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Money 
Leaks Out 
When Paint Scales 051 
Every little cracked and scaled 
place in the paint on a farmer’s 
building is an expense spot. It 
lets in rain that soaks and rots the 
wood. It means expensive 
repairs. 
Dutch Boy White Lead 
mixed with Dutch Boy linseed oil makes 
a paint that keeps houses, barns, vehi¬ 
cles, implements, whole-skinned as well 
as spick and span. It’s a standard paint 
that saves you money. There are low- 
priced paints that cost less —at first — 
but Dutch Boy and Linseed doesn’t 
crack nor scale; it does wear even and 
slow and smooth, and means less fre¬ 
quent painting to keep buildings right. 
It grips into the pores of wood, defies 
rain or sun, and rivets on your house an 
elastic armor that preserves and beauti¬ 
fies it for years. You can mix it with 
any color. 
You can now get red lead in paste form, 
same as white lead. Doesn’t harden in 
the can. Fine for painting resinous 
wood; best by all odds for implements 
and metal work. Ask your dealer. 
A Text Boole on T? n ¥7 p 
House Painting JT 
Ask for Farmers’ Paint 
Helps No. 2514 
Contains instructions for mix¬ 
ing lead and oil for all surfaces, 
and all weather conditions; 
tells which colors look and 
wear best; helps you to estimate 
paint required and probable 
cost. 
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY 
New York Boston Cincinnati Cleveland 
Buffalo Chicago San Francisco St. Louie 
(John T. Lewis & Bros. Co., Philadelphia) 
(National Lead <Sc Oil Co., Pittsburgh) 
Galloway Prices Anywhere 
rTlew o/feUand' 
Feed Mills 
will grind all 
— _—- kinds or shelled 
grain or cob corn—separately or mixed. 
Farmers’ sizes to run with 1 to 12 H. P. 
Good capacity—well made—sturdy. Guar¬ 
anteed— your money back If not satisfied. 
Write today for catalog , low 
prices and free trial offer 
BEW HOLLAND MACHINE CO., Bos 41, Now Holland, Pa 
EVENTS OF THE WEEK. 
D OMESTIC. — Justice Joseph Mor- 
scliHiiser, in the Supreme Court, has 
gone on record at Nyack, V Y., as 
saying that a fanner does not stand a 
chance of getting justice in a legal con¬ 
test in New York City. The justice ad¬ 
vises against John ,T. Thornton transfer¬ 
ring his suit against the Nassau Electric 
Railroad Company from Orange County, 
where the plaintiff lives, to Kings Coun¬ 
ty, New York City. Thornton asks 
000 damages for a broken arm suffered by 
his wife and injuries to himself in an ac¬ 
cident in Brooklyn. "If 1 were a farmer 
I wouldn’t try a ease in New York." said 
the court, "if they gave me a verdict in 
advance. The farmer does not stand a 
chance in New York, and I know it. lie 
cannot get square compensation, and you 
know it." A motion for the plaintiff for 
a change of venue was therefore denied. 
Fourteen persons, inclini ng one woman 
and four children, perished when tin. 
Black Diamond collier Lingan rammed 
and sank the Canadian Government 
steamer Montmagny. Kept. IK. off the 
Beaujen banks in the Kt. Lawrence River, 
about 20 miles from Quebec. < >n hoard 
the Montmagny were the families of two 
lighthouse keepers at Belle Isle and Flow¬ 
er Island. 
The engineer and conductor of a Phila¬ 
delphia and Reading Railway train were 
suffocated and seven passengers were 
overcow when the train was halted in 
the middle of a tunnel near Phrenixville. 
Pa., after running down and killing a 
woman at the tunnel entrance, Kept. 21. 
The sudden application of the emergency 
brakes brought the train to a stop well 
inside the tunnel, throwing many pas¬ 
sengers from their seats. The train crew 
and several of the men passengers ran 
forward, but they were met by a wave 
of gas and smoke, which had accumulated 
in the tunnel. r liree of the men dropped 
alongside the track and tiro others re¬ 
turned for help. Later the air became 
clearer and another advance was made. 
The engineer and conductor were found 
dead beside the engine. 
September IS the steam schooner Fran¬ 
cis II. Leggett foundered off the Oregon 
coast with the loss of 72 persons. 
