural 
associations will meet. The New Jer - 
sey State Poultry Association will meet 
in the Y. M. H. A. auditorium and will 
be addressed by Professor Hervey of the 
New Jersey State College of Agricul¬ 
ture, Professor J. E. Rice of Cornell and 
A. L. Clark of the New Jersey Bureau 
of Markets. The Holstein Breeders 
Association will meet in the Moose Hall 
auditorium, as will the New Jersey 
Guernsey Breeders Association and the 
New Jersey Alfalfa Growers Association 
and the Ayrshire Breeders Association. 
The potato growers will meet in the 
Rider College Auditorium, while the bee¬ 
keepers will hold their session in the 
Republican Club. These various as¬ 
sociations will occupy different quarters 
in the afternoon for their individutl as¬ 
sociation meetings. 
Dairymen to Hold “Get-Together” 
On Thursday there will be the dairy- 
(Continued on Page 446) 
