1912. 
THEJ HURA£> NEW-YORKER 
1S1 
1 
LABEL 
DANA’S EAR LABELS 
Are stamped with any name or address with serial 
numbers. They are simple, practical and a distinct 
and reliable mark. Samples free. Agents wanted. 
C.H. DANA, 74 Main St.,West Lebanon, N.H. 
POULTRY AND TRUCK FARM 
Located between Chestnut Hill and Norristown, Pa., on trolley 
line, two fares from Philadelphia. Near P. It. R. and Beading 
stations. Numerous large and substantial buildings, nearlynew 
and in perfect repair. Plant thoroughly equipped with power, 
machinery, up-to-date apparatus. Three acres garden anil truck 
land adjoining. Three story stono house, two piazzas. House 
recently renovated, has porcelain bath, hot and cold water, sup¬ 
plied by gasoline pumping unit in barn, now range and modern 
plumbing. Fine w'ell, shade trees, shrubs, flowers and fruit 
plantings. Splendid market in Philadelphia, easy driving dis¬ 
tance away. Will show the place in person. Clear title. Price 
very low and terms to suit early buyer. Write 
E. K. CASSAIIAV. IG05 S. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa 
Iya0 Aaiiae 8 -room house, two barns, 38x40, 
HU 1 BS 5 36x70: hen house, 12x30; concrete 
milk-house; spring watered; 38 acres wood ami tim¬ 
ber; l x 4 miles to railroad town. For immediate 
side will include one pair of horses, seven head 
cows and heifers,mower, rake,sulky-plow, wagons, 
harnesses, buggy, grain drill, reaper, and numerous 
other things. All for $3,100, part cash, balance 5 i in¬ 
terest. Another home 11'c acres, 7-room house, 
barn 26x30, 1 3 4 miles from railroad town, only $600, 
part cash, balance 5# interest on long time. Hund¬ 
reds of others that must go. Square dealing is our 
motto. HALL'S FARM AGENCY, Owego, Tioga Co., New York 
NOTICE 
It you want a farm or other property in any 
part of Southern New Jersey, write me today for 
desired information concerning same. Address, 
H. J. SWART, 
Proprietor Vinebml Farm Agency, - Vineland, N. J. 
OUR CENTRAL NEW YORK FARMS 
Grow fine crops with large profits. And they ara 
lotv-priced now. Come and see them, or send for 
bargain list. B. F. McBURNEY & CO., 309 
Unstable Block, Syracuse, New York. 
Til I CT— 70-ACRE FARM, located four miles from 
* w ■ Plainfield. This farm Avillbeleton shares 
or on a rental basis. Very satisfactory terms to the 
right party, H. P. WOOD, 505 Ninth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
F ARM BARGAINS—Buy farmer's farm at farmer’s prices. Near 
Trenton and Philadelphia. 104 acres level land : i.ioo young 
apple and peach trees ; larse stone, 6-room and attic house ; 5- 
room tenant house ; large barn, wagon house and chicken house; 
to station. $5,900. Bargain, No. 20. C. I). UOSK FARM 
AGENCY, Langborne, Penna. 
F airbanks-Morse 
Eclipse Engines 
Tllln 9>Voc> Furnished With or 
A pint of gasoline will run 
the No. 1 Eclipse engine an 
hour and pump over 1000 
gallons of water against 80 
foot head. Adapted to run¬ 
ning cream separators, 
chums, corn shellers, grind¬ 
stones, ice cream freezers, etc. 
Handy Reliable 
Low Priced 
As simple as it is possible 
to make a practical, 
powerful engine. 
Manufactured in 
our immense fac¬ 
tory on the latest 
automatic machines. 
Large, dust-proof 
bearings. Thorough 
lubrication. All like 
interchangeable. Starts 
No danger from freezing. 
No. 2 Eclipse Engine is twice as powerful 
as No. 1. Recommended for deep well pump¬ 
ing, wood sawing, feed-grinding, etc. State 
quantity of water desired in 24 hours and 
we will send catalog No. FB 698 
Fairbanks, Morse & Co. 
