1911. 
i 
Die 
Crops and Markets 
Wholesale Prices at New York. 
Week Ending September 1, 1911. 
BDTTKIt 
A decline of one cent on top grades is 
noted, receipts being 
rather heavy 
for 
cur- 
rent needs. 
Creamery, fancy, lb. 
.26 
@ 
.27 
Good to Choice. 
<& 
.25 
Lower Grades . 
@ 
.22 
State Dairy, best. 
.24 
© 
.26 
Common to Good. 
@ 
.23 
Packing Stock.. 
@ 
•1S*6 
Elgin, 111., butter market firm at 26 cents. 
Boston, western creamery, 27 cents. 
Philadelphia, western creamery, 28 cents. 
CHKlfiSlfi 
Business is quiet owing to the increased 
prices. Reports indicate larger shipments 
on the way, and a possible resulting decline. 
Full Cream, best.. . .12 @ .]3*£ 
Common to Good.09 @ .11 
Skims..115 © .10 
l£GGS 
Receipts of high grade are light; medium 
and low grades in great surplus and values 
Irregular. 
White, good to choico.27 @ .31 
Mixed Colors, best.•..24 @ .26 
Common to Good.18 @ .22 
Western, best.20 @ .23 
Under grades.12 ® .18 
Checks and dirties...11 © .14 
BEANS 
Market on Marrow and Medium very firm, 
with advances of 10 to 20 cents per 100 
pounds. 
Marrow, 100 lbs.. 
Medium. 
Pea. 
Yellow Eye. 
Red Kidney. 
WhiteKidney. 
J,ima. California. . 
4.20 © 4.50 
4.00 © 4.20 
4.00 ® 4.25 
3.50 © 3.55 
5.6(1 © 6.00 
5.00 © 5.20 
6.60 @ 6.65 
HOI'S 
Considerable business in the new crop is 
reported in the Now York section. Trade 
on the Coast is dull. The yield in England 
will be better than was expected. 
Prime to Choice.41 ffl .42 
Common to Good.38 ® .40 
Pacific Coast.40 @ .42 
DllIKD FRUITS 
Some new evaporated apples made from 
windfalls and cull stock are arriving, work¬ 
ing out on a basis of 10 to 11 cents. 
Apples, evap., choice.10*6© 11 
Common to good.08 © .10 
Waste.07 ® .07*6 
Cherries.14 © .18 
Raspberries.\.31 © .32 
FRESH FRUITS 
The apple market has been clogged with 
cull fruit. Fine, picked apples are scarce, 
and selling well. Peaches running very 
irregular in size and quality. Trade in 
grapes rather dull. Pears in heavy supply 
and low, except for best grades. 
Apples, Wealthy, bbl. 2 00 © 3.60 
Alexander. 2.50 © 3.50 
Wolf River . 2.50 © 3.50 
Twenty Ounce. 2.50 . ® 3.00 
Maiden Blush. 2.00 © 2.50 
Sweet Bough, bbl. 1.50 ® 2.00 
Gravenstein. 2.Q0 @ 3 00 
Duchess.2.00 © 3.00 
Nyaok. 2.00 @ 3.00 
Orange Pippin. 1,60 © 2.00 
Fall Pippin. 2.00 @ 3.00 
Windfalls, bbl. 1.00 © 1.25 
Various. * 6 -bbl.-bkt.75 @1.25 
Crabapples, bbl. 2.1X1 @ 6.00 
Pears. Seckel, bbl. 2-50 ® 4.00 
Flemish Beauty, bbl. 1.50 © 2.25 
Bartlett, bbl. 2.25 © 4.50 
Clapp’s. 3.00 @ 5.00 
Kieffer. K-bbl.40 © .60 
Peaches, Up-river, bkt.30 ® .90 
Western N. Y„ bkt.40 © .90 
W. Va., carrier. 1.50 @ 2.25 
Del. and Md., carrier . 1.25 @ 1.75 
Del. and Md„ bkt.40 © .90 
Jersey, carrier. 1.25 ffl 1.76 
Jersey, bkt.40 © 1.00 
Pine Island, bkt.40 @ 1.00 
Muskmelons, Colorado, crate. 1.25 ® 3.25 
Maryland, crate.25 © 1.00 
Jersey, bkt.25 @ .70 
Watermelons. Southern, 100.10.00 ©25.00 
Huckleberries quart.07 © .18 
Plums, 8 -lb. bkt.12 @ .22 
Grapes, Moore's Early. 18-lb. case ... .55 @ .65 
Champion..40 ® .50 
Delaware. .60 @ .75 
Niagara.60 ® .75 
VEGETABUMS 
Receipts of potatoes have been light, and 
prices on choice stock continue high. 
