Love my Lee Safety Scale, which is similar.
I like it because its weight, not volume. Four (ok, five) years of mechanical engineering school and a childhood of reading the statement on cereal boxes (sold by weight, not by volume; some settling of the contents may occur) has me wary of volumetric measurement for anything involving a chemical reaction and a tremendous release of energy, be it smokeless powder or Frosted Flakes.
A balance scale is only as good as its last calibration. My scale drifts about an eyelash between sessions. If I ignore it for 5 sessions, I am off by five eyelashes. Takes a minute to recalibrate it.
You are loading for 22-250 which take approx 35-40 gr of powder.
If that scale did not come with some reference calibration weight, take a 40 grain bullet and calibrate the scale to 40 gr off that bullet and keep that particular bullet with that scale forever. Every loading session, calibrate the scale to that 40 grain bullet.
(Folks who load for a 308 or 30-06 should use a 50-55 grain bullet for reference)
For the loads you have already developed; depending on how obsessive you are, consider wasting a twenty cent bullet and seeing what this scale weighs the charge out in grams, might be different from what you thought by a tenth or two. But now you will have a value referenced to that scale; it will be referenced to the weight of that bullet, so it to will be repeatable forever.