288 
APR 27 
THI RURAL NEW-Y0RK£P, 
Weros jof tip 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, April 20, 1889. 
During 1888 the “Lakeside Holstein-Frie- 
sian herd,” of all ages—just 60 cows—have 
been tested for butter at least one week. These 
records have been authenticated by the Su¬ 
perintendent of Advauced Registry ana ac¬ 
cepted by that work. It is not the records 
of a few phenomenal individuals, but the 
average of entire herds in large numbers,that 
shows the capacity of a breed. Of those test¬ 
ed 17 were mature, five years old and over, 
and averaged 19 pounds 3% ounces per week; 
10 were four-y ear-olds and averaged 16 
pounds 15% ounces per week; 11 were three- 
year-olds and averaged 13 pounds 15% ounces 
per week • 22 were two-year-olds and averaged 
12 pounds 1% ounce per week. A full list 
would be burdensome, but here are a few 
which are included in the above: Among the 
cows are, Clotnilde 2d, 25 pounds 6% ounces; 
Lady Griswold, 24 pounds 13 ounces; Nether- 
land Baroness 4th,22 pounds 5 ounces; Execu 
trix, 21 pounds 12% ounces; Bpnola Fletcher, 
21 pounds 3% ounces; Kappijne, 19 pounds 
12% ounces; Aaggie Constance, 19 pounds 
14% ounces; iEgis 6tb, 19 pounds five ounces, 
etc , etc. Among the four year-olds are 
Artis Rollora, 21 pounds 12 ounces; Aaggie 
Rosa 4th, 21 pounds 8%ounces; Princess Mar¬ 
garet, 20 pounds 1% ounce; Lakeside Prize, 
18 pounds 6% ounces; Artis Helen, 17 pounds 
11% ounces, etc., etc. Among the three-year- 
olds are, Baise,21 pounds 3% ounces; Soldene 
2d, 19 pounds % ounce, etc., etc. Among 
the two-year-olds are, Argyrea 3d, 15 pounds 
5% ounces; Netherland Myrrhna, 14 pounds 
14 ounces; Netherland Princess 5th, 14 pounds 
12 ounces; Venus 5th, 14 pounds 9% ounces; 
Executrix 2d, 14 pounds 4% ounces; Clothilde __ o . .... 
3d’s Countess, 13pounds 14%ounces: Aaggie’s I .Owing chiefly to the comparatively 
plicit information on the subject of Com¬ 
pound Oxygen, together with a record of 
cures in many cases of consumption, asthma, 
catarrh, bronchitis,dyspepsia,hay fever, head¬ 
ache, debility, rheumatism, neuralgia, all 
and nervous disorders. It will be 
forwarded, free of charge, to any one address¬ 
ing Drs Starkey & Palen, No, 1529 Arch 
street, Philadelphia, Pa.; or 120 Sutter Street, 
San Francisco, Cal.—Adi;. 
LATEST MARKETS. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday, April 20, 1889. 
The annual meeting of the American Jersey 
Cattle Club will be held at the office of the 
Club, No. 1 Broadway, N. Y., on Wednesday, 
May 1. Dr. H. M. Howe, President, and F. 
W. Wicks, Secretary. The Jersey breeders 
will hold a convention on May 7, at the 
Fifth Avenue Hotel. I chronic 
A simple device is reported to have been per¬ 
fected at Quincy, Illinois, which will wilder 
farmers independent of the Binding Twine 
Trust. For some weeks a harvester has been 
at work in the tall sedge grass on the Missouri 
bottoms, opposite Quincy, binding with wire 
instead of twine, and the device for doing so 
is pronounced a complete success. A twister 
is simply substituted for the knotter used in 
the twine binder. The farmer can therefore 
use either wire or twine, and the change can 
be made in a moment. It is stated that the 
old objections to wire binders have been ob¬ 
viated in the new attachment. 
Canada proposes to make it a penal offense to 
export cheese from the United States to Eng¬ 
land, via Montreal, with the words “Canadian 
Products” marked on the packages. It is said 
such a practice grpatly injures tne high repu¬ 
tation of Canadian cheese abroad .. 
