Seneca County 667 



arable. Rcedcr Creek is the largest of the small streams draining 

 this town. The soil is gravelly loam intermixed with clay. 



Products: Hay, oats, wheat, barley, buckwheat and corn. 

 Average values of farm land range from $50 to $100 per 

 acre. 



Waterloo : The surface is almost an unbroken flat. A marsh 

 extends through the town south of the center and another occu- 

 pies the northeast corner. Seneca River flows through the town. 



The soil is muck and clay in the north and east, gravelly along 

 the northern border, and a sandy loam in the center and west. 



Products : Potatoes, truck crops, apples, hay and oats. 

 Average values of farm land range from $25 to $200 per 

 acre. 



MARKETING CONDITIONS 



FACILITIES for transportation 



Rail and Electric Roads 



The towns of Waterloo and Seneca Falls are crossed by the 

 New York Central line passing through Auburn and Geneva, 

 and connecting with other points in all directions. 



South of this line the county is served by the Lehigh Valley 

 Railroad. One line extends across the county a short distance 

 from the New York Central and almost parallel to that line. At 

 Geneva Junction it divides into two branches, one extending 

 south into Schuyler County and the other southeast into Tompkins. 

 These two branches, which finally join and .turn south into Penn- 

 sylvania, are connected by a short line near the boundary between 

 the towns of Romulus and Ovid. 



The western parts of the towns of Junius and Waterloo are 

 within easy reach of the New York Central line leading north 

 from Geneva to Lyons. This line is just within the border of 

 Ontario County, and crosses the extreme northwest corner of 

 Junius. 



An electric road runs from Cayuga Lake Park to Seneca Falls, 

 from which place it closely follows the New York Central tracks 

 west to Geneva. 