CHICAGO, NEW YORK, CLEVELAND. CINCINNATI 
Oil and Gasoline Engines, Oil Tractors, Pumps, Water 
Systems, Electric Light Plants. Wind Mills, Feed Grinders. 
parts absolutely 
easily at anytime 
60 Days ^9 
jtoTry^^l 
BEATS 
The Best 
Engine You Ever Saw 
—because it’s the first quality engine of 
the land. The Witte is conceded the best 
engine in America. Made by E. H. Witte, 
master builder for 25 years. Ask Witte 
users. Any size from l l A to 40 horse¬ 
power—all tested to ten per cent over¬ 
load. 61 special advantages. 
And You Now Pay Only 
Wholesale Price 
We cut out dealers—give you their 
profit. Also give you full benefit of our 
natural gas well. No power expense— 
testing, heating,lighting fuel, all free. 
Take a 60 day trial. Five year guar¬ 
antee. Write for book,“How to Judge a 
Gasoline Engine”, and complete catalog. 
Our wholesale factory prices will interest 
you mightily. Write NOW, telling us 
size engine you need. 
WITTE IRON WORKS CO.. 
1891 Oakland Ave., Kansas City. Mo. 
M X I_> K. 
In effect January 1, 1913, the N. T. 
Milk Exchange price was reduced 20 cents 
per 40-quart can, now being: B (selected 
raw and pasteurized), $1.91 per 40-quart 
can; C (for cooking and manufacturing), 
$1.81, netting four and 3% cents to ship¬ 
pers in the 26-cent zone. 
The zones are fixed by the Interstate 
Commerce Commission as follows: 23 cents 
for the first 40 miles from New York; 20 
cents for the next GO miles; 29 cents for 
the next 90 miles; beyond this, 32 cents. 
The railroads allow a discount for car lots 
of 10,000 quarts of 10 and 12% per cent. 
Two indictments charging the illegal 
transportation of milk from Connecticut 
points to Boston were returned January 
17 against the New York, New Haven and 
Hartford Railroad by the United States 
grand jury. The first indictment charges 
concessions in shipments of milk from 
Hampton and Abington, Conn., while the 
second alleges that the New Haven road 
failed to file tariffs for such shipments. 
It is understood that the government's 
evidence is based on the statement that, 
while the published tariffs give rates only 
for the transportation of milk in cans hav¬ 
ing a capacity of 8% quarts, the railroad 
company has transported cans for a Bos¬ 
ton milk company which had a greater ca¬ 
pacity than 8% quarts without publishing 
new tariffs covering the increased ship¬ 
ments. 
A widespread movement to improve the 
quality of milk sold in New York set on 
foot by the New York City Milk Committee 
was aided by Gov, Sulzer January 21 when 
he appointed Harry B. Winters, first as¬ 
sistant Commissioner of Agriculture; Ur. 
Julius Breder of New York, and Albert 
Manning ,of Otisville, as delegates to rep¬ 
resent this State at a conference to be 
held in New York in February. Represen¬ 
tatives will be present from Connecticut, 
Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, 
New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, 
which contribute to New York's milk sup¬ 
ply. The appointment of the New York 
State delegates was made at the request 
of Stephen G. Williams, chairman of the 
New York Milk Committee. lie wrote to 
the Governor that most of the States which 
supply milk to New York were contem¬ 
plating legislation for the regulation of 
dairy farms, and expressed the opinion 
that a conference of representatives of all 
these States “might be of mutual advan¬ 
tage in arriving at a better understanding 
of the problem of protecting the health and 
lives of all consumers of milk, especially 
the babies.” Mr. Williams said it was 
planned to adopt a uniform constructive 
legislative programme “looking to a more 
adequate control over the production and 
handling of milk and the elimination of 
bovine tuberculosis.” The milk committee 
has drawn up a bill to present to the dele¬ 
gates as a basis of discussion. 