Farmers through their organizations are urg 
ing the legislatures of Michigan and Illinois to 
provide for the manufacture of binding twine 
by the convicts in the penitentiary and 
the farmers of Mississippi want cotton bag¬ 
ging made by the State convicts. Ex Com 
missioner of Agriculture Dr. Geo B. Loring 
has been nominated and confirmed as U. S. 
Minister to Portugal _ The Pennsyl 
vama legislature has refused to tax oleomar¬ 
garine and to create the new office of State 
Dairy Commissioner . ...... Florida orange 
growers are beginning to consider that the 
business of orange planting has been overdone. 
It is said that the production 10 years hence, 
when all the trees now planted are in full 
bearing, will be enough to supply one 
box annually to every man, woman 
and child in the United States. 
A bill just introduced into the New York leg¬ 
islature offers a bounty of a half cent per 
pound for sirup from sorghum grown in this 
State. The sirup must weigh 11 pounds to 
the gallon. The manufacturer may put up 
works -worth any sum up to §6,000 and the 
plaut is to be for 10 years free from assess¬ 
ment or taxation for State, county, muni¬ 
cipal, town and school purposes. The sum of 
§3,000 is appropriated for the payment of .... ,. . _ __ __, 
bounty during the first year of the act. I 15®\7c, do”Jersey, do, choice, i4@l5c: do nearby, doj 
NBW YORK MARKETS. 
Cotton.—T he quotations, according to the American 
classification, are as follows: 
New Orleans. 
Strict Ordinary.. 
Good Ordinary.. 
Strict Good Ordinary. 
Strict Low Middling. 
Fair. 
ilands. 
and Gulf. 
,. 8 1-16 
8 5-16 
• 84 
84 
. 9 7-16 
9 11-16 
.. 974 
104 
10% 
104 
.11)4 
104 
.10 13-16 
11 1-16 
.11 5 16 
11 9-16 
.11 9-16 
11 18-16 
.12 
124 
.124 
124 
8TAINKD, 
Texas 
Good Ordinary.7 15-16 I Low Middling 
94 
3d Daughter, 12 pounds 12 ounces; Ida Rook 
er, 13 pounds 12% ounces; Netherland Duke’s 
Nierop, 23 months old, 12 pounds 2% 
ounces; Lady of Verona, 23 months old, 
13 pounds 10% ounces, etc., etc, 
The immigration to the Dakotas is unprece¬ 
dentedly large at this season of the year. From 
five to a dozen emigrant cars are attached to 
nearly every train on the C. M. & St. P. rail¬ 
road, a majority of the emigrants being Ger 
mans, most of whom intend to start in farm 
ing. A great immigrant boom into the new 
States is expected during the coming summer. 
.The Board of Health of the City 
of Mexico, has pronounced American lard an 
adulteration unfit for use, and has prohibited 
its sale. The action has been sustained by 
the Government and will be adopted through¬ 
out the Republic, and suitable instructions 
small balance to the credit of the Department 
of Agriculture, as much of the appropriation 
for the current fiscal year, ending June 30 
next, has been expended, Secretary Rusk has 
discharged 80 of the employees in the Seed 
Division of the Department of Agriculture, 
and is making few additions or changes 
anywhere .A beet sugar company has 
just been incorporated at San Francisco, with 
a capital of §5,000,000, with Louis Schloss, a. 
L. Cutts, F. Ehrmann, Claus Spreckels and 
John Spreckels as directors, the last two hold¬ 
ing half the stock. The object is to erect 
large sugar refineries at various points on the 
Pacific coast in addition to the one already 
established at Watson, Cal., with the purpose 
of refining from 50,000 to 60,000 tons of beet 
sugar a year. This would make up nearly 
half our present annual imports.The 
8triet Good Ord.8 9-16 I Middling .10 5-16 
Poultry— Chickens, spring, per pair, 75c.@$l 25; 
Livb Fowls, near-oy, per lb, 12@124e ; fowls. 
Western, per iM2@124o roosters, per lb, 7@i1c; t» - 
keys, per lb 14@16c: ducks, western Derpalr, 75c@l.(K). 
geese, western, per pair, $1 15@$1 51). 