Onions plenty and dull. Tomatoes badly 
damaged by recent rains. Sweet corn firm 
and higher. 
Potatoes, Jersey, bbl.. 2.75 @ 3.00 
Maine, bag. 2.75 © 2.85 
Long Island, bbl.3.00 @ 3.25 
Sweet Pitatoes, bbl.2.00 @ 3.75 
Beets, 101) bunches. 1.00 © 1.60 
Carrots, bbl. 1.00 © 1.25 
Cabbage, Long Island, bbl.30 @ 1 25 
Cauliflowers, L. I., bbl. 1.00 © 3.1X1 
Sweet Corn, choice. 100. 1.25 © 1.50 
Common to Good.50 @ I.(X) 
Cucumbers, bu.25 © A0 
Pickles, bbl.75 © 1.60 
Celery, Jersey, bunch.10 © .35 
Lettuce. *4-bbi bkt.30 ® 1.00 
Chicory and Hscarol, bbl.25 ® .75 
Peppers, Jersey, bbl.75 © 1.26 
Horseradish. 100 lbs. 3.00 @ 5.00 
Okra. Jersey, t^-bu.25 @ .30 
Onions, Long Island, bbl.2.00 ® 2.25 
Orange Co., bag. 1.25 @ 2.25 
Jersey, bu.75 @ 1.25 
Conn. Yellow. 100-lb. bag. 1.00 @ 1.75 
Peas. State, bu.75 © 1.50 
Radishcs.100 bunches.75 © 1.25 
String Roans, bu.50 © 1.25 
Lima Beans, potato, bu.50 @ 1.00 
Flat kinds.40 @ .65 
Spinach, bbl. 1.00 © 1.50 
Squasn. Marrow, bbl.50 © .75 
Crook Neck, bbl.50 © .75 
TuruiDs. Rutabaga, bbl.75 © .90 
White, bbl. 1.00 @ 1.60 
Kgg Plants. Norfolk, bbl.60 © .75 
Jersey, bu.25 © .30 
Tomatoes. Jersey, box.25 ® .65 
Up-River, bu.40 @ .60 
LIVE POULTRY 
Chickens, Broilers, lb.16 © .18 
Fowls . 16 © .16 
Roosters.09 @ .10 
Ducks.12 @ .13 
Geese. 10 © .n 
Turkeys.12 © .13 
DRESSED POULTRY—Fresh Killed 
Turkeys. Spring, best.25 © .30 
Old Common to Good.12 ffl .13 
Chickens, choice broilers, lb. 21 © 23 
Broilers, common to good.18 © .20 
Fowls. 13 © .16 
Spring Ducks, lb . . .14 © .16 
Squabs doz. 1.00 ® 3.50 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
DRESSED POULTRY-FROZEN 
Turkeys, best.22 © 24 
Chickens, milk-fed roasters.18 © .22 
Coin-fed roasters.16 © .18 
HAY AND STRAW 
Bay. No. 1, ton.27.00 © 28.00 
No. 2.22.00 @ 26.00 
No. 3.17.00 @ 20.00 
Clover Mixed.16.00 © 22 00 
Clover.15.00 © 18.00 
Straw, Rye.14.00 © 16.00 
Oat aDd Wheat.8.00 © 9.00 
LIVE STOCK 
Native Steers. 100 lbs. 5.50 ffl 7.20 
Bulls.3.00 © 4.00 
Cows. 1.25 @ 4.75 
Calves, Prime Veal, 100 lbs. 7.00 @10.00 
Culls . 5.00 © 6.00 
Sheep, 100 lbs.2.50 © 4.00 
Lambs. 4 75 © 7.25 
Hogs. 7.00 @ 8.00 
GRAIN 
Wheat, No. 1. Northern Spring. 1.12 © .. 
No. 2, Red. 94 © .. 
