644 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
August 27, 
MARKET S 
General Review. 
Wheat has gone up like a July thermom¬ 
eter. Options in this market have sold as fol¬ 
lows: September delivery, $1.12%; Decem¬ 
ber, $1.12% ; xviay, $1.14%. Chicago followed 
these prices closely, and all other large mar¬ 
kets in this country and Europe showed some 
advance. Reports of rust and .frost damage 
to the standing grain, and of lighter yields 
than were expected where thrashing has been 
done are responsible. Arrivals of fresh eggs 
are light and prices on upper grades firm and 
higher. Arrivals of potatoes liberal and 
prices weak. Onion receipts are increasing 
and the ordinary kinds are lower. Connec¬ 
ticut white are on hand, and as usual some 
are bringing $5 per barrel. Cabbage very 
plentiful and low. Sweet corn doing a little 
better, as the second-early rush is over. 
Prices obtained during the week ending Au¬ 
gust 22, 1904 : 
GRAIN. 
Wneat, No. 2, red. — @1.12% 
No. 2, hard Winter. — @1.12% 
Corn . — @ 00 
Oats . — @ 42 
Rye . — @ 72 
Clover seed, retail, lb. — @ 15 
Timothy, choice recleaned, bu. — @2.85 
FEED. 
Spring bran, 200-Ib sacks. 23.00@ 20.00 
Middlings . 26.00@ 28.00 
Ha¥ and straw. 
HOPS. 
Hay, prime 
No. 1 .., 
No. 2 ... 
No. 3 ... 
90 
80 
50 
@1.00 
@ 95 
X 82 % 
00 
50 
@ 00 
@ 1.00 
@ 
@ 
13% @ 
12 %@ 
11 @ 
15 @ 
14 @ 
12 %@ 
10 @ 
12 % @ 
11 %@ 
10 @ 
25 @ 
23 @ 
22 @ 
19 %@ 
— @ 
19 @ 
18% 
17% 
15% 
13% 
17 
10 
14% 
13 
14 
13% 
13 
12 
14% 
13 
12 
12 
11 
26 
24 
23 
20 % 
21 
20 
Clover . 45 
Clover, mixed . 50 
Straw, rye . 00 
MILK. 
New York Exchange price 2% cents per 
quart to shippers in 20-cent freight zone. 
BUTTER. 
Creamery, extras, 93@90 score 18 
Firsts . 10 
Seconds . 14 
Thirds . 13 
State dairy, hall'-tuhs, extras.. — 
Tubs, firsts . 15 
Tubs, seconds . 14 
Fresh, thirds . 12 
Western imitation creamery : 
Firsts . 15 
Seconds . 13 
Western factory, firsts. 
Seconds . 
Lower grades . 
Renovated, extras . 
Firsts . 
Seconds . 
Lower grades . 
Packing stock, No. 1. 
No. 2 . 
No. 3 „. 
EGGS. 
Nearby, fresh gathered, fancy, 
white . 
Selected, white, good to cho’e 
Fresh gathered, extra, mixed 
Fresh gathered, firsts. 
West’n, northerly sections, f’cy 
Average best . 
Seconds . 
Thirds . 
Kentucky, fresh gathered, av¬ 
erage best. 
Tennessee and other Southern. 
Southern, inferior. 
Western, fresh gathered, dirties 
Checked eggs .. 
FRESH FRUITS 
Apples, Alexander, bbl.2.00 
Duchess of Oldenburg.2.00 
Gravenstein .2.00 
Twenty Ounce .2.00 
Wealthy .2.00 
Maiden Blush .1. 
Sour Bough .. 
Nyack Pippin .1.50 
Orange Pippin . . . .1.50 
Sweet Bough .1.25 
As to kind, open head bbl. ..1.00 
Windfalls . 50 
Pears, Bartlett, bbl.2.00 
Half-barrel basket. 50 
Clapp’s Favorite, bbl.... 
Flemish Beauty.1.50 
Common .1.00 
Plums, carrier . 40 
Eight-lb basket. 10 
Quart . 1 
Peaches, Georgia, carrier. . 
Md. and Del., carrier.1.00 
Crate . 50 
Basket 50 
Per 20-lb handle basket. 40 
Per 10-lb handle basket. 
Grapes, Delaware, Southern, 
carrier .1.00 
Niagara, Southern . 
Champion, up-river. 75 
Moore’s Early, up-river.1.00 
AVorden, up-river. 