Poultry.—Dresskd— Turkeys, dry picked, good to 
choice, per lb, I5a>i6c; do do,common to fair, l()@i4c; 
do, Iced, dry picked, choice, U@12c. Fowls, western, 
do, choice, ll@l34c; do, nearby, do do I3@i34c; 
Chicks and Fowls, mixed. 10@l2c; do do do, scalded. 
8@9c. Squabs, white, per doz, $3 50@$8 7ado. dark, 
do, $2 50@$2 75. Chickens Philadelphia, dry picked, 
:e, I4@l5c; d 
good ,13@14c; do Western, do do, ll@12c: do do.'lcedj 
good to choice—@—c. Ducks, nearby, choice, per lb, 
14@15c; do do, good, 12w 1-1; do Western, good, 12® 14c. 
Geese. Western, good, 8@10c, 
Gamk.—W ild Ducks, Canvas back, per pair, 3- 
@$—do. Red Head, do, $ 50@$l 00 ; Grouse, do, 
75®90c ; Wild Ducks. Mallard, do, 40@5l>c; Teal,do. 22, 
@40. Plover, per doz., $1 50@$1 75; Snipe, per doz. 
$1 50@$l 75. 
Hops.— State, new, best. 21@22e : do. prime, 19:420c, 
do, low grades, I3@i6c: do do, 1887, 1U@U do do do, 
California, common to prime, I3@l9c; choice, 20c. 
Hay »nd Straw.— Choice Timothy, 90@95o; do good 
do, 85@90c; do medium, 70@8oc; shipping, 6o@65c; do, 
Clover, mixed, 55@T0c. Straw.—No. 1, rye, 75@—c; 
short do 55@65; oat, 40@50c. 
Bkans.—M arrows, new. $1 90®$—new mediums 
choice, <175®—: pea, $1 75®—; red kidney,*2 00®-; 
white kidneys, choice,210®-: foreign, mediums, 1 35 
@1 55 ; California Lima, $2 75@$3 10 ; green peas, 
SI 15@-. 
have been given to th® eustom-houses. Acme Company, of Wilmington, N. C.’, and 
The Ohio Senate has emasculated the anti- 
oleo bill by adding four amendments which 
render it of no use to farmers. One provides 
that imitations of butter must be declared in¬ 
jurious to health after chemical analysis be¬ 
fore its manufacture and sale can be prohib¬ 
ited; another provides that neither butter 
nor cheese must be colored; another ordains 
that any firm in the State which has been 
pecuniarily injured by the bill can recover 
full damages from the State, and the other 
struck out the penal clause. The Senate has 
also killed the beef inspection bill by a vote 
of 16 to 15 .The Ohio Legislature 
has passed a bill making the weight of a 
a number of outside capitalists” have 
agreed on the immediate erection, tboughout 
the pine regions of the South, of factories for 
the manufacture of pine-straw bagging for 
cotton. It is expected that this movement will 
go a great way towards checking the extortion 
Nuts.—P eanuts 
quoted at 8®-c, and farmers’ grudes at 64@7c. 
Hickory Nuts quoted at $0 50@$1 00 per bushel. 
Pecans. 6@Sc. 
icy, 
iides 
FRUIT AND VEGETABLE MARKETS. 
Vegetables.— rotatees. -Bermuda, per bbl, $4 00@ 
$8 00; Maine do. $1 50@$2 00; State do, *0 9()@$1 50; 
Cab., new,$1 t)U@$2 00; Peas, per 
* th ® monopoly .. twee's d sol®! Kale, per bbl..’ $o 50*«O 75: Beets. 
One death and two cases ot sickness which | per crate, $1 25@$i?5; Aspa r agus, per doz., $3 00@t9 iw; 
must inevitably end with death, have been 
lately reported from handling glandered 
horses.The New York Hay and 
Straw Dealers’ Association was organized on 
the 17th inst. at Syracuse. Nearly every 
county in the State was represented. Willis 
Bullock,of Canajoharie, was elected president; 
bushel of beets and carrots 50 pounds. C. C. Caywood, of Woodstock, vice-president; 
PUilo L> n i’k/vI-ov, fho D ~ „ I 1 tt ’ 3 r . ... ' 
Philo Remington, inventor of the Reming¬ 
ton rifle and head of the agricultural works at 
Dion, N. Y., died the other day at the age of 
73.Michael Eugene Chevreul, the 
famous French chemist, who made a number 
of discoveries of much importance to agricul¬ 
ture, is dead at the age of 103. He retained 
many of bis faculties to the last, but was quite 
helpless of late years. 
