TShe  RURAL  NEW-YORKER 
35a 
Week  ending  Feb  lS,  1916 
ment  is  intentional  and  not  accidental 
the  price  will  crawl  up  toward  the  top 
of  the  range,  and  a  way  will  open  to 
still  higher  classes-  of  trade  if  it  is 
thought  worth  while. 
Onions  continue  very  low.  new  cabbage 
and  southern  salads  selling  well  when 
sound,  but  many  are  frozen  and  worth¬ 
less. 
Potatoes  Long  Island,  bbl . 3  75  @  too 
J  erspy  .  2  75  @  3  25 
Maine  . . . . ,'i  all  @  till! 
Sta  te . . . .  .......  3  25  @  n  51) 
Horm mill,  bbl .  4  00  (a  7  i.O 
Swout  Potatoes.  Jersey,  bu .  75  @1  00 
Southern,  bbl .  ....  I  0J  @  2  25 
Beets,  bbl .  1  00  <3  1  75 
Brussels  Sprouts,  qt . ...  8  @  IV 
Carrots,  bbl .  100  @  2  UO 
Cucumbers,  bu .  4  00  @  4  50 
Hothouse,  <10*, . .  .  75  @125 
Cab buge.  ton . 8  00  @11  no 
New  Sonthorn.bbl .  1  00  <8*  1  75 
Lettuce,  balf-bbl,  basket .  75  @2  50 
Onions.  State  .  100  lb.  bag  .  1  00  @  2  00 
Conn.  V alley,  bag  .  2  U0  @  2  50 
Peppers,  hu .  . 1  50  @  2  25 
Peas,  bu . . .  1  00  @3  50 
Radishes,  bbl .  2  00  @3  00 
Hot  bouse.  100  bunches .  3  00  @  4  50 
Spinach,  bbl  . .  1  00  @1  75 
Kale,  bbl  .  15  @  1  00 
Leeks.  100  bunches . .  1  50  @2  00 
Parsnips,  bbl .  1  25  @  1  50 
Roiuaine,  bbl .  1  00  ®  1  50 
String  Beans,  bu . 1  00  @  3  00 
Turnips,  white,  bbl .  1  10  @  1 
Rutabaga, .  75  @  1  25 
New.  H'n  bbl .  1  00  @  1  5j 
Salsify,  100  bunches .  2  Ul)  @40 
Squash,  old,  bbl . 1  75  @20 
New,  bn . .  2  00  «i  2  50 
Tomatoes,  G-Ukt.  crate .  .  1  00  @  3  50 
Hothouse,  lb. . . .  ....  10  ®  25 
Water  Cress.  100  bundles  .  1  50  @  2  0C 
Rhubarb,  hothouse.  tloz.  bunches. ...  40  @  00 
Mushrooms.  Ib .  20  &  40 
Parsley,  bbl .  4  00  @  S  U0 
II A  Y  AND  STRAW. 
Hay.  Timothy,  No.  1.  ton  .  25  00  @20  00 
No.  2 . 22  00  @23  50 
No.  3 . IS  00  @20  UU 
Clover  mixed . hi  00  @22  50 
No  grade  . 10  00  @1100 
Straw.  Uye, . 14  U0  @16  U0 
GRAIN 
Wheat.  No.  1.  Northern  Spring .  1  50  ffl 
Corn,  as  to  quality,  bush .  So  @  87 
Flour,  earlots.  at  N.  T.  bbl .  5  75  @  6  85 
Oats,  as  to  weight,  bush..... .  .  55  @  0  50 
Rye,  free  from  onion .  I  07  @108 
HERBS,  ROOTS,  ETC. 
.  10 
@ 
12 
.  10 
@ 
12 
.  12 
® 
15 
Pennyroyal  Leaves . 
.  2 
($ 
<& 
4 
15 
.  7 
@ 
8 
Feppcraiint  Oil . 
. . .  1  60 
@  2 
25 
RETAIL  PRICES  AT  NEW  YORK. 
These  are  not  the  highest-  or  lowe  : 
prices  noted  here  but  represent  produo 
of  good  quality  and  the  buying  opportuni¬ 
ties  of  at  least  half  of  New  York’s  pop¬ 
ulation. 
Eggs,  fancy  white,  large,  dor. . 
Mixed  colors,  new  laid . 
Online  rv  grades . 
Cold  Storage  . . 
Butter,  fancy  prints.  Ib . . . 
Tub.  choice . 
Oh:  s  roasting,  lb.  . . 