Delaware, up-river .1.25 
Blackberries, quart . 
Huckleberries, large, blue, qt.. 
Ordinary, quart . 3 
Muskmelons, Jersey, basket 
Jersey, bushel-box. 25 
Maryland, basket. 50 
Maryland, crate . 50 
Virginia . 25 
Texas . 25 
Watermelons, carload. 50.00@175.00 
DRESSED POULTRY. 
Turkeys, Western, hens, aver¬ 
age run . 
AVestern, toms, average run.. 
Common . 
Spring chickens, Phila., 3%@4 
lbs to pair, 11). 
Phila., mixed sizes. 
Pa., 3% @4 lbs to pair, fancy 
lb . 
Pa., mixed sizes. 
Pa., under 2 lbs to pair.... 
AVestern, dry picked, large. . 
Western, scalded, large. 
AVestern and Southern, small 
Fowls, Western, average best.. 
AA r estern, Southern & South¬ 
western, average best.... 
Western and Southern, fair 
to good . 
Old cocks . 
Spring ducks, Long Island.... 
Eastern . 
Jersey, Pa. & AVestern, fancy 
Fair to good. 
Western . 
Spring geese. Eastern, white. . 
Eastern, dark . 
Squabs, prime, large, white, doz2 
Mixed .2 
Dark .1 
. 17 
@ 18% 
. 10 
@ 10% 
. 16 
@ 18 
. 15 
%@ 17 
. 14 
@ 15 
3 12 
@ 16 
9 
r 
@ 12% 
.2.00 
@3.00 
.2.00 
@2.75 
.2.00 
@2.50 
,2 00 
@2.50 
.2.00 
@2.50 
.1.75 
@2.25 
@2.25 
@2.25 
@>2.00 
@1.50 
1.00 
@2.50 
. 50 
@1.00 
.2.00 
@4.00 
50 
@1.00 
2.50 
@3.50 
1.50 
@2.50 
1.00 
@1.75 
40 
@ 00 
10 
@ 20 
1 
@ 4 
50 
@1.50 
1.00 
@1.75 
50 
@1.25 
50 
@1.00 
40 
@ 50 
25 
@ 30 
1.00 
@1.25 
1.25 
@1.50 
75 
@ — 
1.00 
@ — 
— 
@1.00 
@1.50 
8 
@ 12 
5 
@ 10 
3 
@ 6 
25 
@1.00 
25 
@ 75 
50 
@1.25 
50 
@2.00 
25 
@ 75 
N. Y. State, 1903, choice... 
... 32 
@ 
34 
Medium to prime. 
@ 
31 
Ordinary . . 
@ 
28 
N. Y. State, 1902. 
@ 
23 
Olds . 
. . . 7 
@ 
13 
German, crop 1903. 
@ 
58 
9%@ 
10 
9 @ 
9% 
7%@ 
8% 
6 @ 
7 
5 @ 
7 
8%@ 
8% 
7%@ 
8 
@ 75 
14 
14 
1 
15 
15 
12 
@ 
13 
21 
@ 
22 
17 
@ 
19 
18 
@ 
19 
15 
ffl 
17 
13 
@ 
14 
15 
@ 
10 
15 
@ 
— 
13 
(a) 
14 
13% 
@ 
— 
13 
@ 
13% 
12% @ 
13 
— 
@ 
9 
15 
@ 
15% 
15 
@ 
15 
(Cl} 
— 
13 
@ 
14 
8 
@ 
11 
17 
(d) 
18 
14 
@ 
16 
.50 
@ 
— 
OO 
(a) 
— 
@ 
■—■ 
COUNTRY-DRESSED MEATS. 
Calves, veals, prime, light, lb.. 
Prime, heavy . 9 
Poor to fair. 
Common . 6 
Buttermilks . 
Pork, Jersey, dressed light, lb 
Jersey, dressed, meuium... 
VEGETABLES. 