Secretary of the Navy Tracy has been a large 
breeder of trotters. Thursday 49 of his stock 
were sold here at auction, bringing a total of 
§54,083—an average of §1,104. Wednesday 
the same number were sold, bringing §59,820. 
an average of nearly §1,221. The total of the 
two days' sale was 98 horses, a large propor¬ 
tion of which were youngsters, which brought 
§113,905, an average of §1,162 per head. Ab¬ 
ide, a George Wilkes mare, 12 years old, 
W. H. Falke, of Albany, secretary, and T. 
W. Smith,of Penn Yan,treasurer. The prin¬ 
cipal object is said to be to get rid ot middle¬ 
men in the New York, Boston and other 
Eastern markets. Wouldn’t this object be 
accomplished better by an association of 
producers than by one of dealers ?. 
Called Buck. 
There is a famous novel by Hugh Conway 
entitled “Called Back.” From a facetious 
proneness we are indirectly reminded that 
this is also the name of the supporter of erect 
stature, the spinal column is ‘called back. 
Disease may weaken it—weariness wear it, 
brought the top figure—§5,900. health leave it; briefly prostration may 
The Maple Sugar Exchange at Brattleboro, 
Vt., has received 31,340 pounds of cake sugar 
and 27,541 pounds in pails, besides 4,216 
f allons of sirup.Dairy Commissioner 
atam, of Connecticut, says that not one- 
third as much “oleo,” is sold in that State as 
there was two years ago, while the sales of 
butter have increased by §464,000. The 
United States Government has gained §25,000 
from the “ oleo ” licenses .George T. 
Angell, President of the Massachusetts Society 
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Anamals, 19 
Milk Street, Boston, offers a reward of §100 
for evidence enough to convict anybody in 
the State of docking horses’ tails. Tnree con¬ 
victions have been already secured. . 
Beef exports in March increased 7,123,000 
pounds, or 45 per cent, as compared with the 
same month last year.There is 
great activity throughout the South in build¬ 
ing cotton seed oil mills in opposition to the 
Cotton Oil Trust. A society to build a dozen 
mills to cost §1,000,000 has just been organ¬ 
ized in the South, and a Philadelphia com¬ 
pany is to put §2,000,000 into the business. 
Planters are likely to get something like rea¬ 
sonable prices for their cottonseed. . 
The Forestry Division of the Department of 
Agriculture has issued a circular giving in¬ 
structions to school officials who are interested 
in the celebration of Arbor Day. Send to 
B. E. Fernon, Washington, D, 
drive its vigor away, but we are pleased to 
remind you that vigor also may be “called 
back,” by Compound Oxygen treatment. 
Here is some encouragement: 
Pensacola, Fla., July 25, 1888. 
“I suffered from a very severe and obstinate 
case of bronchitis. I had tried a great many 
doctors’ remedies, and while I am not entirely 
well, 1 am very greatly improved, and feel 
fully assured that the same is due to your 
Compound Oxygen Treatment.” 
Walla Walla, Wash. Ter., April 9,’88. 
•I have now used your Compound Oxygen 
Treatment for two months, and feel much 
better than 1 did before using it. My lungs 
hold double the amount of air they did at the 
time I first tried it. N. K. Gabriel. 
Brooklyn, N. Y., June 4, 1888. 
No. 331 Decatur St. 
‘I will always recommend Compound Oxy¬ 
gen as the greatest vitalizing agent known; 
for I certainly feel that it has prolonged my 
life ” Mas. S. H. Henderson. 
If you desire convincing proof of its 
efficacy—that is if you will consider authen¬ 
ticated testimonials as such, tnen send for our 
brochure of 300 pages containing full and ex- 
Spinach, per bbl., si 00@$1 75: Tomatoes, pererate. *2.- 
00@$4 10 Onions— Orange Co. red. per bbl., 4(J@75c; 
Conn. red. do. 7YS$1 UO do. white, do $1 (XLsgl 5 *; do, 
yellow do. 6M@?5c: Slate, do do, 25ta-75c; Bermuda, do, 
per crate, $1 25®$-; Beans, string, do, $1 25@$3 00. 