No. 2 Hard Winter.97 ® 
Corn, as to quality, bush. 68 © .72 
Oats, as to weight, bush.46 @ .48 
Rye, No. 2 , Western.90 © .92 
MILL FEED—CAr LOTS 
Spring Bran,ton. 23.60 @ 25.10 
Standard Middlings. 28.00 © 31.00 
Red Dog. . 31.00 © 32.00 
Hominy Chop. 25.00 © 26.20 
Linseed Meal. 37 .(X) © 37.50 
Corn Meal. 27.00 © 28.00 
COTTON 
New York, Middling Upland. 12.00 
Middling Gulf. 12.25 
New Orleans, Low Middling. 11.10 
Good Middling. 11.95 
WOOL 
NewYork Fleeces, Fine, unwashed.19 © .20 
Ohio half blood combing.25 © .26 
Kentucky, three-eighths blood.24 © .25 
Michigan, half blood.25 @ .25*6 
TOBACCO. 
Conn, broadieaf-tlller.08 © .10 
Fine wrappers .60 @ 75 
N. Y.State Fillers.05 @ .06 
Fine and Selections.12 © .16 
Ohio Zimmer's Spanish.19 @ .20 
Virginia Dark Lugs.07*6© .09 
Dark Leaf.10 © .20 
Bright Cutters.12 © .30 
Penn, broad leaf fillers.10 @ .12 
CHICAGO 
Butter, creamery.22 @ .26 
Eggs, good to prime firsts.14 @ .17 
Live Turkeys.10 @ .12 
Fowls. il @ 12 
Chickens.13 @ .14 
Potatoes, bbl.3.50 @ 3.75 
Apples, bbl.1.00 @ 3.00 
Sheep, 100 lbs .2.40 @ 3.75 
Lambs, 100 lbs.4.25 @ 6.70 
Hogs.7.20 @7 75 
„ BUFFALO 
Butter, ereanrcry.26 @ .27 
Eggs, State. 20 @ .24 
Live chickens.-.15 @ .16 
Fowls. .12 @ .14 
Potatoes, bbl.3.00 @ 3.26 
Calves, live, 100 lbs.5.50 @ 9.60 
Sheep. 100 lbs.1.60 @ 3.75 
Lambs, 100 lbs.4.00 @ 7.00 
Hogs.6.75 @ 7.50 
Wheat, No. 2, Red. © .92 
Corn. 67 ® .86 
Oats. ... .42 @ .44 
The corn crop of Hungary will be about 
110.000.000 bushels, nearly one-thiril less 
than last year. 
The American Cranberry Growers’ Asso¬ 
ciation reports the crop outlook about equal 
to last year, not far from 500,000 barrels. 
Consul Johnson, of Kingston, Ontario, 
reports that the pack of canned strawberries 
• and peas will fall 35 to 40 oer cent short of 
delivery orders. It is said that the crops 
of fruits and vegetables available for com¬ 
mercial canning in the Province are smaller 
than for 12 years. 
Michigan Market Conditions. —Plums, 
no sale ; peaches, •contracted. .$1 ; pears, 90 
cents; apples, No. 1, 25 to 30 Cents per 
bushel; potatoes, $1. with good prospects 
for a good price and a large crop. Fruit 
and potatoes are our main products here. 
Hart. Mich. h. c. s. 
We have had some good showers lately, 
hut it gets very dry and hot between show¬ 
ers, so that pastures are not doing well. 
Corn in good shape and the early corn about 
ready to cut. Clover hulling progessing 
rapidly ; yield good hut acreage small. 
Hillsboro, O. w. e. d. 
Pears look well, and a pretty good crop 
here; peaches an average or more if tilings 
keep favorable for them. Winter apples 
50 to GO per emit of an average in this 
section, although some localities have 
more, and dry weather has affected nearly 
all crops very seriously. u. o. m. 
Worcester Co., Mass. 
In Aroostook Co., Me., the farmers are 
feeling quite chesty this year. Potato 
crop is fine and market firm. I struck one 
man digging about 80 barrels of Cobblers 
per acre, geting $2 per barrel for them at 
the siding. However, he probably needs all 
that and more to average out on the past 
three years. c. m. a. 
Maine. 