Broilers,  common  to  good,  ib . 
Fricassee.  It . . . 
Turkeys . . . . 
Fowls  . . . 
Leg  of  lamb. . . 
Lamb  chops . . . 
Roasting  beef . . . 
Pork  cboiis  .  . 
Loiu  of  pork  . .  .  . 
Lettuce,  bead . 
Radishes,  bunch  . 
Cucumbers,  each . 
Apples,  dor . 
Cabbage,  head  . . . 
Potatoes,  peck  . 
30 
@ 
35 
28 
@ 
3C 
24 
@ 
27 
20 
@ 
22 
42 
® 
43 
33 
® 
37 
28 
@ 
31 
32 
@ 
35 
18 
@ 
20 
82 
@ 
34 
22 
@ 
26 
18 
@ 
20 
18 
@ 
20 
20 
@ 
21 
18 
@ 
20 
1G 
do 
IS 
t; 
@ 
10 
3 
® 
5 
10 
@ 
12 
41) 
@ 
60 
5 
@ 
S 
75 
@ 
1  00 
Egg  Questions 
1.  Can  I  tou  ,  fertile  egg  or  not  before! 
putting  it  into  the  machine?  How  much 
should  nn  egg  weigh?  2.  Is  a  tested  egg 
at  six  days  good  to  ii.se?  M.  Does  the 
moon  have  anything  to  d  -  with  hatching 
or  setti’  g?  Borne  hatch  the  chicks  in  full 
or  new  moon  or  first  quarter,  but.  do  not 
set  a  machine  in  last  quarter  <r  have  the 
chicks  horn  3  .  last  quarter.  4.  Now  long 
can  I  keep  an  egg  before  setting?  1  turn 
every  day  until  the  incubator  is  ready  or 
I  have  enough  eggs.  5.  Is  there  any  way 
to  feed  hens  or  pullets  so  they  will  not 
eat  eggs?  I  feed  meat  scrap,  grit  is  be¬ 
fore  them  all  the  time,  and  so  is  charcoal. 
G.  Will  pullets  that  start  laying  in  Feb¬ 
ruary  lav  wle-v  eggs  are  high  this  com¬ 
ing  (i  inter  or  will  they  stop  after  the 
Summer  is  gone  by?  h.  M. 
Massachusetts. 
1.  No;  even  the  white-shelled  eggs  can¬ 
not  be  tested  out  before  the  fourth  day. 
2.  A_  tested -out  egg  is  not  like  a  fresh  one. 
but  is  considered  by  many  people  as  fair¬ 
ly  good  for  omelets,  scrambling  and  in 
genera1  cooking.  3.  The  great  hatcheries 
pay  no  attention  to  the  moon  Idea.  If 
there  were  anything  in  it.  they  should 
have  found  it  out  b.v  this  time  v.\.n  their 
continual  experiments  in  hatching.  4. 
The  fresher  the  eggs  the  better  after  the 
_  week.  Eggs  may  be  set  when  three 
to  six  weeks  old,  but  the  older  the  eggs 
above  ten  days,  the  poorer  the  hatch, 
other  things  being  equal.  A  cool  base¬ 
ment  or  cellar  way  will  keep  them  fresh 
as  long  as  anywhere.  5.  Egg  eating  and 
•several  other  bad  habits  are  due  to  over¬ 
crowding.  They  stop  it  when  given  wide 
range  in  the  open  season,  and  do  not  get 
it  again.  Feeding  seems  to  make  little 
difference.  A  soft  egg  will  sometimes 
start  the  linbit,  or  eggs  broken  in  over¬ 
crowded  nests.  In  Winter,  a  darkened 
ore  an b  still  darker  nests  will  usually 
stop  most  of  the  trouble,  (father  the 
eggs  often.  G.  The  pullets  will  lay  some 
eggs  in  Winter  as  yearlings,  depending 
on  conditions  and  individuality,  but  the 
main  dependence,  is  on  pullets  hatched 
early  this  year.  G.  b.  f. 
Cockerels  for  Breeding 
i  have  20  roosters,  well  developed, 
hatched  June  28,  1915.  Would  it  injure 
these  birds,  or  would  it  be  advisable  to 
use  these  roosters,  when  seven  months 
old,  with  two-vear-old  hens,  for  breeding 
purposes  this  Spring?  They  are  S.  C. 
White  Leghorns,  I,  T. 