Fruits —frksh.-A pples. Baldwin, per bbl. $125@*1 
75; Common, $0 J5@$l 00; Russer, $1 5"®$2 00 Straw¬ 
berries, per qt. 10330;. Cranberries—Jersey tine, box, 
SI 00; do common, 50®?5e. Oranges-Florida, best, 
box, $8 00@$4 50; do, good lots, $2 50@$3 50. 
domestic dried.— Apples, evaporated, new, cnoice 
to fancy, 54@6c; do new, common to prime, 4 35c; 
sliced, new, 3@44c : quarters, 8@S4e: chopped, 14 -4 
14c; cores and sk'us, 1@—c. Ch‘ rrles, new, 134@ise. 
Raspberries, new, ]6@l?4c. Blackberri-s, 4@44c. 
Huckleberries, 10@—c. Beaches—Delaware, evapo¬ 
rated. peeled, 12®15c; do do, unpeeled 5@6c : North 
Carolina, sun-dried, peeled, 7@9c. plums, 6&64c. 
PROVISION MARKETS 
New York.—Provisions —pork.— New mess,IS 50@13 
75, short clear, *14 00®16 00 Extra Prime mess. $12 50® 
$— prime do, $14®—- and family mess, $1325@14 00 
Beef— India v ’es« in tierces, $1350-414 Extra Mess, ’n 
barrels $b753>700 Packet. $9 5‘J@$'0 00 per bbl. and 
$12®$12 50 In tierces; Plate. $8 25®8 50; Family at $12 
50@$16. Hams $12OO@$13 00, Winter packing. Cut 
Mkat8.- Quoted 12 lb average,Bellies,74@“?fc: Pickled 
Hams. 94@10c; pickled Shoulders, 6@64c: Smoked 
shoulders 64@—c: do Hatns.lO®lle. Dressed Hogs.— 
City, heavy to light, 64@64c. Pigs, 7c. Lard. - 
City steam, $6 75; February, $-; March, $-; April, 
$7 20 May. *7 20; June. $7 23: July, $ 7 26; August, 
$7 29; September, $7 32; South America, 8o. 
Boston.—Provisions firm and steady New Mess, 
Pork, $13 75@$I4(J0; Old Mess Pork, $13 00®$13 25; Ex¬ 
tra Prime, new, $13 U0@$18 25. Lard, $8 50®$9 50. 
quiet; 
Wt 
Philadelphia. Pa.— provisions.— Potatoes 
Early Rose. 23@38c per bush.; Burbanks and White 
Star-, 23® 30c Provisions were steady, in moderate 
demand. Beef.—C ity family, per bbl. $9 50@$10: do, 
packets, $9 00®—; smoked beef,hKal04c: beef hams, $14 
Pork.— Mess, $14 U0®$—-; do Prime Mess, new, $13 
50: do, family, $15 00®15 50; Hams, smoked, per lb, 
U4@12c do. S. P„ cured in tierces, 94' i *104c: do 
do, In salt, 10c; sides, clear ribbed, smoked, —@8c; 
shoulders, In dry salt and fully cured, 84@9c ; do, do, 
smoked, 9e; Shoulders, pickle cured, 8@»4c; do do 
smoked, 8 , aK4e; bellies, In pickle, 8@B4e ; do 
breakfast bacon, 94@10e. Lard.— Steady; Cltv re¬ 
fined, 8c; do steam, 9@94c; butchers' loose, 7. @84- 
Chicago.—Mess Pork.- $11 80®- Lard.-$6 85®- 
per 100 lbs ; Short Rib sides 'loose), 86 00; dry salted 
shoulders, boxed, $5 25; short clear sides, boxed, 
$6 25. 
DAIRY AND EGG MARKETS. 