We had a very destructive windstorm 
Friday, August 18; corn, which was good, 
was badly hurt. Potatoes are poor. Every¬ 
body thrashing, wheat yielding 30 to 37 
bushels per acre; are getting 83 .cents per 
bushels for best. Oats yielding well but 
light. Apples about all blown off. Eggs 
30 cents per dozen. Potatoes .$1.30 per 
bushel. Corn 20 cents per dozen, tomatoes 
50 cents per basket, butter 32 cents. 
Ivyland, Pa. n. k. e. 
We have had quite a dry season, but 
enough local showers, so we had a large 
hay crop. Our corn and grain is good ; po¬ 
tatoes very light crop. The apple crop is 
below the average. In 1909 our hay crop 
was very light, and had to sell two- 
thirds of our stock in this vicinity, and so 
now we have lots of hay and a small 
amount of stock. I would like 25 cattle, 
and some of my neighbors are situated the 
same. e. n. r. 
No. Jay, Maine. 
Canadian Fruit Crop. 
In Eastern Canada heat and drought 
have been widespread, in some oases caus¬ 
ing a heavy drop and small-sized apples. 
A wind and hail storm in the Niagara sec¬ 
tion did great damage to orchards. Apples 
are maturing about a week earlier than 
usual. The crop in Nova Scotia will be 
large and of good quality, the best in the 
Dominion. Ontario has a large vield of 
Kieffer pears, and a fair crop of plums and 
peaches. Grapes in the Niagara section are 
looking well except where damaged by hail. 
Small fruits an<l early tomatoes wore cut 
short by drought. 
PRODUCTS, PRICES AND TRADE. 
In July, California had 61G active oil 
wells, turning out 6.937.862 barrels. 
Railroads in New Jersey will this year 
pay tax on $99,978,304 valuation. 
Raw silk from China, valued at $1,000,- 
OOO. arrived in New York this week, via the 
Pacific Coast. * 
The mackerel catch reported at Massa¬ 
chusetts ports this year is considerably 
larger than for 1910, about 44,000 barrels 
thus far. 
The Missouri tomato pack will be very 
light. Many factories arc not running at 
all, the crop being a practical failure owing 
to heat and drought. 
It would take several men with hand¬ 
saws to equal the output of a new lumber 
mill at Klamath Falls, Oregon, which will 
turn out 160,000 feet per day. 
In Philadelphia the retail dealers have 
made decided advances in the price of 
• meats. Some of these prices are : 24 cents 
for pork chops; 30 cents for sliced ham; 
sirloin steak. 28 cents; roasts, 22 to 25 
cents. 
Fish in large quantities are caught for 
tin* manufacture of oil and scrap for fer¬ 
tilizers. One of the improvements in this 
industry is a floating factory, on which the 
fishing boats can unload their cargoes with¬ 
out docking. One factory of this kind, cost¬ 
ing $500,000. is now working off Delaware 
Bay. 
Patent medicines to the alleged value of 
$7,000,000 were exported from this country 
during 1910. About $1,500,000 worth went 
to South America; $1,750,000 to England; 
$64,000 to Germany; $55,000 to Spain; 
$36,000 to France; China. $30,000; Aus¬ 
tralia. $302,000, and to the Philippines, 
$107,000. 
Posting advertising signs along tiie pub¬ 
lic highways in New York State is now 
contrary to law. • Exception is made in the 
ease of public notices, fire signs, etc. In 
many sections both sides of the road form 
a continuous panorama of unsightly patent 
medicine or similar signs, nailed to trees 
and fences or painted on stones. 
A Pennsylvania man arrived at Boston 
this week with a shipment of 53 ostriches 
secured in Africa. These birds were got 
from the native tribes and put on board the 
vessel secretly, as the German, French and 
English governments in whose territory 
they were taken have strict laws against the 
exportation of ostriches from Africa. 
Pears and plums from the Far West 
have been sidling unusually low in New 
York recently, owing to the very heavy re¬ 
ceipts. Bartlett pears have wholesaled as 
low as 75 cents per box, and plums 70 cents 
per four-basket crate. The losses to ship¬ 
pers have in some cases been as much as 
$300 per car. At these prices the street 
peddlers have done a rushing business, as 
they could s-dl twice as many pears for 10 
(cuts as ordinarily. 
