-732 
Octobw 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
MARKETS 
THE WEEK’S QUOTATIOHS. 
Common to medium, per lb.... 6 @ 8 
Buiiermillts, per 10. 7 (yJ 8 
liriAssers, per It>. & (u* PVS 
Pork, Jersey, dressed, ligtit, lb. bViy* 8 
Jersey, dressed, meUlum, lb... feVAty) 874 
GAME. 
WHOLESALE PBICEa 
iNkw Tokk, October 19, 190L 
GRAIN.—There is but little speculation, 
and export business is light. There are 
reports of extensive drought damage to the 
crop in Argentina. 
Wheat, No. 1, N’thn Chicago... 
No. 1, Northern Duluth. 
No. Z, red, elevator. 
Coi’ii, No. 2, mixed, elevator... 
Oais, No. 2, mixed. 
Rye, No. 2, W’n, 1 . o. b., N. Y. 
Barley, feeding . 
Malting, new crop. 
BEANS. 
Marrow, 19U1, choice, bu. 
Pea, bbls, 1901, choice.. 
lOuO, choice .. 
Red kidney, 1901, choice. 
1900, clioice .. 
PEED. 
Spring bran, coarse. 
Winter bran . 
Red Dog . 
No graue Hour. 
Unsound wheat, per 100 lbs. 
Linseed meal, ion. 
CottonseeU meal, ton. 
— 
® 
76% 
. — 
@ 
77% 
. — 
@ 
75% 
, — 
@ 
61% 
— 
@ 
39% 
. — 
® 
61% 
. 53 
@ 
55 
. 57 
® 
65 
■ 
@2 
75 
.- 
@2 
10 
— 
@2 
05 
,2 60 
@2 
65 
— 
@2 
55 
,1 85 
@1 
90 
,1 80 
@1 
90 
.1 70 
@1 
80 
’ 50 
@18 
00 
> 50 
@19 
00 
— 
@22 
75 
— 
@22 
40 
67 
@ 
70 
» 00 
@30 
00 
— 
@26 
10 
HAY AND STRAW. 
Hay, No. 1. 82^® 85 
No. 2 . 75 <y) 80 
No. 3 . 0214 ® 65 
Clover . 50 ® 55 
Clover, mixed . 60 ® 70 
Straw, rye, long. 55 ® 80 
MILK. 
New York Exchange price 2% cents per 
quart in 26-cent freight zone. 
BUTTER.—A slight scarcity of extra 
creamery raised the price to 22 cents. The 
accumulation of lower grades has been 
worked off, and the market is in oetter 
condition than for some time. 
Creamery, extra, per lb. — ® 22 
Eirsts .'. 19i/^(y) 21 
Seconds . 17 ® 19 
Lower grades . 15 ® 16 
June, extras . — ® 21 
June, seconds to lirsis. 18 ® 20 
State dairy, tubs, fancy. 20 ® 20^ 
Tubs, lirsts . 18 ® 19 
Tubs, seconds . 16 ® 17 
Tins, etc. 14 ® 19 
W’n imitation creamery, fancy. 17 ® 17^ 
Firsts . 15 ® 16 
Lower grades . 14 ® 141/2 
W'n factory, June, fancy. — ® 15V2 
Fresh, lirsts . 14%® 15 
Fresh, fair to good. 14 ® 14i^ 
Renovated butter, fancy. T7%® 18 
Common to choice. 13 ® 16% 
Packing stock . 12 ® 14 
CHEESE. 
Full cream, colored, small, fey. 
Colored, small, choice. 
White, small, fancy. 
Small, white, choice. 
Small, good to prime. 
Colored, large, fancy. 
Colored, large, choice. 
White, large, fancy. 
White, large, choice. 
Large, good to prime. 
Common to fair. 
Light skims, small, choice. 
Large, choice . 
Part skims, prime. 
Fair to good. 
Common . 
Full skims . 
EGGS.—An advance of one 
- @ 
10% 
9?4@ 
10 
10 @ 
10% 
9%@ 
9% 
9%@ 
9% 
— @ 
9% 
9 @ 
9% 
9%@ 
9% 
9 @ 
9% 
8%@ 
8% 
7 @ 
7% 
—, @ 
8% 
7%@ 
7% 
6%@ 
7% 
6% 
3 ^ 
4 
i%@ 
2 % 
cent 
was 
noted early in the week, but this turned 
buyers to cold-storage stock and weakened 
the market for fresh receipts. 
