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Show A SPRING PROBLEM SOLVED. it ie Spring is here, The grass is rising ris-ing green, tender and succulent in the pastures. The time is not far off, perhaps has arrived, when you will bo turning your herd out to browse on the most perfectly balanced bal-anced ration n cow can have, pasture grass. It is the food most palatable to the cow. She loves it and does better on it than anything else. In the spring. we feel young an 1 vigorous, men and animals. Many of your herd have just freshened, all feel rejuvenated after the long win-tcr win-tcr confinement with its monotonous round of dry feeds. Your cows will respond to the call of nature's fare by giving their greatest flow. What arc you going to do to get the most profit out of this bounteous gift of nature? Arc you going to continue to take your whole milk to the shipping station to be sold for table purposes or to the creamery where your cream is considered the only thing of value and you get but small pay for it? Remember that a-il your neighbors will also be exper-encing exper-encing the benefits of the "Flush" season, and that in .consequence the shipping stations and the creameries creamer-ies will be flooded with supply. That means that prices will drop to the lowest figures of the year so that th benefits of your increased production are to a great extent withheld from you. t There is one way in which you can get the utmost profit out of your milk this spring; that is, hy installing install-ing a XJ. S. Cream Separator, skimming skim-ming the cream from the milk at ; our home, selling the cream at a fair profit to the creamery and feed- . mg the warm skim, miik to your calves, pigs, and pou'try. Or, if you choose, you can make your own butter but-ter and retain all these other advantages. advan-tages. If you have not learned the advantage of feeding skim milk to - your stock, a few months subscription subscript-ion to an agricultural paper will show ou many instances of where this :s ' being done with great profit. The new model, 1909 U. S. Separator, Separa-tor, is probably the one best fitted for your needs, whether you have five cows or a large herd. This model r which is being widely discussed rmong dairying experts, docs not diff- ,- er greatly from the older modols made by the Vermont Farm Machine Company, except in one particular, and that is in the bowl and skimming skim-ming device. Even here the principle prin-ciple of skimming is unchanged, but greatly intensified. It is reported that this new bowl, while being easily washed and simple in construction, is doing the work of a bowl, about twice the size in the older style machines. ma-chines. All dairymen who have used or seen a separator will recognize ' that this means far less effort on the part of the user, if run by hand. ., The 'low supply can, the fast clean skimming, the easy running, and cleanliness of the newest model U. S. Separator is already "becoming wcl known. Another fine feature of the U. S. Machine (and this feature is not confined to the latest models) is that the crunk can be placed on cith-, cith-, or side of the machine, and that when a fitted for power, the crank may be Ifi. uscl- when the power gives out, by "JP simply going to the other side of the f machine. It would be a good idea to k', send for Catalog 38, which the Vcr-I Vcr-I J s mont Form Machine Co., Bellows I ! r Falls, Vt., will gladly send on request. . k . 1 o |