1909. 
CONTENTS 
The Rural New-Yorker, March 27, 1909. 
FARM TOPICS. 
Oats or Corn in Virginia.. 
Killing Out Quack.... 
Onion Crops by Hand...... 
That Tank Spraying Outfit. 
Destroying Honeysuckle . 
An Institute on Keel.. 
A Sulky Side-bill Plow. 
A Bird Dog for Crows. 
Potatoes and Scab... 
Fertilizers and Station Reports. 
plant Food for a Potato Crop. 
Mixed Grass for Seeding and Pasture. 
Hope Farm Notes. 
Conditions in Indiana. 
Corporations as Farmers. 
Culture of Soy Beans..• •• 
Alfalfa Overflowed on the Columbia 
River . 
Soy Beans Following Rye. 
Values of Farm Land. 
Oats and Barley Together. 
The Ashes from Manure. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
327 
328 
329 
330 
331 
332 
333 
333 
334 
334 
330 
337 
339 
341 
340 
348 
FRESH FRUITS 
Apples, 
• 
Spitz. 
4.60 
@ 6,00 
Baldwin, bbl. 
, 4.00 
fa) 5.50 
pk. 
.50® 
.75 
Greening.. 
. 3.50 
@ 5.00 
Spy. 
@ 5.50 
Ben Davis.. 
. 2.25 
@ 4.50 
Russet.. 
. 2.50 
@ 4.00 
Western, bn. box... 
. 2.00 
@ 3.60 
doz. 
.50® .10 
Cranberries, 
Cape Cod, bbl. 
.10.00 
@10.50 
qt. 
.15® 
.20 
Jersev, bbl. 
. 8.00 
@ 9.00 
Jersey, std. crate... 
. 2.00 
@ 2.25 
Strawberries, 
Florida, qt. 
. .25 
@ .50 
■50@ 
.60 
Oranges, 
3.00 
(a) 4.50 
doz. 
.50® 
.75 
California, fey. box. 
. 3.50 
@ 3.75 
doz. 
.50® 
.75 
California, choice.. 
. 3.00 
fa) 8.25 
doz. 
.40® 
.50 
Grape Fruit, 
Florida, fey. box... 
. 2.60 
@ 3.00 
each 
15.® 
.20 
Florida, choice. 
. 1.50 
@ 2.00 
each 
.08® 
.10 
VEGETABLES 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY. 
Silo for Seven Cows. 
Potatoes, 
Wholesale 
Retail 
348 
Bermuda, bbl. 
6.00 
@ 7.00 
qt. 
.15 
349 
St ate. 180 lbs. 
2.25 
@ 2.75 
bu. 
1.25 
350 
Maine. 165 lbs. 
2.35 
@ 2.75 
bu. 
1.25 
351 
Foreign, 105 lbs. 
1.75 
@ 2.10 
bu. 
1.00 
Sweet Potatoes.bu.bkt. 
, .75 
@ 1.25 
pk. 
.30@ .50 
Asparagus, fey. green 
doz. 
9.00 
@10 00 
Com. to good... 
3.00 
@ 7.00 
326 
Beets, bbl. 
.75 
@ 1.00 
K Pk- 
.10 
344 
Carrots, bbl. . 
@ 1.25 
pk. 
.25 
344 
Cabbage, ton. 