Potatoes, L. I., in bulk, 180 Ibs.1.50 
Jersey, in bulk, 180 lbs.1.50 
Jersey, Delaware and Mary-, 
land, round, bbl.1.37 
Jersey, long .1.25 
Southern, prime .1.12 
Common . 75 
Sweet potatoes, s'n prime, bbl..2.00 
Southern, culls . 75 
Jersey, basket .1.25 
Yams, Southern, white, bbl.... 1.25 
Red .1.00 
Beets, nearby. 100 bunches.... 75 
Carrots, nearby, 100 bunches.. 50 
Barrel .1.25 
Cabbage, L. I. & Jersey, 100...1.00 
Cucumbers, bbl. 25 
Half-barrel basket . 15 
Bushel-box . 10 
Cucumbers pickles, 1,000. 50 
Egg plants, barrel. 75 
Half-barrel basket. 40 
Bushel-box . 30 
Green corn, Jersey, 100. 50 
Lima beans, Potato, basket.... 75 
Flat, basket. 50 
Lettuce, nearby, bbl. 50 
Boston, dozen ... .. 50 
Onions, Baltimore, yellow, bkt..l.25 
Phila., yellow, basket.1.25 
Nearby, white, half-bbl. bkt. .1.50 
Nearby, yellow, bol.2.00 
Nearby, red.2.00 
Connecticut, white .3.00 
Connecticut, yellow.2.25 
Connecticut, red .2.00 
Orange Co., N. Y., white, bag.1.75 
Orange Co., yellow .2.00 
Orange Co.. N. Y., red.1.75 
Peppers, barrel . 50 
Basket . 25 
Box . 
Peas, Western N. A'., bu.-bkt. . . 
String beans, State, basket. . . . 
Squash, yellow crook-neck. bbl. 
White . 25 
Marrow . 50 
Hubbard . 75 
Turnips, ruta baga, barrel. 50 
Tomatoes, upper Jersey, Acme, 
bushel-box . 15 
Upper Jersey, Grant. 10 
South Jersey, Acme. 10 
South Jersey, Stone. 10 
South Jersey, Grant. 10 
Del. & Md., small basket.... 15 
BOTANIC DRUGS.—Prices paid the pro¬ 
ducer for stuff of fair quality properly cured : 
Ginseng, lb, $3@6; blood root, 5@6; poke 
root, 4; cascara sagrada, 7@10; wild cherry 
bark, 3@5; prickly ash. 7@10; sassafras, 
4@5; white pine, 2@3; slippery elm, 10@20. 
FARM CHEMICALS.—Prices on fertiliz- 
ing materials cover the range from ton to 
carload lots. Nitrate of soda, ton, $45@50; 
ground bone, $25@28 ; dried blood, $54@57 ; 
muriate of potash, $36@45 ; sulphate of pot¬ 
ash, $44@50; kainit, $11@13; acid phos¬ 
phate, $12(5776; copper sulphate in bbl. lots, 
5% ; water glass (silicate of soda), in small 
lots, lb, 15@30. 
TOBACCO.—Louisville Burley, common to 
good lugs, 6@7; common to fine leaf, 7%@ 
10%@20%. Virginia shipping, common to 
good lugs, 10%@15; common to good leaf, 
12%. Seed leaf, Connecticut fillers, 5@10; 
wrappers, 30@70. New York State fillers, 3 
@5. Pennsylvania fillers, 3@6. 
LIA r E STOCK. 
NEW YORK.—Steers, $4.25@6.15; oxen, 
$3.50@4.50; cows, $1.50@3.60; calves, veal, 
$5@7.50 : lower grades, $4@4.50 ; sheep, $2.50 
@3.75 ; lambs, $5.50@6.25 ; hogs, $4.90@0. 
BUFFALO.—Steers, $4.75@5.50; stoekers 
and feeders, $2@4; calves, $4@6.25; sheep, 
$2@4 ; lambs, $5@6.75 ; hogs, $4.50@5.80. 
CHICAGO.—Steers, $4@6; sheep, $3@4; 
Iambs, $4@6; hogs, $4.80@5.55. 
20 
75 
75 
25 
@ 1.02 
@1.50 
@1.35 
@1.25 
@1.00 
@2.50 
@ 1.00 
(a1.50 
@1.75 
@1.25 
@ 1.00 
@ 75 
@ 1.50 
@2.50 
@ 75 
@ 40 
@ 30 
@2.00 
@ 1.00 
@ 60 
@ 40 
@1.25 
<n 1.50 
@ 1.00 
@ 75 
(<v 75 
@1.50 
Oi 1.35 
@2.00 
@2.50 
@2.25 
@5.00 
@2.75 
@2.25 
@2.25 
(a 2.50 
(<i 2.00 
@ 75 
@ 40 
@ 30 
@ 1.12 
@ 1.12 
@ 50 
@ 50 
@ 75 
@ 1.00 
75 
@ 
@ 
(a 
@ 
@ 
@ 
50 
35 
40 
30 
25 
25 
MARKET NEWS 
The Pancake Lima. —This uncatalogued 
variety is so called because flat as a pancake, 
consisting of a practically beanless pod. It 
Is the product of careless picking or of too 
great anxiety to be first in the market. 1 
have noticed a good many badly mixed lots 
lately. Buyers look at them, are sure to no¬ 
tice those with empty pods, and will not even 
make a bid. Many people have a prejudice 
against the flat Lima, and will not look at it 
unless the Deans are large. They are trou¬ 
blesome things to shell and no one wishes to 
bother with them when the beans are only 
half an inch long. I have heard of one large 
town where Limas cannot be sold unless 
shelled. 