QUOTATIONS LOSS OFF. 
state & Pa., avge. prime, doz.. — ® 23 
W’n, fresh-gathered, average 
best, per doz. 22 ® 22% 
QUOTATIONS AT MARK. 
Nearby State & Pa., fresh-gath¬ 
ered, fancy, selected, doz— — ® 25 
Average, best lots. 21%® 22 
W’n, fresh-gathered, candled, 
selected . — ® 21% 
Regular packings, N’th’n secs. 17 ® 21 
Southerly sections, best. 18 ® 19 
Southerly sections, ordinary.. 15 ® 17 
W’n, fresh-gathered, dirties— 13 ® 15 
Checks . 12 ® 12% 
W’n, refrigerator, per doz. 15%® 18 
LIVE POULTRY. 
Spring chickens, per lb. 8%® 9 
Fowls, per lb. 9 ® 9% 
Roosters, per lb. — ® 5 
Turkeys, per lb. 8 ® 10 
Ducks, average W’n, per pair.. 55 @ 65 
Average Southern, per pair... 45 ® 55 
Geese, average W’n, per pair..l 12 @1 25 
Average Southern, per pair... 90 @112 
Pigeons, mixed, per pair. — ® 15 
DRESSED POULTRY. 
FRESH PACKED—ICED. 
Turkeys, Spring, dry-picked, lb. 11 ® 13 
Scalded, per lb. 8 ® 10 
Culls, per lb. 5 ® 7 
Broilers, Phila., over 4 lbs. to 
pair, per lb. 17 ® 18 
Phila., mixed sizes, per lb— 11 @ 13 
Penn, fair to good, per lb. 9 ® 13 
Ohio & Mich., scalded, lb. 9%® 10 
Other W’n, dry-picked, lb 9 ® 9% 
Other W’n, scalded, per lb... 8%® 9 
Poor to fair, dry-picked or 
scalded, per lb. 6 ® 8 
Fowls, W’n, dry-picked, prime. — ® 9 
Western, scalded, prime. — ^ ® 
South’wn, dry-picked, prime.. — @ 8 
W’n & S’th’wn, poor to good. 6 @ 8 
Old roosters, per Ib. — @ 6 
Ducks, Spring, L. I., and other 
nearby, per lb. 14%@ 15 
Western . 7 @ 11 
Geese, Spring, Eastern. 12 @ 15 
Squabs, choice, large, dark.2 75 @3 00 
Dark, per doz.1 25 @1 50 
Culls, per doz. 50 @1 00 
COUNTRY-DRESSED MEATS. 
Calves, veal, prime, per lb. — @ 10 
Fair to good, per lb. 9 ® 9% 
Grouse, per pair.1 00 @1 25 
DaririOges, per pair.2 60 @2 oO 
Woodcock, per pair. — @1 56 
English snipe, per doz. — @2 06 
Golden piover, per doz. — @2 56 
Grass piover, per doz.1 50 @2 60 
Wild bucks, canvas, per pair ...2 66 (g3 66. 
ReU head, per pair.f oO @2 06 
Mallard, per pair. i5 @1 60 
Teal, blue wing, per pair. 60 ® 75 
Teal, green wing, per pair- 46 ® 60 
Common, per pair. 25 ® 
So 
35 
30 
, - @ 
10 
. — @ 
9% 
6 @ 
8 
— @ 
9% 
8%@ 
9 
8%@ 
8% 
6 @ 
8 
4%@ 
5% 
1 50 @2 25 
Rabbits, per pair. 36 
Venison, saddles, per lb. 
DRIED FRUITS. 
Apples, evaporated, 1901, fey, lb. 
Evaporated, 1901, choice. 
Evaporated, 1961, poor to good. 
Evaporated, 1966, fancy, ib.... 
Evaporated, I960, choice, lb... 
Evaporated, i960, prime, lb.... 
Evaporated, 1900, common to 
good, per lb. 
Sun-dried, 1901, per lb 
Chops, per 100 lbs.1 
Cores and skins, per 106 lbs...l 60 @2 00 
Raspberries, evaporated, 1901, lb. 23%® 24 
Sun-dried, 1901, per lb. 26 ® 21 
Blackberries, 1961, per lb. — ® 7 
Huckleberries, 1901, per lb. 16 ® 17 
Cherries, nearby, 1901, per lb.... 15 @ 15% 
Southern, 1901 . 
FRESH FRUITS. 
Apples, York Imperial, bbl... 
Wine Sap, per bbl. 
