io8 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
February fi. 1904 
Extra Fine Imported 
56=Piece China 
TEA SET 
FREE 
with an order for 25 lbs. of 
New Crop 00c . 70c. or 80c. 
Tea, or25 lbs. Great Ameri¬ 
can Baking I*owder,46c a lb. 
or an assorted order Teas 
and Baking Powder, or HO 
lbs. Bomosa Coffee. 33c a lb. 
or 502 oz. bottles of pureex- 
tracts.Vanilla. Lemon, etc., 
25c a bottle or 25 1-lb. cansor 
Spice, any kind, absolutely 
pure,50e a can. 
For prompt attention, 
address Mr. J.,T.I>., care of 
Great American Tea Co. 
Box 280, 
31-33 Vesey St., New York 
rCIENTIFIC GRINDING MIL».S grind Corn 
k In the ear, or Grain in any form. Strong, exact, 
’ reliable. Catalogue D mailed free. 
FOOS Midi. CO., Springfield, Ohio. 
3 Haymakers 
Walter A. Wood Mowers save 
work, hay and horseflesh. Made 
in different styles to suit the work 
you have to do. Cost no mere 
than others. Strongest—light¬ 
est—host. 
Walter A. Wood Tedders make 
haymaking easier and more prof¬ 
itable. Not a weak spot in them 
—everything steel hut the shafts. 
Made with 6 and 8 forks for one 
or two horses. 
Walter A. Wood Self-Dump 
Hay Rakes are automatic. The 
horse does all the work. All steel 
with especially strong wheels and 
patent hubs. All sizes. Also in 
Hand-Dump style. 
Our new illustrated catalog de¬ 
scribes Walter A. Wood Grain and 
Corn Binders, Reapers, Mowers, 
Rakes, Tedders and Knife Grinders 
It's free for the asking. See the near¬ 
est agent or write, naming this 
paper, to 
Walter A. Wood Mowing 
& Reaping Machine Com* 
pany, Hoosick Falls, N. Y. 
Repairs furnished for Walter A. 
Wood machines of any date. 
BRADLEY’S: The World’s Best by Every Test 
WHO SAYS 
WOMEN CAN’T FARM! 
Down in Knox County, Maine, there is a young 
woman who is successfully carrying on a farm. One of 
her specialties is potato growing, in which she has obtained 
excellent results. Much of her success is due to two 
things: first, a thorough preparation of the soil; and, 
second, courage in the application of fertilizers, for she 
has discovered that it pays to fertilize well, and she uses 
much more than the quantity usually recommended. The 
potatoes she grew this year were extremely fine, and the 
yield speaks for itself. She writes as follows: 
“The land for the potatoes was broken up in April, then har¬ 
rowed and re-harrowed until it was like an ash heap. Everybody 
who saw the piece said they never saw such a handsome piece of 
potatoes. The tops were all even, and covered the ground so one 
could hardly tell which way the rows ran. Doubling the amount of 
fertilizer has practically doubled the crop. I used 2,500 lbs. to the 
acre of Bradley’s High Grade Complete Manure, and the yield was 
402 bushels per acre.” 
Why Experiment, When Bradley’s Fertilizers 
Produce Crops Like This? 
BRADLEY FERTILIZER WORKS 
American Agricultural Chemical Co. 
92 State Street : Boston, Mass. 
Ask for 
Booklet It 
Gl ( 
IGEORGIA 
J GEORGIA offers the greatest opportunities to settlers ■ a 
Wr and investors to bo found in Amprioa tn-dnv It 
Lands 
and investors to be found in America to-day. It 
has been overlooked in the rush to less favored but 
better advertised sections. Ii is the ideal place for 
Northern farmers and their sons to locate. Grows 
all kinds of crops, make permanent and profitable homes, and all at a very 
moderate cost. The climate of Georgia is perfect, neither too hot nor too cold 
and is diversified as the land rises from the sea-level to an altitude of 5,000 feet. 
No blizzards, or violent extremes of weather. The best climate, in fact, to be 
found anywhere on the continent, for health and comfort with profit. Coal 
is cheap and abundant, educational and church advantages the very best, water plentiful, transportation facilities Igood. 
More than one-half the deposits in State Banks are owned by Georgia farmers. f 
and they 
1 
LANDS in the most desirable sections of this wonderful state can be purchased onlong time and at 
far lower prices than are asked in northern states. There is no more beautiful or fertile land out¬ 
doors than Georgia possesses in abundance. Ten months in the year there is open pasturage for 
cattle. So rich and fertile is the soil, so early and convenient the market, that farms here yield annu¬ 
ally 40 percent of their valuations. Failure of crops is almost unheard of in the entire state of 
Georgia, and where diversified crops are grown nothing like an unprofitable year was ever known. 
No better opportunity exists for poultry and dairy farming, cattle, hogs and 
stock breedinggenerally. Smallfruits and in fact all fruits grow to perfection. 
GROW any crop here that grows in your state, and others that you cannot 
grow to profit. Ten cent cotton is like dollar wheat. Georgia peaches sell 
for millions. Fines'i grasses and open pasturage ten months yearly make 
dairy farming and cattle raising profitable. Don’t 
misjudge Georgia just because you know little or 
nothing about it. Find out. Lay aside any 
prejudice you may possess and ask for facts, and 
then investigate for yourself. 
Grow 
Write 
GREATER GEORGIA ASSOCIATION, Atlanta, Georgia, 
will tell you 