Apples. —The market is improving with 
the arrival of more of the better varieties. 
The highest prices are obtained for Alex¬ 
ander, Gravenstein. Oldenburg, Wealth}’ and 
Twenty Ounce. Maiden Blush goes very well, 
but is seldom at. its best as offered here, being 
too immature. This variety bruises badly un 
less quite hard, but is of poor quality unless 
very nearly ripe when picked. Those who 
have eaten Blush when picked about one sec¬ 
ond before it was ready to drop from the 
tree would not recognize it as often seen here. 
The large red-streaked Alexander is the most 
showy Fall apple, and being of passable qual¬ 
ity tops the market. The apple shippers at 
their recent convention decided not to make 
public their official forecast by States. This 
is probablv just as well, as the people usually 
make light of their prognostications, claiming 
that they are always wilfully misleading. The 
plungers in the apple trade are the ones who 
have made trouble for buyers and growers. 
There is a surplus of apple speculators with 
only a hand-to-mouth capital and no special 
standing. They never expect to pay for all 
that they buy and hence can overbid those 
who pay their debts. Apple growers can do 
themselves and the trade in general a service 
by helping to starve out these plungers who 
insist on carrying more sail than their capital, 
ability or the market warrants. Insist that 
new buyers who cannot furnish known in¬ 
dorsement shall pay cash for every load of 
apples or at least every carload Before it 
leaves the station and take no excuse or bluff. 
If he will not do this he intends to make the 
grower help pay for any losses from his wild 
buying. Every year responsible buyers are 
driven out of apple sections because they can¬ 
not meet the prices offered by some rattle- 
head or scalawag. 
Salsify. —“Is there any market for salsify 
in New York, and how should be it be sent, 
with usual price?’’ l. y. 
Otsego, N. Y. 
This is a sort of milk-and-water vegetable 
that is not popular. Quite a little is shipped 
here every year and brings fair prices, but 
the trade could be easily cloyed. There is 
some on sale now, bringing eight cents per 
bunch of about a dozen roots. "As the oyster 
plant will endure freezing it is sometimes left 
in the ground until Spring, the same as pars¬ 
nips. If one has much it might be well to 
market part in Fall and the rest in Spring. 
The roots should be washed, three or four 
inches of the top left on, and the bunch tied 
in two places, at the tops and around the roots 
toward the small end. Sometimes the roots 
get hard and woody, when they are not sal¬ 
able at any price. It will not pay to ship 
salsify unless of good quality. 
Peaches.— Practically all of the Georgia 
crop has arrived. AVith a few exceptions 
prices have held up well and the quality of 
the fruit has been good. Maryland and Dela¬ 
ware are now furnishing a fair quantity both 
of crate and basket stock. Connecticut 
peaches are about ready to pick, and the yield 
is said to be better than was anticipated 
earlier. As a matter of convenience, nearly 
all consumers ask for freestone peaches, and 
they are willing to sacrifice a little in quality 
for the sake of having the pit separate from 
the llesh easily. The popularity of the Elberta 
is quite largely due to its marked freedom. A 
fair specimen can be broken with the fingers 
and the pit removed without any spattering 
of juice. Hence a number of others of better 
flavor, but a slight cling tendency, are re¬ 
jected in its favor. Some peaches have no 
well defined habit in this particular. They 
are either cling or more or less free as they 
take a notion. The degree of ripeness has 
considerable to do with this. Some tender- 
fleshed, juicy kinds can scarcely be separated 
when dead rtpe. Among the retailers a fav¬ 
orite plan is to have a peach broken open on 
top of the basket as a sample, the others pre¬ 
sumably being the same kind. This satisfies 
some buyers. Olliers insist on breaking open 
two or three more. This conversation was 
heard recently : 
“Be they all freestones?” “Why, of course,” 
said the fruit man. While talking he had 
been hunting around to find one that looked 
as though it might break open. A trial was 
made and most of the flesh stuck to the pit. 