The Colorado mine operators have de¬ 
murred against accepting in its entirety 
President Wilson’s plan for ending the 
big strike in that State. In this stand 
the officers of the Colorado Fuel and Iron 
Company are backed up publicly by John 
D. Rockefeller, Jr., who is supposed to 
represent a controlling stock interest in 
the company. The portions of the plan 
rejected by the mine operators are re¬ 
garded here ns the vital ones and there 
is little likelihood of any settlement as 
the result of President Wilson’s sugges¬ 
tions, unless a compromise is reached on 
the points of difference. 
THE EUROPEAN WAR.—The tenth 
day of the battle of the Aisne, Kept. 22, 
it was reckoned that the casualties had 
reached 1SO.OOO. The forces engaged 
were said to number 2,600.000. The 
Germans wore intrenched on the heights, 
and supplied with heavy guns, with which 
they bombarde’ Rheims. The great 
cathedral, one of the most wonderful ex- 
amnles of Gothic art, and endeared to 
France by its historic associations, was 
tlic sneeial ta“get of the bombardment. 
Ambassador Jnssernnd filed a protest 
with acting Secretary of State Lansing at 
Washington agaii>«t the destruction of 
the cathedral of Rheims. and President 
Poincare directed a formal protest to be 
made to all neutral Powers against the 
destruction of this historic structure. 
Germany expresses regret, but defends 
the vandalism as a military necessity. 
Sept. 26, the eleventh day of the battle 
of the Aisne, the Allies continued to gain 
ground; the Germans were stiR hurling 
masses against the center. The main 
battle line from Lassiguy to the ridge of 
the Argonne, 100 miles, is a double row 
of fortresses, from which Allies and Ger¬ 
mans sally in attack and counter attack, 
while great guns devastate by day and 
night. East of the Argonne and in the 
Vosges and Lorraine the French armies 
are a little more than holding their 
ground.Sept. 18 six nuns in a con¬ 
vent at Nancy were mentioned in army 
orders for devotion with which they nursed 
1.000 wounded during the German bom¬ 
bardment which has lasted since August 
2-1.The senate of Cambridge Uni¬ 
versity has invited the Catholic Univer¬ 
sity of Louvain. Belgium, to move to 
Cambridge, there to continue its own sep¬ 
arate studies, grant degrees and gener¬ 
ally to pursue its activities ns at its own 
foundation. Cambridge University would 
supply the technical facilities for carrying 
out this work.The Russians an¬ 
nounced, Sept. 22. that they had captured 
Jaroslav, and were pressing on towards 
Cracow.The Turkish government is 
partially demobilizing its troops and 
withdrawing them from the frontier. 
.The English cruiser Pegasus was 
destroyed in the harbor at Zanzibar by 
a Gorman cruiser, and it is said three 
British merchantmen were destroyed by 
the German cruiser 1 in den in the In¬ 
dian Ocean. Kept. 21, the Hatribnrg- 
American liner lleina, employed as a 
collier, was captured by a French cruiser 
and taken into Martinique.Kept. 
22 three British cruisers, the Creasy. the 
Aboukir and the Ilogue, were sunk in 
the North Sea by German submarines, 
about 1,000 men were saved, but the loss 
of life is said to be 1,163. Two of the 
submarines were reported destroyed. 
Thi* dandy 
d r i v i 
com 
is yours 
(Without 
one cent 
of cost. Burns 
charcoal cakes. Keeps 
your feet warm in zero 
weather. Got my offer and 
the "Blue Grasi" etorm bu^gy. 
Sunny Southern Comfort 
in Your Bleak Winter Driving 
My famous all-enclosed storm buggy is 
warm oncoldostdays. Cool and shaded 
in summer. Full wrought strai -lit grain 
. Warp-proof doors with double 
strrn 'thcla ;. Room .’seat—ample 
leg room. Ideal farm bugoi'* Just the thing. 
“Blue Grass”Storm Baggy 
At Bohon’s Factory Price 
Save $15 to $50 and get 
the best bu-gy you ever 
rode in. No 
You get it at actual manu¬ 
facturing cost plus small 
legitimate manufacturer's 
profit. Why pay more 
when you get this 
grade buggy at my 
special low price? 
$500 
00 
boND 
Protects You 
When You Buy 
Bohon’s "Blue 
___ Grass’’Buggies 
Unlimited guarantee on workmanship and ma¬ 
terial as long as you have my hu izv. Thirty 
days riding trial w.th n oncy back if you don’t 
like my buggy. You can't beat this fair offer. 