40.00 
®45.00 
head 
.10® .12 
Value of Separator Cream. 34o 
A Balanced Ration . 34;> 
Ration for Milch Cows. 345 
A Ration with Dried Beet Pulp. 345 
Indigestion in Mare. 345 
Pol! Evil . 345 
Slimy Milk . 345 
Indigestion . 34o 
Hogging Corn in Missouri. 340 
Frenzied Cow Testing. 347 
Crimson Clover Hay. 347 
Advertising Milk . 348 
Holsteins and the Milk Standard.... 349 
Tunis Sheep . 349 
Pekin Duck Culture. 352 
Standard Ration for Cows. 352 
Paralysis in Pigs. 352 
Garget . 352 
Bitter Milk . 352 
Atrophy of Milk Gland. 352 
Live Stock Notes. 353 
Medicine for Cholera. 353 
New, bbl. crate. 1.50 @ 2.25 
Celery, doz.15 @ .50 
Lettuce, Southern.bbt. 1.50 @ 2.50 
Onions, 
Conn. Wtiite bbl.... 3.00 @5.00 
Conn. Yellow. 1.75 @ 2.25 
Conn. Red. 1.50 @ 2.00 
Orange Co., bag. 1.26 @ 1.50 
Peas, 
Southern, }4 bbl.bkt. 2.00 @ 5.00 
Parsnips, bbl.75 @ 1.00 
Parsley, 100 bunches.. 1.50 @ 2.00 
Peppers S’n., carrier.. 1.00 @ 2.00 
Romaine, 
Southern, bkt.75 fa) 1.60 
Radishes, bkt. 1.50 @ 1.75 
String Beans, 
Southern, % bbl. bkt. 2.00 @ 4.00 
Spinach, bbl.75 @ 1.50 
Squash, Hubbard, bbl. 1 00 @ 1.50 
Turnips, 
Rutabaga, bbl.75 @ 1.00 
White, bbl.50 @ 1.00 
Tomatoes. 
Florida,20 qt. carrier. 1.00 @ 2.60 
bch. 
each 
qt. 
qt. 
H pk. 
a pk. 
bch. 
head 
bch. 
qt. 
pk. 
each 
M pk. 
, 10 @ .20 
.05® .10 
15 
.10 
.75® 1.00 
.15 
.05 
.10 
.05 
.20 
.25 
.05 
.15 
HORTICULTURE. 
Apples from the Pacific Coast.... 325, 
Planting Apple Trees on Roadsides. 
Pruning the Apple Trees. 
List of Fruits for Virginia. 
Pansies in Florida. 
Early Apples in Virginia. 
Fruit Packages; Tomato Crop. 
Grafting Burbank Plums. 
Ashes on Onions; Strawberry Rows 
Compressed Air Spraying Again.... 
Sex of Strawberry Plants. 
Laying Out an Orchard. 
Handling Cutworms . 
Japan Plums in Canada. 
Deer and Montana Apple Orchards. 
Training Up Tomatoes. 
Ruralisms . 
HOTHOUSE PRODUCTS. 
WOMAN AND THE HOME. 
From Day to Day. 
The Rural Patterns. 
Birding in Early Spring. 
Plain Puddings . 
326 
326 
327 
328 
329 
330 
330 
331 
332 
332 
333 
333 
333 
335 
336 
337 
338 
342 
342 
343 
343 
V>uuuiii UUTos 
Fancy, doz. 
1.00 
@ 
1.25 
each 
.10 
No. 1, doz. 
.60 
@ 
90 
each 
•08@ 
.10 
No. 2. box. 
2.00 
@ 
4.60 
each 
•05@ 
.06 
Lettuce, dozen. 
.50 
la) 
.75 
eacb 
.10® 
.12 
Mushrooms, lb... ..... 
.20 
® 
.45 
.75@1.00 
Mint, dozen bunches.. 
.40 
Radishes, 100 bunches. 
2.50 
@ 
3.60 
bch. 
.05 
Tomatoes, lb. 
.05 
@ 
.15 
lb. 
.20® 
.25 
DRESSED POULTRY 
Turkeys, best, lb. . 
.22 
@ 
.23 
lb. 
.24® 
.25 
Fair to Good. 
.17 
® 
.20 
.20® 
.22 
Capons, best. 
.26 
@ 
.28 
.30® 
.32 
Common to good. 
.19 
@ 
.24 
. 25® 
.28 
Chickens, best. . 
.23 
@ 
.24 
.25® 
.27 
Good to Choice. 
.18 
® 
.20 
23@ 
.25 
Common Hun. 
.12 
® 
.16 
.16® 
.18 
Fowls... 
.12 
® 
.15 
■ 15@ 
.18 
Ducks. 