Wheat, little raised, $1.01 to $1.04; oats, 
sample, 27 cents; No. 3, white, 30; corn, 
60 cents per 100; rye, 58; barley, 40 to 
50, according to quality. Hay, Timothy, 
$12; clover, light mixed, $11; clover, 
heavy mixed, $9; clover, $11; oat straw, 
$6.25; rye straw, $6.25; clover seed, $9; 
Alsike, $11.25 ; Timothy seed, $1. Hogs, 
7% cents pound: cattle, three to seven; 
calves, eight; lambs, 6%; sheep. 3%. Not 
many dairy cows kept; most of those are 
mixed breeds. Milks, six cents per quart 
from the milkman ; butter, 30 cents to the 
farmer, 32 at retail; good country butter 
scarce. Cream, 31 cents when the buyer 
comes after it, some ship their own, and 
usually get one cent more than Elgin 
prices. Not many apples grown, worth 
about 50 cents a bushel to the grower, 
about $1 at retail. Some farmers have a 
few potatoes to sell; they usually bring 
about 50 cents. No vegetables produced for 
market. A number of farmers raised sugar 
beets the past Summer. The crop aver¬ 
aged about eight to 10 tons, and sold for 
$5 per ton. It is not a profitable crop at 
such yields. j. f. d. 
Middle Point, O. 
Hay from $14 to $16 in barn; rye straw, 
$11 in barn: oat straw is all fed up here, 
no grain sold to speak of. Cows at auc¬ 
tion, $35 to $60; horses, good, $200 to 
$300; eggs, 30 cents at store; milk goes 
to creamery. November butter sold for 
39% ; three cents for milking leaves 36% 
clear. Potatoes, SO cents; apples sent to 
commission men clear from 75 cents to $1 
barrel. L. k. l. 
Greenville, New York. 
On account of the rainy weather and bad 
roads the Syracuse market has not been 
very active for the past week. Following 
are some of the prices being offertxl by 
the buyers: Eggs, 32 to 35; butter, 32 to 
38; pork. 10 to 11; potatoes, 65 to 75; 
cabbage, $2.50 to $3; Timothy. $16 to $17 
a ton; Alfalfa bay, $15 to $16 a ton; 
squash, three to four cents per pound; 
apples, $2 to $3 per barrel. e. n. c. 
East Syracuse, N. Y. 
Cows bring at sales, $35 to $50; butter, 
36 to 40 cents per pound. Milk at the 
milk station sells for $2 a 100. Much 
cheese made here. Potatoes, 60 to 70; 
eggs. 30 to 40. Apples, $1.25 to $2 a 
barrel. Hay, $14 to $18 a ton; beef, 
dressed, $9 a hundred. Hogs, dressed, $10 
to $12 per 100. We are having an open 
Winter. Not any snow yet; poor sleighing; 
a lot of rain at present. e. w. 
Rensselaer Co., N. Y. 
My market is Gardiner, Me. Potatoes are 
50 to 60: eggs, 32; hay. $12 to $16. Live 
hogs about $6 per 100, dressed nine cents 
per pound. Cows, $50 to $75; butter, 35 
to 38 cents; squash, two cents a pound; 
onions, 1 % cents a pound; milk, seven 
cents a quart. Apples. Spy, 40 cents per 
peck. Prices vary so it is hard to make 
statement. The man who has fancy stuff 
and private trade can get almost any price 
he asks. I have been getting 60 cents a 
dozen for strictly fresh eggs. j. e. b. 
Augusta, Me. 
$ 7.50 
And You Keep This 
Great Engine 
Full line of accessories at rock 
bottom prices and on easy 
payments. Belts, Shafting, 
Pulleys, Sawing Outfits, 
etc. See catalog. 
If you want to keep this Chilled Cylinder 
Engine of mine after you have tried it out for ten 
whole days you can do it by sending me $7.50. If 
you want a larger engine or a smaller engine I will 
give you the same sort of a record-breaking proposi¬ 
tion. I make these engines myself. I know what 
the Chilled Cylinder is and I am so sure of my engines that I do not hesitate to send any one 
of them out for an absolutely free ten days’ trial. 