New y ORK.-BUTTER-New, Creamery,State,palls, best, 
27@28e. do do. tubs. new. 20®26: Pennsylvania, best. 25 
@26; Elgin, best, 27: Western, best 25@—; do prime, 
28@25e; dogood, 193i2’c; do poor, 16@l7c. State, Dairy, 
half-flrklns, tubs, best, 25@26c; do do prime. 20@23o; 
do do fine. 19-t2lc; Welsh tubs, fine, 21-31220; do do 
good. 19@30; firkins, best, 19@21e ; do prime, 21@22c; 
do fine,—@—e. Western-imitation Creamery, best, 
2i<ai28; do fine, 17@I9; Western dairy, fine, 18 '3>19; do 
fair, 15@’.7c: do poor. 12@13c; do factory, fresh, best. 
19@20e, do prime, 16@17c; do good. 14@15; do poor.llj^ 
@18J^e; do June, 18@14. Old butter from 2 to 4c. lower. 
Cheese.— State factory, fancy, l0^@U‘4c;dodo, nne, 
ll-aiUic: do do, prime. ’03i@ll4: do do, fair to good 
10@l()!4c: Ohio, fiat, prime, 11@114c; do good, 10®lie; 
do. good. Ur39%{; Skims, ligat, 8J4@9J4c; do medium, 
6*£@8>& do full, 2®2-4c. 
Eggs.—N ear-by. fresh, 124@l'Mfe: Canadian, ll@l2c; 
Western, best, llj^@124c. Duck, 25@264c. 
Philadelphia.—butter active. Pennsylvania cream¬ 
ery extra, at27@—c: Western creamery, extra at 164® 
17c B. C. and N.Y.creamery.extra,17c: Western factory 
14@15c; packing butter, ll@12c. Eggs —Were firm. 
Pennsylvania firsts. 124@—c; Western firsts. 12®-c: 
Cheese dull-steady; demand fair: New York full 
cream, at 9@94c; Ohio flats choice, 84c; do, fair to 
prime, 74@8c. 
Boston.— Butter firm; Western extra Creamery, 28® 
29e; Eastern extra Creamery. 27@28c. Cheese dull. 
Fggs firm ; Eastern extras, 13@—c; Michigan extras 
12c; Western firsts at —®—c. 
Chicago, III.— Butter.— On the Produce Excnange 
to-dav the butter market was activeand steady; Elgin 
creamery, 25@26c; choice Western. 21@28c. choice 
dairy, 20@23c; common to fair, ll@12c. Eggs firm at 
104c. 
Cheese— State factory, September made, 12c; do do 
do, October, fancy, ll@ll4c; do. tine, 114@l»%c; do 
fair and good. 10@104c; Ohio, fiat, prime, U@114e; 
do, good, 94@l04c skims, light, 8M@94c; do, medi¬ 
um, 64@84c; do, full. 2®2&c. 
LIVE STOCK MARKETS. 
New York, Saturday, April 20,1889. 
BEEVES.—Dressed beef unchanged and in moderate 
request at 54@7c. nor lb. with some sales of choice 
and extra sides at 74@74o. 
MILCH OOWS.- 
head. Dull al $2 
stock. 
Receipts thus far for the week 152 
>@$43 per head for poor to good 
CALVES.—Demand moderately active at 4@44e. for 
Buttermilk calves: 44c. for mixed do. and 5<4<c. for 
ordinary to prime veals, with choice fat stock reach 
teg 74c. Dressed calves in fair demand at f,@9c. tor 
country dressed veals, and 6@hic. for city dressed. 
Extra carcasses sold as high as I04@iic. 
SHEEP AND LAMBS.—Market unchanged and de¬ 
mand moderate. Clipped sheep sold at S4 4i)@M 624; 
unshorn do at $5@$5 85: clipped yearlings at $4 50® 
$5 5’i; woolled do at $6 50@$6 70. Spring Lambs ranged 
in price from $3 to $7 per head. Dressed Mutton slow 
at >4 9c and dressed Yearlings quiet at8@10c. Sales 
Onshorn Michigan Sheep. 97 lb. average, at $5 75 
per 100 lb- unshorn Michigan Yearlings, 69 lb., at S« 70. 