.11 
® 
.15 
•15@ 
.18 
Geese. 
.10 
@ 
.12 
.16® 
.18 
Squabs, doz. 
1.00 
@ 4.50 
COUNTRY DRESSED MEATS 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
Prof. Mark’s Vernon Slingerland . .. 
Heating House from Dairy Boiler. 
Maple Syrup Making in Ohio. 
Tumbleweeds . 
Tapping Maple Trees. 
A Virginia Ice Storm. 
Editorials . 
Events of the Week. 
Direct Primary Nominations. 
A Human Mail Package. 
Defrauding the Public. 
“Parcels Post or Bust”. 
One Remedy for Swindling. 
Publisher’s Desk . 
328 
334 
335 
335 
336 
337 
340 
341 
341 
341 
346 
349 
351 
354 
Calves, best, 10. 
.10 
@ 
.12 
Common to Good.... 
.07 
® 
.09 
Lambs, hothouse, head. 
4.00 
@ 
7.00 
Pork. 
.05 
® 
.09 
LIVE STOCK 
Native Steers. 100 lbs.. 
5.30 
@ 
6.45 
fa) 
5.00 
Bulls. 
4.00 
@ 
5.00 
Cows. 
2.00 
@ 
4.60 
Dressed Beef Sides, 
100 lbs. 
8.00 
@10.00 
Calves, 
Prime Veal, 100 lb... 
5.00 
@ 
9.00 
Culls. 
. 2.50 
fa) 
4.50 
Sheep, 100 lbs. 
3.50 
@ 
4.00 
Lambs. 
. 7.00 
© 
8.00 
Hogs. . 
. 6.50 
@ 
7.00 
G RAIN 
MARKETS 
I’r'ccs current at New York during week ending 
March 19, 1909, wholesale except where other¬ 
wise indicated. The retail prices given do not, as 
a rule, cover either the highest or lowest sales, but 
show what the bulk of consumers of moderate 
means pay for small quantities of produce bought 
in Fulton, Washington,. Jefferson Markets, etc., 
and up-town grocery stores. “Retail” is rather 
an indefinite word, but in this column it means 
less than barrel or other original package lots of 
fruits and vegetables, less than tubs of butter, 
cases of eggs. etc. The trade of commission mer¬ 
chants is strictly wholesale. The retail prices 
given are those secured by grocers and small deal¬ 
ers who receive no direct shipments. 
BUTTER 
1.25 
1.20 
1.12 
•7ti 
.60 
.88 
.75 
Wholesale 
Retail 
Creamery, fancy, lb. 
.. .30 
@ 
,31 
•33@ 
.36 
Good to Choice.... 
. . .26 
® 
.29 
30® 
.32 
Lower Grades . 
.24 
25@ 
.29 
Storage. 
,.. .23 
® 
.29 
Stale Dairy, best.... 
... .24 
® 
.26 
.26® 
.28 
Common to Good.. 
.. .20 
@ 
.23 
.24® 
.26 
Factory. 
... .18 
© 
.21 
•23@ 
.25 
Packing Stock. 
... .17 
@ 
.19 
CHEESE 
Fail Cream, best_ 
... .15 
@ 
.16 
.20@ 
.22 
Common to Good.. 
,.. .12 
@ 
.14 
.16® 
.18 
Skims. 
@ 
.09 
.10® 
.13 
MILK. 
New York Exchange price $1.71 per 
40-quart can, netting 314 cents to 
shippers in tbe26-cent freight zone 
who have no additional station 
Mixed Colors, best. 
Common to Good. 
Marrow, bu. 
Medium. 
Pea.. 
Red Kidney. 2.20 
White Kidney.2.40 
Yellow Eye.3.25 
HOPS 
Prime to Choice.13 @ 
Common to Good. 11 @ 
Olds.. @ 
German Crop, 1908 .23 @ 
Wheat, No. 1. North’n 
Duluth, bu. 
No. 2, Red. 