Snow, good to choice, bbl— 
King, per bbl. 
Ben Davis, per bbl. 
Greening, per bbl. 
Twenty-oz., hand-pekd, bbl. 
Fall and York Rippin, bbl.. 
Bound, Sweet, per bbl. 
Fall varieties, com. to lair. 
Baldwin, prime, per bbl. 
Ordinary Hard, red, fair to 
prime, per bbl. 
Ordinary, hard, red sorts, 
inferior, per bbl. 
bbl. 
fancy, bbl... 
lots, per bbl. 
Bartlett, prime to fancy, keg 1 25 
Seckel, fancy, per bbl. 
Seckel, fair to prime, bbl... 
Beurre Bose, per bbl. 
Beurre Clairgeau, per bbl.. 
Beurre d Anjou, per bbl. 
Kieffer, per bbl. 
Duchess, per bbl. 
Nearby, common, per bbl.. 
Quinces, per bbl. 
Beaches, up-river, pony bskt. 
Up-river, per 2-bskt. car’r.. 
Ohio & Mich., per bu. bskt.. 
Southern, per basket. 
Southern, per carrier. 1 
Grapes, up-river, Del., carrier. 
Up-river, black, carrier. 
W’n N. Y., Catawba, sm. bk 
N. Y., Del., case, 15 3- 
basket . 1 
N. Y., Del., small bkt. 
N. Y., Niagara, case, 
3-Ib. basket. 
N. Y., Niagara, sm bk. 
N. Y., Concord, case, 
3-lb. basket 
Windfalls, per 
Pears, Bartlett, 
Bartlett, avge. 
W’n 
Ib. 
W’n 
W’n 
15 
W’n 
W’n 
15 
black kinds. 
13%@ 
14 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
50 
3 
00 
@ 
3 
50 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
50 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
50 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
00 
3 
50 
@ 
5 
00 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
00 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
00 
3 
00 
@ 
3 
50 
2 
00 
@ 
3 
00 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
00 
2 
50 
@ 
3 
00 
1 
50 
@ 
2 
00 
1 
25 
@ 
1 
60 
— 
@ 
4 
00 
2 
50 
@ 
3 
50 
1 
25 
@ 
1 
50 
4 
00 
@ 
4 
50 
2 
2^ 
@ 
3 
50 
2 
50 
@ 
3 
60 
2 
00 
@ 
3 
00 
2 
00 
@ 
3 
00 
1 
00 
@ 
2 
2p 
1 
50 
@ 
2 
00 
1 
00 
@ 
1 
50 
3 
00 
@ 
4 
00 
60 
@ 
1 
00 
1 
00 
@ 
1 
75 
1 
25 
@ 
2 
50 
50 
1 
00 
1 
50 
2 
00 
1 
00 
1 
25 
50 
65 
10 
@ 
11 
1 
50 
@ 
1 
75 
12 
@ 
15 
@ 
1 
60 
10 
@ 
14 
— 
@ 
90 
W’n N. Y, 
small basket . 8 
Wine grapes, black, ton....30 00 
Wine grapes, Del., per ton..25 00 
Wine grapes, white, per ton.30 00 
Cranberries, Cape Cod, fancy, 
large, late varieties, bbl.. 
Cape Cod, Early Black, 
fancy, dark, per bbl. 
Cape Cod, med. coTrd, bbl.. 
Cape • Cod, poor to fair. 
VEGETABLES. 
Potatoes, L. I., per bbl.2 25 
Maine, prime, per bag.2 00 
Maine, per 180 lbs.2 00 
Maine, inferior .1 25 
State & W’n, prime, bbl.2 00 
Albany & Troy, prime, bbi— — 
State & W’n, inferior.1 25 
Jersey, per bbl.1 50 
German, prime, 112-rb. bag... 1 25 
German, inferior, 112-lb. bag. 75 
German, per 168-Ib. bag.1 50 
Scotch, Magnum, 168-lb. bag..l 50 
Sweet Potatoes, So. Jersey, bbl.l 50 
Yellow, Va., per bbl. — 
Beets. Jersey & L. I., 100 bchs.. — 
Brussels sprouts, per qt. 6 
Cauliilowers, per bbl.1 00 
Celery, State & W’n, doz. roots. 20 
Jersey & L. I., doz. flat bchs. — 
Carrots, L. I., per bbl. 75 
Cabbages, L. I., Flat Dutch 100.3 00 
Cucumbers, Shelter Island, bbl.4 00 
Hothouse, per doz. 75 
Eggplants, Fla., per bbl.3 50 
Fla., per %-bbl. crate.1 75 
Lima beans, Jersey «& L. I., Po¬ 
tato, per bag. 