Great Britain’s imports for the seven 
months ending July 31 amounted to $1,- 
900.000,000. The largest items were "rain 
and flour. $200,000,000; meats, $145,000,- 
000; cotton, $145,000,000; wool, $130,000,- 
000; wood and timber, $60,000,000. Ex¬ 
ports for the same period totaled $1,290,- 
375.000, the chief items being cotton and 
wool textiles, $450,000,000 ; iron and steel 
manufactures, $125,000,000: coal and coke, 
$106,000,000; chemicals, $55,000,000. 
“You ought to go around to the fire 
house,” said the elevator man to an errand 
boy going to the ninth floor of a large 
building oast of the Brooklyn Bridge. Later 
the elevator man explained that the boy 
needed a hair cut, and in that part of the 
city it was a common thing, when the fire¬ 
men had a little leisure, to amuse them¬ 
selves by barbering with the horse clippers 
as closely as possible any street hoys who 
cared for that sort of hair cut: not stylish, 
hut short and to the point, and very dura¬ 
ble. 
Artificial silk to the amount of 8.000.- 
000 pounds is annually imported into this 
country from Europe. This is entirely dif¬ 
ferent from the vegetable silks, and various 
processes giving a silk finish to other fab¬ 
rics. The artificial silk is made from cot¬ 
ton waste dissolved and treated by chem¬ 
ical processes until a thick liquid very 
closely resembling the material secreted by 
the silkworm is formed, and then spun by 
an operation as nearly as possible resem¬ 
bling the natural process of the worm. In 
the vicinity of Lyons, France, nearly 30,000 
people are employed in making this arti¬ 
ficial silk. 
He doesn’t worry about the trusts or the 
tariff or reciprocity or the “insurgents” or 
any of the various new isms and ologies be¬ 
fore the public. He is a Chinaman sitting in 
his little shop before a fire on which are 
several iron molds for the baking of rice 
cakes. Beside him is a large pan of batter. 
A little is put into each mold ; a few mo¬ 
ments on the fire does the job, and there 
you have a crisp, thin wafer, pretty near 
the top notch in bakery goods. ITe does 
not worry—few Chinamen do—and he may 
lie something of a back number, but he 
bakes first-class rice cakes and makes an 
honest living, and keeps calm and cheerful 
about it. 
Ginseng Outlook. —The imports of the 
root into Hongkong from the Fniled States 
In 1910 amounted to 94,000 pounds, as com¬ 
pared with 160.800 pounds in 1909 and 
146,933 pounds in 1908. and these figures 
practically represent the total imports of 
the port. The close of the year found 
stocks on hand amounting to 44.200 pounds, 
as compared with 70.000 pounds in De¬ 
cember. 1909, and 31.000 pounds in Decem¬ 
ber of 1908. Tiie season of 1911 opened 
with low stocks and improved demand, and 
unless early arrivals are sueli as to over¬ 
whelm the market the prospects are for 
good prices during the current season.— 
Consular Report. 
Price Variations. —If the best lambs 
sold in New York for $9 per hundred last 
week and $8 or $8.50 this, it might natural¬ 
ly be concluded that the price of lambs 
had dropped. This would not necessarily 
follow, however, because the quality of 
CONTENTS 
The Rural New-Yorker, September 9, 1911. 
FARM TOPICS. 
A Pennsylvania Stone Wall. 893 894 
Struggles for Alfalfa in Maine. 894 
behool Gardens and Teaching Agriculture 894 
Going Back to the Land”. 894 
Graduate Agricultural Reflections. 895 
A Bunch of Questions. ’ go* 
Pennsylvania Weed Law.09* 
Fertilizer with Green Manure. soa 
A Seedsman’s Bluff. 898 
Harvesting Soy Beans. ' oqo 
crop Notes. ;;;;; . 
Coming Farmers' Meetings. 898 
Hope^Farm 0n N° D n 4 aga ^. Y ” ; jjjg 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY. 
Better Milk—Better Money.. 
Raising Draft Horses on the'Farm. 
A \ irginia Stock Barn.)*. 
Vetch as Horse Hay. 
Dropped Sole . 
Heaves .. 
Ascites . 
Foul in F"oot.• 
Facts About Feeding Rape. 
Black Cherry Poisons Cattle. 
What About “The Poor Man’s Cow?’’”" 
Milk . 
Milk Regulation in Massachusetts. 
Garget . 
Liars About Layers... 