“That’s no freestone,” said the buyer. 
Yet the other insisted that they were free 
and it only happened that he did not handle 
it right. The buyer was not satisfied and 
took another basket of yellow dry-fleshed fruit. 
Business Fiuction. — Strikes, lockouts, 
trusts, unions, boycotts, etc., are getting to 
be familiar words. Markets of all kinds are 
affected by anything that disturbs the regular 
movement of the industrial world. Any blow 
struck at the pay roll of a community is felt 
by butcher, baker and merchants. * People 
must live, but when earning little economize 
even on necessities. AVith their present atti¬ 
tude the aims and claims of both employers 
and workmen are overlapped and hopelessly 
entangled. According to one side employers 
are cold-blooded thieves, and the other de¬ 
clares as vehemently that of all trusts the 
most tyrannical and demoralizing is the labor 
trust. In theory trusts and unions are good 
things. The one ougfit to secure a more uni¬ 
form product at a lessened cost, and the other 
to protect labor by getting fair treatment and 
reasonable nay from employers disposed to he 
unjust. But both trusts and unions are ma¬ 
chines that can be wonted for private greed 
ad libitum when those in charge are thus dis¬ 
posed, so there are cuts in wages to load up 
dividends, and by threats and blows ljonest, 
capable men are kept from working, to carry 
out the plans of lawless agitators who live 
by stirring up trouble. One, perhaps humil¬ 
iating, fact which a great many have not 
learned, yet a most wholesome one to know, 
is that no man is indispensable to a business. 
The exceptions are very rare. AA’hen an em¬ 
ployee begins to think that the boss cannot do 
without him, his opinions need revising. This 
is no reflection on one’s individual ability or 
the quality of his work, but a recognition of 
tne truth that money and effort are spent to 
organize businesses so that they may outlast 
the life of any man. It might seem that one 
who has established and carried to working 
perfection some great industry, who is its ap¬ 
parent beating heart, might be essential to its 
life, but he dies and the business goes on 
without a hitch. The man himself was quite 
sure that it would, for he had seen the same 
occurrence many times, and knew that in 
orhers uiere was latent force toi pick up and 
move on with everything he dropped. Per¬ 
haps he had, in the very effort to develop the 
business, been unconsciously training his suc¬ 
cessor. In most strikes it would be a common 
calamity to have either win all its conten 
tions, as outrageous green woulu be inflamed 
or domineering self-importance so puffed up 
as to be unbearable. If a few of the walking 
delegates, orators and hogs were squelched, 
the common-sense elements on both sides 
would “get together” and settle things in 
about 15 minutes on the only settleable basis, 
that of common sense. w. w. H. 
When you write advertisers mention The 
R. N.-Y. and you will get a quick reply and 
“a square deal.” See guarantee, page 8. 
HORSE POWERS 
THRASHERS 
and CLEANERS 
One <fe two-horse Thrashing Outfits. Level niiTTCDP 
Tread, PerfectGovernor, Feed & Ensilage OUI I trio 
Write for catalogue. 
ELLISKEYSTONEAGR’LWORKS.Potfstown.Pa 
Y 
OUNG MEN WANTED, RAILWA 
Train service,experience unnecessary 
Prepare you at home by MAIL. Send 
stamp for application blank and book¬ 
let J P, Rillwivlastltste icdiisaneU* It A 
Y 
H0LLYR00D FARM HERD. 
HIGHLY BRED. ADVANCED REGISTRY. 
HOLSTEI N-FRI ESIAN CATTLE. 
AH the popular families represented. Size, individ¬ 
uality, constitution and production, 
100 Choice Animals to Select From 100 
MATURE AND YOUNG STOCK FOR SALE. 
Few Hull Calves from 4 to 8 months old. Sired 
by MERCEDES JULEPS PIETEliTJE 
PAUL, No. 29830. 
Dams with Official Advanced Registry Records. 
Write for description, breeding and prices; all will 
suit you. Come and see the Herd; only two hours 
from New York City. 
JAMES H, AVALLICK, Middletown, N. Y. 
WHITE SPRINGS FARM 
GUERNSEY HERD. 
Headed by PETEK THE GREAT OF PAXTANG. 