New  York, 
ff  these  cockerels  have  been  well  fed 
and  cared  for  so  as  to  reach  full  devel¬ 
opment  for  their  age,  they  may  be  used  in 
the  breeding  pen  for  the  coming  season.  It 
would  be  best,  if  practicable,  to  keep  them 
by  them v ’'•(.*  until  about  two  weeks  be¬ 
fore  the  eggs  are  needed  for  hatching,  but 
they  should  not  be  closely  confined  and 
fed  exclusively  upon  fattening  foods,  like 
corn.  AX.  b.  D, 
Oil-heated  Brooder 
IIow  can  I  use  an  oil  stove  heater  +0 
advantage  in  brooding  young  chickens? 
What  size  brooder  will  be  required  for 
500  chicks?  C.  E. 
Now  Y  .-’r. 
!i  is  possibl  tha.,  an  oil  stove  could  be 
used  as  are  th  •mrll  coal  stoves  in  coal- 
heated  brooder  ut  do  not  know  of  ny 
tha  have  been  iiecessfuily  tried  out  for 
this  purpose.  Thor  \s  acre  danger  in 
tlu  use  of  oil  .as  Lu.e.  aud  I  think  that 
ym  \.oi:ld  better  atisfied  with  one  of 
the- -several  ell-known  coal  heated  brood¬ 
er  adapted  to  th  are  A  500  chicks,  or 
mere,  in  on  lock.  A  orooder  house  10 
feet  square  will  care  io  500  chicks  in  one 
flock  '  *  ;  coal  heater  i  employed.  A 
larger  house  is  better  and  smaller  ones 
hav  beer.  used.  M.  B.  d. 
Damp  Houses 
I  have  about  500  hens,  and  am  only 
getting  15  to  18  eggs  per  day.  I  have 
two  henhouses,  one  20x40  and  the  other 
20x30.  I  have  ventilators  2xG  feet  in 
th  front  covered  with  cloth,  which  7 
leave  pen  all  day  unless  it  storms,  and 
hou;  :  are  so  damp  that  the  hens  have 
ce1  s,  and  s  rn  have  sore  eyes ;  they 
swell  abut  nd  hard  cheesy  chunks  form 
in  them.  My  houses  are  up  from  the 
ground  so  T  banked  them  with  horse  ma¬ 
nure  ix  Ic  ep  the  floors  warm.  What 
can  I  do  to  prevent  this  dampness,  and 
what  would  you  do  for  the  sick  ones?  I 
have  225  aci  or  haul,  21  cows  and  can¬ 
not  make  ends  meor  What  would  vOu 
advise  me  to  do  to  make  a  better  incou.  v 
I  have  clay  laud  a  little  rolling,  but  can 
be  w  .1.  -4  to  a  good  advantage. 
New  York.  m.  j.  k. 
If  your  nmiltry  Louses  are  damp,  it  is 
evidence  that  tne  means  for  ventilation 
are  not.  adequate  to  their  task,  no  mat¬ 
ter  what  the  method  used.  Probably 
these  houses  face  the  south  aud  have 
glass  windows  besides  the  cloth  covered 
openings  of  which  you  speak.  If  so, 
see  that  nil  other  sides  of  the  building 
are  made  airtight,  then  open  the  win¬ 
dows  on  the  south  side  and  leave  them 
open.  Don’t  depot:.',  upon  cloth  covered 
openings;  they  are  a  delusion  and  a 
snare.  A  curtain  of  any  kind  of  cloth 
that  cau  he  dropped  in  front  of  the 
perches  on  Zero  nights  will  save  the 
combs  of  the  fowls;  their  own  activity 
will  protect  flic:/,  m  the  daytime.  When 
storms  drive-  directly  into  the  windows, 
close  them  temporarily  but  open  them 
again  as  soon  as  possible  and  leave  them 
"lien.  Remove  the  sick  liens  from  the 
flock  and  _  place  them  by  themselves  in 
dry,  comfortable  quarters  where  they 
may  have  a  chance  to  recover.  Tf  any 
arc  evidently  seriously  affected  aud  have 
a  foul  smelling  discharge  from  the  nos¬ 
trils.  kill  and  bury  them.  Add  permau- 
ganati  >f  potash  to  the  drinking  water 
of  all  the  fowls,  giving  them  as  strong  a 
solution  as  tiny  will  drink;  a  teaspoon- 
fill  to  the  gallon,  or  more,  These  sore 
eyes,  etc.,  are  the  result  of  close,  damp 
and  possibly  dirty  quarters.  They  are 
inevitable  unless  the  buildings  are  kept 
clean  and  reasonably  free  from  moisture, 
which  Litt  r  means  that  moisture  must 
not  be  present  in  sufficient  amount  to  col¬ 
lect  on  the  walls  as  frost  on  cold  days. 