Clipped State Sheep, 82 'b , at $4 50; unshorn do. 78 lb, 
at *5; SprlnN Lambs at $5 each. Unsh ->rn State Sheep, 
99 lb, at *5 S5 Cllnpcd Ohio Sheep, 854 lb. at SI 50; 
clipped Ohio Yearlings. 53 lb, at $4 624. Jersey Spring 
Lambs at $5@$7 per head. 
HOGS.—Market steady at $5@$5 40. 
unchanged. 
Country dressed 
Communications 
Received for the 
April 20, 1889. 
Week Ending 
L. L.—C. F. O.—V. W. G—H. C.—G. S. M.—G. W. N.— 
G. W. G.—V. S.-F. D. D.—C. S. R —D. C. L.—C. C. B.— 
S. B.-L. B. P.-Mrs. J. W.-L. C. W.-J. W.- J. P. A.- 
O. F. B.-J. R. B.-S. N. R.-J. H. P.-L M. W.-J. M.- 
F. D.S.-A. B S.-C. H. F.-A. J. C.-F. D.— H. A. W- 
L. H. B.—H. T.—J. F.—F. E. S. F C. S.—G. V. S.—W. E. 
W.-W. M. B -J. H. L.-P. L. D.-E A. F.-A. H. S.- 
R. W. McA.-W. A. O.-F. E. L.-H. L. W.-T. B. P.- 
W. S. H.-A, B-H D. P.-S. B. H.-A, D.-H. S.-E. A. 
McC.—E. H. C.—G. W. F—H. S—J. A. C.—F. G. W.— 
W. C. A.—C. A. W.-J. J. H. G.—T. T. L.-J. A. W.-C. 
F. O. -L. F. A.—O. D—W. P. W.-D. C. L.-H. A. N.- 
D C. C.-J. Y. D.-F. E. V.-J. A. F.-J. F.-J. C. P.-M. 
M. -S. C.-M. B.—H. M. F..-G. S. J-T. W. D.—O. D.—M. 
I.-W. A. E.-G. R B.-J. E. B.—L. P. W.-F. H. B.-J. 
C.—B. W. B.-F. G. W.-B. W. B.-E. W. S -John J. 
Payne. Please report.—B. H. G.—V. W. G.—H. G. O. 
E.-H. R Jr.-A. B. A.-H. S. B.-T. H. H.—B. B.-D. M. 
K--E. J. M.-W. R M.-G P.-A. L. H.—P. O. L.-T. B. 
P. M. C B-E. A. R'-A E. H.—D. R.—J. W.—F. W. A. 
G. W. M.-E. S. P.-W. J H. 
The Kodak. 
ANYBODY 
can use the Ko¬ 
dak. The ope¬ 
ration of mak¬ 
ing a picture 
•onsists simply 
>f pressing a 
>u tton. One 
^aundred instan- 
taneous pic¬ 
tures are made 
without reload¬ 
ing No dark 
PRICE S'Z.’i.oo. room or chemi¬ 
cals are necessary. A division of labor is 
offered, whereby all the work of finishing 
the pictures is done at the factory, where 
the camera can be »eut to be reloaded. 
The operator need not learn anything about 
photography. He can “press the button”— 
we do the rest. 
Bend for copy of Kodak Primer, with sam¬ 
ple photograph. Mention Rural New-Yorker 
The Eastman Dry Plate and Film Go. 
ROCHESTER. N. Y. 
B ook-keeping taught 
Tuition low. Information free. 
II 
BY BAIL. 
nation free. 
B. A l)AM3, Sanford, Fla. 
THE KANNEBERC ROOFING COMPANY. CANTON, OHIO. 
(The Originators of Strictly Genuine Steel Rooting.) 
-manufacturers of - 
The KANNEBEIiG PATENT, ^sraSLf* CORRUGATEI > IRON. 
(Four Sizes of Corrugations.) 
Crimped Edge Iron Roofing and 
siding, Beaded Iron Siding and Cell¬ 
ing, Water Proof Building Paper, 
Ready Mixed Paints, Etc. 
VVi’ite.lor.Catalogue,.Price Li«| and Samples, Mention the Rural New-Yorker, 
Latest Improved 
Folded Lock Seam. 
Strictly Genuine Steel Roofing. 