Jersey, flat, per bag. 
Lettuce, nearby, per bbl_ 
Onions, pickie, white, bbl... 
Orange Co., white, per bag 
Orange Co., red, per bag.. 
Orange Co., yeilow, per bag...2 00 
Orange Co., inferior, per bag.l 00 
Connecticut, white, per bbl....2 00 
Connecticut, yellow, per bbl..2 25 
Connecticut, red, per bbl.2 50 
State & W’n, yellow, per bbl.2 25 
State & W’n, red, per bbl.2 50 
Peppers, Jersey, green, bbl— 75 
Jersey, red, per bbl.1 25 
Peas, Va., per %-bbl. basket....! 25 
Squash, Hubbard, per bbl.1 00 
White, per bbl.1 00 
Marrow, per bbl. 90 
Pumpkins, per bbl. 50 
String beans, J’y & L. I., bag... 50 
Southern, wax, %-bbl. bskt... 75 
Southern, green, %-bbl. bskt.. 75 
Turnips, Jersey, Russia, box... — 
Canada, Russia, per bbl. 75 
Tomatoes, fair quality, bu. box. 50 
® 8 % 
@32 00 
@50 00 
@40 00 
6 25 ® 6 50 
® 5 75 
@ 5 50 
@ 5 00 
@2 50 
@2 10 
@2 12 
@1 75 
@2 12 
@2 00 
@1 75 
@1 87 
@1 35 
@1 00 
@2 00 
@2 00 
@2 25 
@1 25 
@1 00 
@ 12 
@2 50 
@ 50 
@1 00 
@1 00 
@ 4.00 
@6 50 
@ 87 
@4 50 
@2 25 
A CUKE FOR ASTHMA. 
Asthma sufferers need no longer leave home and 
business in order to be cured. Nature lias pro¬ 
duced a vegetable remedy that will permanently 
cure Asthma and all diseases of the lungs and 
bronchial tubes. Having tested its wonderful 
curative powers in thousands of cases (with a 
record of 90 per cent permanently cured) and de¬ 
siring to relieve human suffering, I will send free 
of charge to all .sufferers from Asthma, Consump¬ 
tion, Catarrh, Bronchitis and nervous dlseasts. 
this recipe in German, French or English, with 
full directions for preparing and using. Sent by 
mail. Address with stamp, naming this paper, 
W. A. Noyes, 847 Powers Block, Rochester. N, Y. 
BUSINESS BITS. 
Derrick Oil Co., of Titusville, Pa., is 
offering to seli oil to our readers with l.he 
privilege of returning it at the firm s ex¬ 
pense if not satisfactory. That seems very 
liberal and certainly fair. 
During recent years the pros and cons 
of dishorning have been very generaily 
discussed editorially. On the outset there 
was considerable objection to the practice 
on the part of those who thought it cruel 
and inhumane. On investigation it has 
been found that dishorning, when properly 
done, is both humane and profitable. One 
of the finest instruments for this purpose 
is the Keystone dishorner. We advise dis¬ 
horning because we believe it has a quiet¬ 
ing effect upon the animal itself, making 
it gentler, easier to handle, and conse¬ 
quently, more profitable. The proper sea¬ 
son for doing this work is at hand, and 
those who are thinking of buying would 
do well to write at once for further par¬ 
ticulars. Address M. T. Phillips, Sole Man¬ 
ufacturers, Pomeroy, Pa. 
Consumption, Bronchitis and 
Bronchial Asthma. 
Wants, For Sale or Exchange 
Wanted —Farmers and Dairymen, 830 
to 160, with bouse or board. Only competent men wltb 
good references. Tbe Rural Agency, Durham, N.H. 
N otice—F or Sale or Exchange Cheap 
FEED CUTTER, with 36 feet of Swivel 
Carrier; been run only two years. 
Address Box 35, Lakeville, N. Y. 
_ 1^—Eight acres of exceptionally 
■ or choice garden ground; fruit; 
good buildings; 2)^ miles from Stamford Center, 
one hour from New York City. Conveniences. 
Address Box 3, Springdale. Conn. 
*‘I OWN MY HOME.” 
That’s what puU nerve and backbone Into amao. 