No. 1, Macaroni-- 
Corn, as to quality, bu. .72 
Oats, as to weight, bu. .53 
Rye.85 
Barley.72 
FEED 
Wheat, Bran, ton.27.00 ®29.00 
Middlings.28.00 @31.00 
Red Dog. 31.50 
Linseed Meal.33.00 @34.00 
HAY AND STRAW 
Quotations for large bales. 
Small bales sell 50 cents to $1.00 
per ton lees. 
Hay, No. 1, tor.15.50 
No. 2.14.00 
No. 3.12.00 
Clover Mixed.13.00 
Clover.11.00 
Marsh.0.00 
Straw, Rye.18.00 
Oat and Wheat.8.00 
BOSTON WHOLESALE MARKETS. 
Butter, Best Creamery.28® 
Fair to Good.26® 
Eggs, Fancy .23® 
Good to Choice.19@ 
Lower Grades.10@ 
Apples, Choice, bbl. 5.00@ 
Common to Good ...'. 3.00® 
Oranges, box . 2.00@ 
Strawberries, quart. 25® 
Potatoes, 165 lb. bag. 1.60® 
Sweet Potatoes, )4 bbl. 1.00® 
Onions, bush.75® 
Lettuce, box. 50® 
Cabbage, bbl . 1.50® 
Squash, bbl.50® 
@16.00 
@15.00 
@13.00 
@15.00 
@12.00 
© 8.00 
@20.00 
@ 10.00 
.18® 25 
•15@ .17 
.12® .15 
lb., .18® .25 
'1 
1LADIOLUS"' 
BULBLETS 
200 for 25c 
Do you love flowers? I do and 
I wanteveryonetohaveplenty. 
My special hobby is the Gladi¬ 
olus, and I have one of the 
finest collections in the 
world. I have nearly 1,000 
varities, many of them 6 
inches across—every color 
of the rainbow—will grow 
anywhere. 
Just for a Starter 
Send me 25c and I will mail 
you 200 bulblets of my 
finest varities (1,000 for 
$1.00) postpaid, with full 
cultural instructions. Some 
will bloom this year, and 
all will make large bulbs 
which will bloom and mul¬ 
tiply next year. Large 
bulbs ready to bloom, 30c 
per dozen. Rare varieties 
more. 
Field’s Seed Book Free 
I wrote it myself—20 years ex¬ 
perience in it—just what you want 
to know about flowers, farm and 
garden seeds. Tells how I test 
and guarantee them to make good. 
Write today before the bulbs a ud 
books are gone. 
Henry Field Seed Co. 
Box 26 Shenandoah, Iowa. 
m 
EVERY HOME 
should be adorned with 
Pulms and other leaf and 
flowering plants. We have 44 
zreenhouses full. Also have 
hundreds of car lots of 
FRUIT and ORNAMENT¬ 
AL TREES. Seeds, Plants, 
Roses, Vines, Rulbs, small 
size Shrubs and Trees 
mailed postpaid. Safe arrival 
and satisfaction guaranteed. 
Immense stock of SUPERB 
CANN AS, the queen of bed¬ 
ding plants. Direct deal will save you money and 
insure you the best. Elegant 168-page Catalog FREE. 
65 yeurs. 44 greenhouses. 1200 acres. 
The Storrs & Harrison Co., Box 188 Painesville, 0. 
12 FRUIT TREES 
Value $1.90 for 98c 
1 Roosevelt, 2 Lombard. 1 
Bradshaw Plum; 1 Mont¬ 
morency,! Windsor Cherry; 
_1 Niagara, 1 Elberta Peach: 
1 Baldwin, 1 Dutchess Apple; 1 Orange Quince and 
1 Bartlett Pear. All trees first class, 4 feet high. 
12 Trees For 98 Cents. Send us a list of your wants 
for wholesale prices Write for free catalog. 
Jltl.OSKV I1KOS. & WEI.I.S, Hal 16 l)»n.'ille, V V. 
Fruit, Shade, and Ornamental Trees, 
Shrubs, Roses and Plants of all kinds at 
CALL’S NURSERIES, PERRY, O. 