If  I  could  successfully  advise  people 
how  to  make  both  ends  meet  on  a  farm,  I 
should  be  too  popular  to  be  comfortable; 
but,  bless  your  heart,  a  year  isn't  long 
enough  to  find  out.  where  you  are  making 
mistakes.  Farming  is  a  business  that 
has  to  be  learned,  and  lessons  of  this 
kind  have  to  be  paid  for  by  some  one ; 
fortunate  is  1; lie  mat'  who  isn’t  trying  to 
pay  for  the  farm  A  the  same  time* ;  225 
acres  of  land.  21  cows  and  500  liens 
should  certainly  provide  a  living  for  one 
family,  but  all  these  can  as  easily  run  a 
man  into  debt  as  provide  him  with  an  in¬ 
come.  IIow  to  make  them  do  the  latter 
is  a  question  Unit  must  he  solved  by  each 
man  for  himself.  Tile  solution  is  summed 
up  in  the  word  “management”  but,  to 
most  of  us,  the  ability  to  manage  suc¬ 
cessfully  comes  only  after  long  training 
and  many  hard  knocks,  and,  after  we 
have  acquired  it,  we  can’t  pass  it  on  to 
some  one  else.  yi. 
TheGasoline£ngine 
on  the  Farm 
Building  Book  Coupon 
MATTITUCK  WHITE  LEGHORN  FARM 
In  deciding  where  yoe  wi"  vour  baby  chicks  or 
pullets  you  must  na'-  c.u-  orincipal  considerations  in 
mind.  viz. :  1  Vigorous  stock.  2.  Stock  bred-to- 
lay.  3  Seasonable  price  4.  Honest  treatment. 
O  iock  and  business  methods  fulfill  these  cnrdilipns 
'  o  illustrate  our  flock  of  1000  pullets — Barron-Young 
strain  were  layine  300  eggs  per  day  in  Oct.,  when  eggs 
ncttcil  us  65c.  per  do?.,  wholesale.  By  Fen,  I5»lv  'hey 
were  laying  100.  and  even  the  snow  and  cold  of  Fehruar- 
haven't  stopped  them.  And  we  do  not  force  our  aem. 
But  seud  for  our  circular  HUd  read  the  expeneneewofoth 
ers-witli  our  Ktoek.  Rend  particularly  i >«  1‘hjc i«,pli  headed 
•‘200-eoo  bona,  and  such.”  It  •nay  heiriR  Up  ideas  you 
hadn’t  emisidiu-cd  before.  Write  today  to 
ARTHUR  H  PENNY  MnttHnck,  N  V 
Pearl  Grit  is  nn  extra  roc  pro- 
(dueer.  Extra  r-gK*  inoronne  ocg 
iruncy.  ’I’ho  extra  money  more  than 
pays  for  1‘cnrl  Grit.  Deers  eay  no, 
aud  keep  a  supply  on  hand.  The 
rcrmoti  Is,  IT  l‘AYS,  Wo  want  yon  to 
write  ns  today  tor  detailed  informa¬ 
tion.  booklet  treo.  ' 
THE  OHIO  MARBLE  COMPANY 
46S.  Cleveland  {Street,  l*ii|«a,  Ohio 
fPlARl  — O 
PCdCtOV 
kVrAT  <*• 
Xntsinny 
EFFICIENCY  CHICKS 
Retie,  Rocks.  Wyandotte*,  I*etrhpMiny  MhinrcM,  A  neon  as  ot  uigh 
e«t  qualttlcA  and  M.tr  eet:  prod  action  at  appealing  pr\c«-8.  Send 
for  cAUlojrue.  Clyde  Chick  H.tTGHKXtY,  Box  21  R,  Clyde,  Ohio 
HATCHING  EGOS  -  £7  per  hundred 
C'Mretul’y  Selected  Eggs  from  our  own  brooding  pen  of 
htgn  record  layers.  90 £  Fertility  guiiranteed. 
DAY  OLD  CHICKS  -  $15  per  hundred 
VifcforouK  Purebred  dajr-old  chicks  hutched  right 
lYnm  eggs  from  <?ur  best  trap-nested  breeders?.  A  full 
fount  of  bust  ling  vigorous  chicks  guaranteed  at 
your  express  depot. 
lYumpt  a«*  livery,  quality  and  fair  dealing 
H!‘o  tho  foundation  of  our  business 
Wintringham  Park  Poultry  Farm,  -  *  Toms  River,  N.  J. 