We sell them on tbe easiest terms. More than a 
hundred to choose from in our Illustrated Real 
Estate Catalogue Mailed free Write tcHlay. 
W.P.Allen Land & Imp.Co.,Salisbury.Md. 
F oe, sale—G entleman’s Farm. One 
hour from New York City by Central Railroad 
of New Jersey, close by,growing town. No malaria. 
Good society. About 110 acres, most y in grass. This 
year's Urst crop, 235 large two-horse wagon loads of 
hay. Second crop 100 large two-horse wagon loads 
of hay. Uome market. Modern buildings. Chance 
for speculatlonin building lots. Owner having taken 
up bis residence in Europe, will sell this place below 
value. For circular address owner 
FREDERICK LOE 8 ER, Personal, 
484 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Real Estate Agents please enclose their card. 
Diseases Wliicli Cause Almost as 
Mauy Deaths as Consumption. 
From Dr. Robert Hunter’s Lectures on 
Consumption. 
A cold settling on the chest or gi'ippe 
that goes down to the lungs produces 
bronchitis, and when it has continued for 
several months it becomes chronic bron¬ 
chitis. 
There is at first only trifling cough in 
the morning with slight chilly feelings, 
followed by a sense of feverishness towards 
evening. Walking rapidly or going up¬ 
stairs cause shortness of breath with a 
general sense of tightness and oppression 
in the chest. 
As the disease advances the patient be¬ 
gins to raise yellow or greenish-yellow 
matter; has hectic fever and night sweats 
and loses in flesh and strength. From 
this point, unless arrested by treatment, 
it goes on rapidly, soon exhausts the vi¬ 
tality and causes death with symptoms 
closely resembling consumption and yet 
not consumption at all. 
By careful observation extending through 
many years, I am confident that fully 
TWO-FIFTHS of all the deaths chai-ged 
to consumption are really deaths by con¬ 
sumptive bronchitis. On examining the 
sputum and the tissue of the lungs In 
these cases we find neither tubercle nor 
the bacilli germs that are always present 
in TRUE consumption. 
This is a most important fact, for bron¬ 
chitis is much easier to cure than con¬ 
sumption, every case being curable if prop¬ 
erly treated. It is only a seated, chronic 
inflammation of the mucous lining of the 
air tubes, and at the worst is as certainly 
curable in the lungs as such inflammation 
in any other part of the body. 
Consumptive bronchitis is not curable 
by medicine given in the stomach, nor by 
those hyperdermically injected, for they 
never reach its seat. It is only by the 
direct application of medicines to the lining 
of the bronchial tubes in the lungs that 
cure is ever effected. The disease is not 
in the stomach, nor in the blood, but In 
the lining of the lungs, and THERE THE 
REMEDIES MUST BE APPLIED. 
Nothing but a direct application of heal¬ 
ing medicines, antiseptics and germicides 
to the very seat of the disease will affect 
the cure of this or any other lung case, 
and they can be applied only by inhaling 
them in a gaseous state. The lungs con¬ 
stitute an air cavity, and can be reached 
medicinally only by medicated air. This 
treatment was discovered, perfected and 
first successfully applied by me. It is the 
only natural, scientific and common-sense 
treatment ever applied for the cure of 
bronchial and consumptive diseases. If it 
fails, nothing else could possibly succeed. 
But it never does fail, unless mortal injury 
to the lung structures has taken place be¬ 
fore it is applied. 
Readers mentioning The Rural New- 
Yorker can obtain Dr. Hunter’s book, 
“The Lungs and Their Diseases,’’ abso¬ 
lutely FREE by addressing Dr. Robert 
Hunter Association, 117 W. 45th Street, 
New York City. 
6RINDS 
EAR CORN, SHELLED CORN, OATS, 
RYE, BARLEY, KAFFIR CORN. ETC. 
Fine or coarse, for feed or fainijy pur* 
purposes. Has Hlinke feed. Bur— ^ 
made of white mela],&o bard that neither 
tool will touch them. Tney will open 
nails or hard subsiances through witnout break 
age. W’efurnish ibismill with or with 
out crushers and elevators. 
AAQApiTy 10 to ^5 bu. an hr., 
UMi Mill I I acconiingto pow. 
use !, kind of grain ami tinenc&s you grim! 
