In the following pages you will find much valuable information regarding the proper care—in health and sickness—of horses, cattle, swine, sheep and poultry.
We trust, and believe that you will find it most helpful in connection with your work. That it will enable you to be more successful, earn bigger profits.
Right at the start we wish to emphasize two facts which are really fundamental and which are recognized by the most successful stock keepers. The first is this: It does not pay to keep scrub stock, animals which cannot under any conditions give the big returns. The second: No animal, regardless of breeding, can do its best work unless it is kept in perfect physical condition.
The selection of your animals is up to you. Get good ones. Than keep them good and make them better. The Pratt line of stock and poultry preparations, regulators, tonics, disinfectants and remedies, will help you greatly. Made for nearly fifty years by America’s pioneer concern in this line, each article is the best of its kind, each is backed by this square-deal guarantee—“Your Money Back If You Are Not Satisfied.”
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THE PRATT GUARANTEE
“Your Money Back If YOU Are Not Satisfied”
The Pratt Food Company believes in fair play. We desire that our millions of customers shall receive full value for every cent they spend in purchasing our goods. And to that end we spare no expense in making each article in the Pratt Line just as good, just as efficient, as is humanly possible.
More than that, we wish each customer to be completely satisfied. If for any reason any article bearing the Pratt trade-mark fails to give such satisfaction, the full purchase price will be refunded on demand by the dealer who made the sale.
You can buy and use Pratts Stock and Poultry Preparations with fullest confidence because you are protected by
The Guarantee That Has Stood For Nearly Fifty Years
Copyright, 1919, by Pratt Food Co.
PRATTS PRACTICAL POINTERS
HORSES
While the automobile and the tractor are now doing much of the work formerly done by horses, the “horseless era” is still far off. A good horse will always be worth good money, will always be a desirable and profitable member of the farm family. But the undersized no-breed specimen will be even less valuable in the future than in the past.
The great demand for horses for army use and the high prices paid by the Government, tempted horse breeders and farmers to dispose of the fine specimens which alone met the exacting requirements of army buyers. It will take years to make good this tremendous wastage of horse flesh. But this is a big opportunity for breeders of good horses and we may expect them to make the most of it.