Baby  Chicks-Hatching  Eggs 
Trap  nested  Whit.n  Rock*.  Stnte  tasted  for  W7  Di 
nrrhea.  All  3Iale«  from  200-261-Eek  hen*.  Pricelist 
free.  NOB  SCOT  EGG  FARM,  NOBSCOT.  MASS 
S.  C.  White  leghorn  l’nllnte— April  hatched 
$1.25;  yearling  hens,  $1.50  Hatching  eggs.  $5  per 
hundred.  Cornell  Strain  P.  J.  6illit,Sprmo  Valley, N.Y 
Baby  Chicks  and  Hatching  Eggs 
Success  strain  Barred  Rocks  a,,  i  Young's  White 
Leghorns.  Farm  rnisoii,  strong,  vigorous  stock. 
Chickens,  $15  hundred.  Write  for  free  catalogue, 
note  oar  liberal  terms,  the  guarantee,  and  what 
others  sny  about  our  stock. 
Shady  Hill  Poultry  Farm,  ,  Bolton,  Mass. 
-Pay-Old  Chicks  and  E; 
HAMPTON  S.  PITTSTOWN,  ► 
Black  Leghorn 
POULTMMEH,  »TTEIITIOH;-«BS.'.,,cc£khfr 
sale  each  week  commencing  March  1.  Prioe.  115  fo- 
100.  Write  for  circular.  The  Elmore  farm,  Bridacnnri.  Can 
Eggs  for  Hatching 
strain.  Greatest,  la.'  ers  of  large  white  eggs,  $5  per 
100.  MOT'LL  POULTRY  FARM.  Harnmoi.ton,  N.  J. 
Wyandotte  Breeders i 
from  best  pen  exported  by  Barron.  $5  each.  Egg 
pedigree  furnished.  TEASI.KY,  Chkshhck.  Conn 
SINGLE  COMB  WHITE  LEGHORN 
Mammoth  Fmrfpn  Gupqn  1 »K|n  Ducks,  White  Atn. 
mdonnuin  LUlUBil  UobSfl  (,.m  (iuineas.  Rock,  R.  I 
Red.  OaJttpines,  Minorcan,  Leghorns,  Wvaudottes 
Mapl't  Cove  *\)til?ry  Varda,  R.  2,  Athena,  Pa 
Breeder  aud  Importer  of  Tom  Barron's  strain  Ex¬ 
clusively,  A  few  pnllets  and  cockerels  for  sale  at 
reasonable  prices,  considering  quality.  Records 
and  price  list  upon  request  Won  third  prize  ribbon 
for  December  and  January  at  Missouri  Egg  Contest, 
Eggs  for  hatching.  M.  J.  QUACKENBUSH,  Nulley,  N.  J 
Cook’s  Fawn  Indian  Runner  Ducks  exhibition11  and 
laying  strain.  Interesting  booklet  with  prices 
stock  and  eggs  free.  IRVING  COOK.  Munnsvillc.Ncw  York. 
PARKS’  SINGLE  COMB  WHITE  LEGHORNS 
Are  i  he  Official  World  Record  LnvineStrninb  of  AMER¬ 
ICA.  (NOLAND.  AUSTRALIA  AND  NEW  ZEALAND.  EGGS  AND 
CHICKS  for  sale,  and  the  5ioet,  Practical  Catalog  ever 
printed,  "UTILITY  FACTS, "  lfrco.  J.  »,  CAUKS,  llox  r,  Altoona,  Pa. 
AMMOTH  PEKIN  DU CKS— Kggs,$l  .50  pai  12 
J.''  per  50.  Also  drakes.  <i«u.  F.  Williamson,  Klaudt-i-s,  N.  i 
HTILITY  LEGHORN  BREEDERS!  White  Leghorn  cocks  and 
V  cockerels,  $5  each.  America's  best  laying  strain, 
as  proved  by  International  Egg  Laying  Contests. 
Particulars  inrnishod.  PEASLEY,  Cheshire,  Connecticut 
of  a  book  every 
jSSjjsS  farm  borne  ought 
selecting  the  most 
suitable  engine  for 
directions  a 
given  for  handling  the  tractor  on  the  ro 
530  pages.  Nearly  ISO  engravings. 