ITie only mill ihai grinds ear corn and al 
other grain successfully. With 2, 4 or ' 
H. P, Made in 3 sizes for p^wer up to 1: 
horse. Guuraiiteed togrlnd more ear corn . 
th m any mill made with samep jwer^bfcuiise* 
crusher and grinding plates are on separate 
shafts, reducing friction. We have 40 styles of grinders,adapted to 
power wind mills, engines and hurse powers of nil sizes. We also 
furnish powers of all kinds for driving all kinds of machinery, 
Write lor our Large Fr«*e Catalogue of 15.000 other articles* 
Alarvlo Smith Co., 55.59 N. Jeffersoa St., Chicago, Ills. 
GLENN RANCH, 
Glenn County, California, 
FOR SALE IN SUBDIVISIONS. 
This famous and well-known farm, the home of the 
late Dr. Glenn, “the wheat kinn,” has been surveyed 
and subdivided. It isolfered for sale In any sized gov¬ 
ernment subdivision at remarkably low prices, and 
In DO case, It Is believed, exceeding what it Is assessed 
for County and State taxation purposes. 
This great ranch of 40 000 acres runs up and down 
the western bank of the Sacramento River for 15 
miles. It Is located in a region that has never lacked 
an ample rainfall, and no irrigation is required. 
The river Is navigable at all seasons of the year, 
and freight and trading boats make regular trips. 
The closest personal Inspection of the land by pro¬ 
posed purchasers Is Invited. Parties desiring to look 
at the land should go to Chico, California. 
For further particulars and for maps, showing the 
subdivisions and prices per acre, address personally 
or by letter, 
3B’. O. IxXTSK, 
Agent of N. D. Rideout, Administrator of the Estate 
of n. J. Glenn, of Chico, Butte County, California. 
LARGE UFDK'QUTPFQ-Tltree young 
ENGLISH boars tit for 
service. W. DORMAN, R. D. No. 1, Stanley, N. Y. 
Oldest ComiDission Moose ir.JS’iS,'’' .“‘.““r: 
cheese, eggs, pork, poultry, dressed calves, game, &c. 
E. B. WOODWARD, 302 Greenwich Street, New Vork. 
Apples and Pears 
This time of the year we make a specialty of hand¬ 
ling shipments of apples and pears, and are now pre¬ 
pared 'to handle consignments to the best possible 
advantnge. Write us at once for Information regard¬ 
ing shipping, etc.; also for stencils. 
archdeacon & CO., 100 Murray St.. New York 
Envelopes,p’d,500 $1.50; Letterheads, same,T25 ea.,$l; 
B Tags, 600, $1, deliv’d. Cards with stock cuts 50e. 100 
up. 8am.2c.stamp. H. Sedgwick, Cornwall Holiow.Ct 
CONTENTS. 
The Rural New-Yorker, October 26, 1901. 
FARM TOPICS. 
A Review of Chemicals and Clover. 
Part II. 721 
Wholesale Business in Farming.721, 722 
Eastern and Western Farming Com¬ 
pared .722 
High-Priced Land in Iowa.722 
Brief Notes from the Farm.722 
Tame Grass for Idaho.725 
Hope Farm Notes.727 
Farm Matters in Kansas.729 
Farm Values .729 
New York State Cabbage Crop.729 
Crop Prospects .729 
New Jersey P''armers’ Institutes.729 
Grass Notes by Geo. M. Clark.729 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY. 
Cow Feed Compared.725 
Taxing Cows at Atlanta.733 
The Cattle in the Pan-American Model 
Dairy .734 
A Pew More Oleo Rogues.734 
Dairy and Farm Notes.735 
A Second-Hand Separator.735 
The Tenant’s Share.735 
Bloated Cows .735 
HORTICULTURE. 
Fertility and Frost.723 
Clothing a Desert Island with Trees.723 
Good Plums; Bose Pears.724 
Fruit Questions .724 
Spring Budding for Peaches.724 
Pruning and Feeding Bush Fruits.724 
Everybody’s Garden .725 
Killing Wild Morning-Glory.725 
Notes from the Rural Grounds.726 
Fruit Notes from California.726 
The Alton Peach.726 
The Pruning of Sweet Cherry Trees.726 
WOMAN AND HOME. 
From Day to Day.730 
The Rural Patterns.'730 
House Plants for Winter.731 
Scraps and Carpet Rags.731 
Rural Recipes .731 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
Remedies for the English Sparrows.722 
The Farm Cat.723 
Advertisers and Their Catalogues.725 
Editorials .728 
Events of the Week.'728 
Items of Interest.729 
Markets .732 
Business Bits .732 
Market Notes .'733 
The West Through Eastern Eyes. Part 1,733 