A Utility Poultry Test.' 
A Record of Laying.j 
Market for lien Manure. 
Don’t Mix Them. 
Brahma Crosses . 
An Ice Cream Farm. 
A Milk Inspector’s Work. 
895 
908 
909 
909 
909 
909 
909 
909 
910 
910 
910 
911 
911 
911 
912 
912 
912 
912 
912 
912 
913 
913 
HORTICULTURE. 
Drying the Feet of Apple Trees. 893 
An Experience with Tree Agents. 894 
Tree Agents and Unoccupied Farms. 894 
A Courageous Apple Tree. 894 
Insect Enemies of the Apple Tree. 897 
Advice from Home. 899 
New Hybrid Raspberries. 903 
Nut Trees; Fall Planting. 903 
Peach Pits and Stocks. 903 
Daffodils in Frames. 903 
Mignonette and Ants.903 
WOMAN AND THE HOME. ~ 
From Day to Day. 906 
Charity Sweetheart’s Letter. 906 
The Rural Patterns. 907 
Some Homemade Troches. 907 
Beef Loaf. 907 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
Honey Bees and Tobacco. 896 
Dripping Chimney . 897 
Will Concrete Icehouse Satisfy?. 897 
Editorials . 904 
Publisher’s Desk . 914 
those offered this week might be much 
lower. In fact, this week’s market might 
actually be higher, so that the $9 quality 
ol' last week might bring $10 if here now. 
Contradictory as this seems it is likely to 
happen any day in sales of products for 
which there are no standard market grades. 
Hence a correct comparative interpretation 
of one day’s or week's market prices with 
another requires close observation of qual¬ 
ity as well as selling price. Efforts are 
being made to develop standard grades in 
butter, eggs, fruits and some vegetables, 
fancy creamery butter conics perhaps near¬ 
est to being a standard, and a price change 
In this is a quite certain indication of a 
change in market tone. w. w. h. 
Self-Burning Limb.— We thought all 
the different kinds of lime had been de¬ 
scribed in The R. N.-Y., but a new one is 
mentioned by Consul John D. Whiting 
of Jerusalem. This lime seems to he well 
filled with petroleum: “The quarrying is 
easily done with primitive picks and other 
tools, as the rock is quite soft and full of 
seams. The stone is broken into small 
pieces with hammers and piled up against 
the bank of rock. A wall of the same ma¬ 
terial about two feet high is roughly laid 
up around the pile on tnree sides, making 
a pile of small stone eight to 10 feet long 
and nearly as wide, and two feet at the 
front, rising to nearly three times that 
height at the hack where It lies against 
the bank. In building the wall around the 
pile small holes are lert for draft and in 
which to start the fire. When the kiln 
is ready to burn, a few small bunches of 
straw are placed in the holes mentioned, 
lit with flint and steel, and in a short 
time the whole pile has ignited. The men 
then begin working on a new kiln while 
the other burns and cools. After about 12 
hours of burning the stone has all become 
converted into lime, except the stones in 
the wall and the very top layer, which are 
only about half burned. When cool the 
lime is air-slaked and sifted to remove any 
pieces not thoroughly burned, which are 
thrown Into a new pile to he fired again.” 
JELUFFE, WRIGHT & COMPANY, 
Commission Merchants, 284 Washington St., New York. 
Poultry, Eggs. Meats, Produce. Shipments Solicited. 
D I.IC A SK semi a trial shipment to the Oldest Coni- 
* mission House in New York. lCst. 1838. Butter. 
Ktills. Poultry. Pork. Calves. Hay. Grain. 1Umis’ 
Apples, etc. K. It. WOODWARD, 3l)i! Iliee.ivicli Si.. \.Y.' 
Boston Produce Co. 
Commission Merchants, 
Fruits and Produce. Consignments Solicited 
93-95 South Market St. ( - Boston. 
Highest prices guaranteed for White or Brown 
I.eghorns or mixed eggs. Also high grade butter. 
Write us for information. A trial will convince you 
of our ability to obtain extreme prices. Address 
JOHNSTONE O COUGHLAN, 
172 Duane Street, t : New York 
JOHN C. QUICK CO. 
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 34 JAY STREET, NEW YORK 
POULTRY FARM EGGSoUR SPECIALTY . 
QUICK Returns Our Motto. Established 1855 