Easy Payments 
Take your time about paying for the en¬ 
gine. Payments 
so small that 
you will never 
miss them — 
send me postal 
for the FR. r 
Book today 
Rock Bottom Prices 
If you decide after the free trial that 
you want a Schmidt Chilled Cylinder Engine, 
remember you can get it at the rook bottom 
price, the same price that the wholesale dealer 
has to pay. No middlemen—no dealers—get 
any profit when you buy a Chilled Cylinder 
Engine on this offer. I guarantee these engines— 
the largest bank in Iowa backs up this guarantee. 
Don’t Send Me a Penny 
I Want to SHOW You First 
I want you to SEE my engine do all the work on 
your place before you decide to buy one. See the 
new oiling device and the new valveless car¬ 
buretor that I have put on the horizontal en¬ 
gines.-^See how the governor regulates the 
supply of gasoline. See all the devices that 
go to make my engines the most simple and efficient 
in the world. Write today and let me send my book. 
FREE 
Book 
Just your name 
and address on 
a postal will do. 
I will send you 
my new book, 
‘‘How to Use Power,” absolutely free and prepaii 
Find out all about my offer and look over the great 
line of Chilled Cylinder Engines. No obligations. 
BEN L. SCHMIDT, President 
Schmidt Bros. Co. Engine Works 
Dept. 4292. Davenport, la. 
TOR SALE—Fully Equipped POULTRY PLANT. Price, $12,000. 
For particulars, address GEO. HOLTZ, Pomona, N. Y, 
Montgomery County FarmsT.^cdptive efr- 
cular. HUNSBERGER’S FARM AGENCY, Pennsburg, Pa. 
FOR RCNT-Small farm in fruit belt; house, 
tun • barn, 15 acres, 2 Alfalfa, 1,000 trees; 
excellent soil and market. J. DEMARY, ITHACA, N. Y. 
CARM WANTED in Columbia or Dutchess Counties, N. Y.— 
■ 100 or more acres, with bearing apple orchard of 
about 25acres. Good orchard land, buildings and wa 
ter supply essential. Commercial Orchardist, care R. N.-Y" 
Now lorcou Fa rmo—Mert Warren Dresser,Burlington, 
II Cn JCI OB J T fl. Ill 0 Burlington Co. New Jersey farms 
between Philadelphia and New York. Unsurpassed 
markets and soil; mild climate. Send for farm list 
Tel# Me How Many 
Head of Stock You Have 
and I’ll feed them 60 days before you pay. I’ll show you how to 
make your farm animals grow faster—thrive better—put on more 
flesh on no more feed—make you more money. 
Ptt Rsd Them of Worms or No Pa*? 
I’ll drive out the blood-sucking, life-sapping, disease-breedir - 
parasites, which multiply in the stomach and intestines, kiiling o.' 
your hogs and sheep, starving your horses and cattle, and stealing vour 
feed and profit. I’ll send you enough Sal-Vet to last all your stock 60 
days. Simply put it where all your farm animals can run to it freely. 
They will doctor themselves* Don’t send any money—j ust the coupon. 
Fill it out and mail today.l _ 
Sidney #?. Fail, Pres . 
Proof Thai Proves 
from Actual Users 
"Sal-Yet has been of great ser¬ 
vice to us; it has kept our hogs 
and pigs free from worms and, in 
addition, proved to be a splendid 
tonic.—J. B. ESPY, Agricultur¬ 
ist, Southeast Alabama Experi¬ 
ment Statio n. Abbe ville. Ala. 
“For their own good, I would 
recommend Sal-Yet to all sheep 
men. It will destroy every stom¬ 
ach worm in the flock and keep 
your sheep and lambs free from 
them and at the same time keep 
the flock in the pink of condi¬ 
tion and health.”—ROBERT S. 
BLASTOOK, Mgr. Sheep Dept.. 