No. 6346, and BLUE BLOOD, No. 631U. 
Such Cows as Sheet Anchor’s Lassie. Imp. Deanie 
7th, Lady Myrtle of Homestead,-etc. The Herd num- 
ders about 40 carefully selected animals. Registered 
and tuberculin-tested. Breeding stock for sale at 
all times, including the choicest of Bull and Heifer 
Calves of all ages, and at reasonable prices. For 
further particulars and catalogue, address, 
ALFRED G. LEAVIS, Geneva, N. Y. 
PINELAND 
INCUBATORS 
HATCH GHKATEST NUMliKK 
OF FINEST CHICKS. 
BROODERS 
HAVE NEVER BEEN EQUALED 
FIDELITY FOOD 
FOR YOUNG CHICKS. 
Used everywhere by practical poultrymen and 
Bpecialist8 fanciers with unfailing success. Insurea 
perfect health and promotes rapid growth. 
Concise Catalogue from 
PINELAND INCUBATOR & BROODER CO., 
Box R. Jamesburj, N. J. f U. S. A. 
C DEPTH* I EC at wholesale. Send 
wrLUIHuLEO forcatalog.Agents 
wanted. COCLTKBOPTICAIiCO. Chicago, Ill. 
C|l /A C A perfect steer irame silo with guar- 
^ W anteed workmanship and material. 
10x20 silo $78.37. Speoial terms to Farmer’s Clubs 
St Granges. The International Silo Co., J efferson, O. 
Oldest Commission 
ATTENTION 
•Needing male 
-- _ __help of any kind, 
favor us with your orders. Mail orders a Specialty 
I. HERZ. Labor Agency, 2 Carlisle St., New York 
W A NTF n“^ irl for private dairy and light house 
VInil I LU work. State wages wanted. Address, 
G. M. C., 59 North Street, Pittsfield, Mass. 
For rich farming and fruit growing. 
I BnET10 Write J. D. 8. HANS©N, Hart, Mich. 
F REE RIDE TO OREGON. Great Oppor¬ 
tunity. Send Ten Cents (coin) for particulars. 
Northwest Colonization Co., Box889, Portland, Oro 
WANTFII — ® ood dair y farm, with or without stock, 
(VHIIILU tools, or retail route. Must have good 
soil, buildings and markers. R,”014,Concord, N. H. 
T HE OWNER of a well improved stock and dairy 
farm of 220 acres, five miles from Topeka, the 
capital of Kansas, wishes to correspond with an in¬ 
telligent, capable farmer, who understands farming, 
dairying, and the rearing of purebred Shorthorns and 
Berkshire Hogs. A good proposition to a thoroughly 
competent man. Full information on application. 
References given and required. Address, 
DAVID G. PAGE, Box 731, Sta. A, Topeka, Kan. 
MONEY-MAKING FARM. 
One of the most sightly locations in New England. 
At night five light-houses can be seen. There is 
hard wood enough, probably 660 cords, to pay for this 
100 acre farm; good orchard of 100 trees; live-room 
house; barn, 38x40; only five miles to good cash 
markets; to settle estate only $860, part cash and 
easy terms. Write us for travelling instructions, 60 
that you can go to see it at once. Illustrated lists of 
other New England farms, with reliable information 
of soils, crops.markets, climate,etc.,mailed free E 
A.STKOUT, Farm Department 42, 150 Nassau St.,New 
York City, or Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass. 
UIV CCUCD and ASTHMA cured to stay CURED 
VIA I ILlLlI BOOK 64F. Faitii. P. H»roldH»y«s, Buffalo N. Y 
Extension Axle Nuts 
make old buggies ruu like new; quick sellers; very 
proiitable. Our bub covers keep all grit out of boxeB. 
Aisknts Wantkii. 
HARDWARE SPECIALTY CO., Box 13, Pontiac, Mich. 
TILE DRAINED LAND IS MORE PRODUCTIVE 
creases the value. Acres of swampy land reclaimed and made fertile. 
V : t 1 Jackson’s Round Drain Tile meets every requirement. We also make Sewer 
f if L I— j Pipe, Red and Fire Brick, Chimney Tops, Encaustic Side Walk Tile, etc. W rite 
for what you want and prices. JOHN U, JACKSON, 76 Third Ave,, Albany, K. Y. 
JAYNE’S EXPECTORANT 
CURES THE WORST COLDS. 
For 73 years the Standard Cough Remedy. 