Call deals direct with his customers and 
thousands of the best fruft-growers are 
his customers. Write him for Price 
List. 
IMPERIAL 
Pulverizer 
CLOD CRUSHER 
AND ROLLER 
Leads Them All! 
2814 
.27 
.25 
.20 
.18 
6.00 
4.50 
3.60 
.40 
1.70 
1.25 
.90 
.60 
2.00 
.60 
choufarsThe Peterson Mfg. Co. «£"«’ 
INSURABLE 
INCUBATORS 
In addition to being recognized as the World’s Rest 
Hatcher of stronger chicks than anv other, 
CYPHERS FIRE-PROOFED, INSURABLE INCUBATOR 
for 1909 Bears the Insurance Label without which you cannot get inaur- 
ancoonyour buildings. Take no Risks. Buy no machine without the 
label. Our 21‘2-page Free Book tells all about it. Write today. 
CYPHERS INCUBATOR COMPANY, Buffalo, N. Y. 
Boston,Mass.; New York City; Chicago.IU.;Kansas City,Mo.;Oakland,Cal. 
qt. 
.07® 
.12 
EGGS 
. .22 
® .23 
.25® 
.28 
l. .20 
@ .21 
.23© 
.25 
.. .19 
@ .20 
.21® 
.23 
,. .16 
® .18 
-17@ 
.20 
.. .18 ® .19 
BEANS 
■20@ 
.21 
. 2.40 
@ 2.50 
2.40 
qt. 
.12 
. 2.20 
<§ 2.30 
fa) 2.45 
qt. 
.10 
.. 2.40 
@ 2.65 
@ 3.40 
qt. 
.16 
P LEASE semi a trial shipment to the Oldest Com¬ 
mission House in New York. Est. 1S38. Butter, 
Eggs, Poultry, Pork, Calves, Hay 
Apples, etc. 
365 
REGISTERED JERSEYS 
Rich in the blood of Golden Lad P. S. 1242 H. C., 
Flying Fox P. 8. 2729 H. C., Courage P. 8. 1813 H. C., 
The Owl P. S. 2195H.C. Young Bulls and a few 
Heifers for sale. Fair prices. 
M. S. BELTZHOOVER, 
Sunnyside Park, Irvington, N. V. 
Brood Mares For Sale! 
I have six pure bred 
Registered Percheron 
Brood Mares, all in foal; also 3 Registered Per¬ 
cheron Stud Colts, 1 and 2 yrs. old. Will sell cheap. 
Address WILLIAM PADEN, Greenville, Pa. 
SINGLE COMB WHITE LEGHORNS. 
The Breed that Pays is the Breed that Lays 
WINTER EGGS 
Average egg yield 1st Jan , 40 per cent, Feb. 20th, 
65 to 70 per cent. 700 breeders and layers. Eggs 
$1.00 per 15, $3.00 per 50, $5.00 per 100. 
GEO. FROST, 
Pinehurst Poultry Farm, Levanna, N.Y. 
S INGLE COMli RHODE ISLAND REDS- 
Blne ribbon winners. Eggs 10 and 15 cents each. 
Dr. W. R. FISHER, Swiftwater, Pennsylvania. 
W HITE PLYMOUTHS-exclusively trap-nested, 
bred to lay. Eggs from best pens$2 for 15; incu¬ 
bator eggs $6 per 100. A. S. BRIAN, Mt. Kisco, N. Y; 
S 
O. BROWN LEGHORN EGGS. 30for$1.00. 
i $3.00 per 100. Good stock. Address 
H. A. THATCHER, Perulaek. Pa. 
O —$5.00 per 100 R. C. Brown Leghorn- 
Jliarge, up to date stock; exclusive 
farm range. 
Extra choice matings, $2.00 for 15. 
F. U. BU8HNELL. Chatham, N 
Y. 
Eggs for Hatching—$2.00 for 15 White and 
Barred Rocks, K. C. White and Brown Leghorns, 
8. C. White and Black Leghorns, American Domi¬ 
niques and Anconas. Also all varieties of orna¬ 
mental birds for sale. THE OTSELIC FAKM8, 
Whitney's Point, New York. 