Walnut Hall Stock Farm Don- 
erail, Ky. _ 
S. R. Fell 
Pro). 
Reg. 
Pharm. 
What SAL-VET is and Does 
Sal - Vet is a wonder-working medicated 
salt which completely rids farm animals of their 
greatest enemies—the stomach and free intes¬ 
tinal worms. These deadly pests are the cause 
of 90% of all live-stock diseases. They keep 
farm stock in a poor, weakened, money-losing 
condition—they are the first step to hog chol¬ 
era, swine plague, horse plague and other con¬ 
tagious diseases. 
How SflL-VET Prevents Diseases 
Sal-Vet prevents heavy losses when 
disease breaks out in your neighborhood be¬ 
cause it kills and expels these deadly, life-sapping 
pests and puts every animal on your farm in a 
healthy, vigorous, worm-free condition—enabling 
them to better resist these deadly plagues. It 
sharpens the appetite, improves digestion and 
makes all stock grow into profit fast because it 
helps them get the good of all their food. Being a 
salt, animals like it and run to it freely—and 
They Doctor Themselves 
It requires no mixing—no drenching 
—no dosing—no trouble at all. Leading agri¬ 
cultural colleges and all prominent live-stock 
authorities endorse it. 
Let me send you a 60-day supply without a penny 
of pay in advance. 
Send No Money—Just the Coupon 
Fill out the coupon, tell me how many 
head of stock you have, and mail it to me today 
I’ll ship you enough Sal-Vet to last all your stock ’ 
60 days. You simply pay the freight charges V 
when it arrives and at the end of 60 days re- Jr 
port results. If Sal-Vet does not do what I / 
claim you won’t owe me a penny, 
the coupon NOW. Address 
SIDNEY R. FEIL, Pres. 
THE §. R. FEIL CO. 
Dept. Buy 
Send 
I cannot find words to express 
how much I think of Sal-Vet. 
Hogs all around my place had 
cholera, bnt I did not loso a sin¬ 
gle one of mine, and all winter 
they continued to look just fine.” 
WM. CAMPBELL, Route No. 10, 
Decatur. Inch_ 
•‘Before getting your Sal-Vet 
I had lost thirteen of my best 
hogs, but since feeding Sal-Vet 
I did not lose a single one. and 
every animai is in fine condi- 
tion.”—j (Signed) GEO, MOREN. 
Route No. 1, Pittsbu rgh, Kansas. 
“I have given Sal-Vet a thor¬ 
ough trial with most gratifying 
results. My herd of pure bred 
Berkshires contracted a bad 
cough and continually got worse, 
until I gave your Sal - Vet to 
them. After two weeks of this 
treatment, not a hog was cough¬ 
ing. and all are as sleek as 
moles.”—E, DANA SUTCLIFF, 
Shickshinnr. Pa. 
PRICES Wlbs.. 52.25; 1 U 0 lbs.. 
■ $5.00; 200 lbs.. S9.CC; 300 
lbs.. 513.00; 500 lbs., *21.12. No 
orders filled for less than 40 lbs. 
Never sold in bulk; only in Trade- 
Marked_SnI-Vptpacknges ; ^^^_^ 
60-flay trial shipments are based on 1 lb. 
or Sal-Vet for each hoc or sheep and 4 
lbs. for each horse or Bead of cattle, as 
Ueur -a wo can come without breaking 
regular packages. 
,/ SIDNEY R. FEIL, Pres. 
THE S. R. FEIL CO. 
Dept RNY 2-1-13 Cleveland, O. 
Ship me enough Sal-Vet to last my stock 60 
.days. I will pay the freight charges when it ar¬ 
rives, report results in 60 days and will then pay 
for it if it does what you claim. If it does not you 
are to cancel the charge. 
[no] 
Mfg. 
Chem. 
Cleveland, O. / 
Name 
P. O ... 
Shipping Sta . State __ 
No.of Sheep. . Hogs . Cattle _ Horses 