This  book  will  o..  sent  to  uny  address  prepaid  — 
TWO  NEW  YEARLY  SUBSCRIPTIONS 
or  Twenty  Ten-week  Trial  Subscriptions 
or  Four  Yearly  Renewal  Subscriptions 
or  One  New  Yearly  Subscription  and  Two 
Renewal  Subscriptions. 
The  Rural  New  Yorker,  333  West  30th  St,,  N  2, 
Turkeys  forSale 
winners.  Address.  Mrs.  J  AS  H.  BENEDICT,  Wisner,  N.Y. 
S4  per  10.  It.  C.  Red  Eggs,  5 
Sheep.  H.  J.  VAN  DYKE 
per  15.  Shropshii-e 
Gettysburg,  Penn  a. 
XTTR  KTTTYS  Will  exchange  Mammoth  Bronze 
AJTvxVIN  J  O  (gobblers  for  turkey  h tins.  PER. 
C1IKKON  MARE  for  sale — black;  aged  seven; 
weighs  about  sixteen  hundred;  without  a  fault. 
L  E.  MINARD,  •  BOONTON.  N.  . 
rURKEYS  BrT'n'io 
ho:ee breeding  stock.  A.  R.  Manson. Bresie  Corner:  N.Y. 
Fctct*  ^ Purebred  Bronze  Turkey  Eggs,  $,j 
UsgSUUOalc  per  dozen.  Cnlurnwan  Plymouth 
Rocks.  $3,  or  two  dozen  for$5.  W.  L.  Gay,  Lime  Rock,  Cl. 
Wkte«»ll»MT.rt*ii»7^«,,ia~S"iJ*gs- 
isfaction  guaranteed.  H.W.  Anderson, StEwartstown.  Pa, 
WWteHolhndTnA.ynM^tiS^ 
audotte  cockerels,  (Barron  Strain);  March  hatch; 
strong,  vigorous  birds.  RICHARD  KFIF,  Cranhury,  N.  J. 
Oid  barn  and  shedb  on  George  Mixter 
farm.  Hardwick.  Massachusetts, 
made  weatherproof  and  as  attractive 
US  w  hen  new  by  covering  roof  and 
sides  with  RU-BER-OIT  Roofing. 
Make  Old  Buildings  New 
Keep  them  warm  in  winter  and  cool  in  summer;  protect  their 
against  Cre,  weather  and  decay  by  covering  both  roofs  and  sides  with 
Pronounced  “RU"  as  in  RUBY-  —  te00* 
COSTS  MORE 
It  is  the  original  smooth-surfaced 
ready-to-lay  roofing,  uniform  in  qual¬ 
ity  for  23  years.  Hundreds  of  build¬ 
ings  roofed  with  RU-BER-OlQ  more 
than  20  years  ago  are  still  waterproof. 
HU-BER-OID  is  waterproofed  with 
a  compound  containing  high  grade 
animal  and  vegetable  substances, 
wK  cannot  crack  or  run.  It  con¬ 
tains  no  tar  or  asphaltic  oils. 
Farm  Building  Books  Free 
Our  Bam  Bi  ?!<•  gives  plans  for 
different  types  of  barns,  “Roofing 
a  Home”  shows  how  to  lay  hand¬ 
some  wear-proof  roofs.  “Building  I 
a  Poultry  House”  gives  practical  | 
building  plans.  Mail  the  coupon,  a 
WEARS  LONGER 
PU  •ber-OIQ  is  also  made  in  attrac¬ 
tive  and  beautiful  Tile  Red  and 
Copper  Grnen  JKa-lor-oid).  It  is  sold 
oy  the  best  dealers  everywhere. 
The  U.  S.  Court  of  Appeals  has  re¬ 
cently  enjoined  imitators  from  using 
the  word  “Rubberoid  or  any  sirn  lar 
name  as  the  trade  name  or  brand  of 
their  roofing.  ” 
Ru  -ber-OIQ  Roofing  has  more  than 
300  imitators.  Be  sure  you  get  tbv. 
genuine.  Look  for  the  “Ru-ber-oid 
Man”  on  every  roll. 
The  Standard  Paint  Co.,  575  Wool  worth  Plug..  N.Y.  City 
Send  me  samples  of  Hu-bhr-oio  asd  the  hooks  opposite 
which  I  mark  X.  I  intend  to  roof  a _ 
CRootlng  a  Home  CTBuildinq  Your  Owt,  Sarage 
□Building  a  Poultry  House  □Covering  Your  Factory 
|  DBuilding  a  Bungalow  CArtislic  Rools 
■  CBuilding  a  Barn  U  a  dealer,  check  nereD 