Poultry—Pigeons, Pheasants, Guinea Fowl. Pea 
Fowl. Swan. Also eggs for hatching. Writo for 
prices. THE UNITED CO., 26 Vesey St., New York. 
Incubators—Brooders. A complete line of 
Poultry and Dog supplies. Write for catalogue. 
THE UNITED CO., 26 Vesey St., New York. 
I n beautiful Post Cards, Raster, Decoration Day, 4th I U - 
I U July, Floral, Birthday, etc. All different; appro- I U u, 
prlate wordings; exquisite colors and designs, best values, With 
free catalog. Star Post Card Co., 13& So. Sth St, Fliiln., Pa. 
W ANTED—A position as General Farm Manager. 
by a man with twenty-three years of practical 
experience, who fully understands taking care of 
and developing large estates. Best of reference. 
R. C. Reeves Co., 187 Water St., N. Y. City. 
FflR SAI F CHEAP-CYPHERS (Standard and 
run OHLL New Model), Incubators and Brood¬ 
ers; alsoimproved champion brooders; all complete 
and good as new. D. K. Hone, Sharon Springs, N.Y. 
WASHINGTON Irrigated Lands that grow the finest apples 
and peaches In the world. Fine cllmnte. Liberal termB. 
References. KUGFNE MAXWELL, Cnlmnn Bldg.,Seattle,Waeb. 
S EVERAL hundred acres highly improved land 
located near Kelly ton, Alabama, for sale or 
lease. Mild, healthy climate. EUGENE MAX¬ 
WELL, Colman Bldg., Seattle. Wash 
FflR Q A | C-NINETY-SEVEN ACRES-Eight. 
rUri OnLL room house, two barns, granary- 
hog house, timber and fruit: four and one-half 
miles from two stntions Price $1,600, one-balf 
cash. HALL'S FARM AGENCY, Owego, N. Y 
1^ jj ACRES—half cleared—$5 000; 10-room dwell- 
113 ing and other buildings costing price of 
farm; mild climate, good roads, easy farming. 
Catalogue free. O. M. PURNELL, Snow Hill, Md. 
TO SHEEP GROWERS. 
The owner of a farm of 440 acres—200 acres tillable 
clay land. 220 acres well watered pasture in West- 
port on Lake Champlain, N. Y.—desires to arrange 
with a farmer having sufficient capital to provide 
500 sheep and to care for them, to grow sheep on 
shares. Ample barn room, comfortable farm house. 
Term of contract, 5 years. Unexceptionable refer¬ 
ences given and required. Address. 
WM. 1). MARKS. Westport, N. Y. 
Laurel Farm Jerseys 
Fern’s Jubilee, No. 73852, at the head of 
the herd. Sire: Louisiana Purchase, No. 
68494. Dam: Fern of Florence, No. 164625. 
Test 330 lbs. of Hutter in 120 days. 
J. GRANT MORSE, - Hamilton, N. Y. 
F ARM 56 ACRES— a mile to R. R. Station, land 
all tillable, good orchards, three large barns, 
blacksmith shop. House of 12 rooms, slate roof. 
Corn house and numerous other buildings. Artesian 
well, cistern and running sprirg water, all in good 
condition. G. M. S TACK, Still River. Conn. 
75 ACRES, STOCK and TOOLS, $1,5 :0. 
Well located in central New York: productive 
fields; 2-story, 12-room house, line outbuildings, in 
excellent condition, maple shade, good fruit 
orchard; for quick sale owner includes 7 sheep, 
cow, flock hens, farming machinery and tools. 
Only $1,660; part cash. See page 5‘'Strout’s Bulle¬ 
tin of Farm Bargains,” March number just out. 
copy free. E. A. STROUT CO., Dept. H)09, 47 West 
34th Street, New York City. 
106-Acre Monmouth Co. Farm, $5,500. 
Eighty acres in fields; balance in pasture and 
woodland. Over 560 barrels of fruit yearly; also 
blackberries, raspberries; asparagus pays $500 to 
$800 yearly; land produces big general crops. good 
house and outbuildings. For immediate sale $6,500, 
part cash. For picture see “Strout’s Bulletin of 
Farm Bargains,” p: ge II, March issue just out. 
copy free. E. A. STROUT CO., Dept. 1099, 47 West 
34th Street, New York City. 
$120 PER MONTH FOR MILK is one item 
of present income ; 4 of the cows. 2 horses, hay 
wagon, corn planter, mower, cultivator, harrow 
and other farming tools included ; 84 acres in 
splendid section near city ; 35 tons hay. 1200 bu. 
corn and 600bu. of other grain harvested last season; 
100 fruit trees; fine 14 room house, large barn, 
ample outbuildings; to settle matters at once, only 
$7,000: $3,500 will he left on easy terms; see picture 
page 15. March Bulletin of Farm Bargains; copy free. 
Dept. 1099. E. A. STROUT CO., 
land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 
FOR SALE 
miles from depot. 
—A good Onondaga County 
Farm of 130 acres. Three 
$ 2 , 000 . 
G. C. DORSEY, Geneva, N. Y. 
FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN. 
Productive orchard property within one and two 
miles of the eity limits. For particulars inquire of 
the subscriber. S. D. WILLARD, Geneva, N. Y. 
_ Grain, Beans, 
E. II. WOODWARD, 302’Ureennicli St., N. Y. 
.16 
.12 
.06 
.30 
DRIED FRUITS 
A poles, evap. fancy... .08*^ 
Evap., com. to good. .05 @ .07 
Sup Dried. 0 4 @ .05 
Cherries. 12 @ .14 
Raspberries. 
HneUebcnrles......’.’.".! .12 @ 
Blackberries.07 
lb. 
.20 lb. 
13 
@ .07^ 
.12 
•08@ .10 
.15® .20 
.22® .24 
GKO P. HAMMOND. EST. 1875. FRANK W. GODWIN 
GEO. P. HAMMOND & GO., 
Commission Merchants and Dealers in all kinds of 
COUNTRY PRODUCE, Apples, Peaches, Ber 
ries Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Poultry. Mushrooms 
and Hot house Products a Specialty. Consignments 
solicited. 34 & 36 Little 12tl» St., New York- 
DO YOU NEED FARM HELP? 
THE JEWISH AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL AID SOCIETY 
has on its lists men wishing to obtain employment upon 
farms Most of them arc without experience but they 
are able-bodied and willing to work. They speak little or 
no English, although many of them speak German. If 
you can make use of such help, please communicate witli 
us. stating what you will pay. whether the work is per¬ 
manent, ami whether you prefer a single or married man. 
Wo are a philanthropic organization, whose object it is 
to assist and encourage Jews to become farmers. YVe 
charge no commission to employer or employee. 
Address : THE J. A. & I. A. B., 
174 Second Avc., New York City. 
I3 
JlllUl^ You can’t afford to over- 
¥ M^look the LOUDEN Hay Car¬ 
rier:—that is if you want a car¬ 
rier that will never break down 
that you do not tend away for repairs 
every now and then. Years of hard 
usage by thousands of farmers have 
proven this to such an extent 
that they will not buy any 
hay tools, forks, slings. 
tracks without the 
Lightens Labor 
name LOUDEN on 
them. Never 
any bind- Vi-'PJV'-l ... 
HCarrie 
»Hay 
ing on the track; the sim¬ 
plest lock that works per¬ 
fectly every time; patented 
swivel takes kinks out of rope. 
Why not buy a LOUDEN carrier that 
will be good for life. We are hay tool spec¬ 
ialists— Free catalogue of LOUDEN Lit¬ 
ter Carriers, Flexible Barn Door^ 
Hangers and other labor sav-^ 
ing hardware specialties^ 
will show you why. 
Free Booklet, 
“ Fitting up 
Barns." 
LOUDEN MACHINERY CO., 601 Broadway, Fairlield, Iowa. 