Don't* 1 ’*Wonder V/hy Bohon Sells So 
Many Buggies”—Find Out 
My big buggy bargain book tells you why. 
\ l- ow prices, top notch quality and a 
ft^m^-r, s ’ |Uarc rite for my Buggy 
mw/ Bargain Book and free foot warmer offer. 
/ D. T. BOHON 
2441 Main Street Harrodsburg, Ky, 
Get My Catalog FREE 
i 
Make Money Trapping 
Lots of Bport anrl thore’s money in ft. FI If 
\ i:\VN, published monthly, fcella nil about 
trapping, hunting, raw furs, u.shhu;, bnntlm; tloga, Rims, gin¬ 
seng, fur fanning, wonrteraft, n’lid all pursuit* for profit in forest 
ami field I,otn of good stories. SPEC IA L OFFER; Son.I t>Oc 
for one yciirV* bUhscrlptlon to FI It NEWS ami set FREE valua¬ 
ble 6-J-pago Trapper’s Guido. FCR NEWS, 75 W. 23d St, N. Y. 
Mr. Business Farmer 
Stop ! Read ! Act! 
XT/ATT need the Excelsior engtno on your farm. Every day 
L V/ U y OU go -without it you are losing money. You do not 
havo to take our word for It. Order an engino subject to satb- 
t act Ion. II you do fmt llnd It i- the l*»«t engine and the biggest; 
ini#ne,v-niak»*r you over saw, Kemt It hark to us. If after trial, 
you find It is the beat engine yon over used, keep it. You can 
pay all rash or half ea-di and the halanre in notes covering one 
year. You do not have to pay a penny in advance; you do 
not have to .sign any notes until you are sure that the engine is 
everything we claim, if you will tell or the size engine you 
want and when you want it, «!«•• the size of your farm, we will 
make you an interesting proposition, somethin-, that will save 
you money. Send today for catalog and other information. 
Do Not Delay, Art Now. 
R CONSOLIDATED GASOLINE ENGINE CO. 
202 Fulton Street New York City 
Don't 
Pay 
Rent 
—prices now extremely low—natural In¬ 
crease will return your money in a few 
years—well fanned, annual profits will 
run even more. Dairying, livestock, poul¬ 
try, fruit and truck—these are a few of 
the big money-making lines. Along the 
Southern Ry., M. &-o. and G. S. &F. Ry. 
aremanyopenings. Writenowfor ‘'South¬ 
ern magazine and land lists. 
AJ- ^ ■ v '( hards, Land and lnd. Agt., . 
Room 8r So.Ry.Washington, D.C.^r 
UUANTED— Responsible party to take charge of busi- 
*■ ness in each county. Now AntomntieCoinbiiin- 
tion Tool, combined wire fence stretcher, post puller, 
lifting jack, etc. Lifts or pulls 3 tons, weighs 24 
pounds. Sells to farmers, shops, teamsters, etc. 
Descriptive catalogue ami terms upon request, 
HARRAH MANUFACTURING CU., Box M, Bloomfield, Indiana 
FERTILE FARMS—BEAUTIFUL PERKIOMEN VALLEY; fruit. 
I truck, dairy. Catalog. W. M. STEVENS, Perkasie, Pa. 
Profiiable Burlington Co., N. J., Farms“£ e V 
all purposes. Established 1898. A. W. DRESSER, Burlington, H. J 
| C n Cormo FOK SALE—near Vhlla. mid Trenton markets, 
I uU 1 Cl I III o . i railroad and N 
logun. Established 2. r > years. Iloraoe (J. Ileeder, .Newtown, Penn* 
Fnvmc in Dolawn A 11 sizes > Productive 
r arms in I/claWaie soil, genial climate, 
close to markets, fair prices, free booklet. Address 
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. - DOVER, DELAWARE 
210 ACRES-22 Head Fine Cows 
and heifers; f> horses: best stock; tools; hay; grain; 
14-room, big while house; largo barns; basements: 
hay; crops; stock; tools; everything on this fine 
farm goes $12.0111); part cash. Write for particulars. 
HALL’S FARM AGENCY, Owego, Tioga Co.. N Y. 
FORGET THE WAR!! 
Holsteins are of More Interest 
If you want to make lots of milk (and money) 
this winter, and we know you do, attend the 
L. S. and P. (Vs. “Fresh Cow Sale” 
October 12 and 13, 1914 
At the New Sale Pavilion, Syracuse, N. Y. 
175 Registered Holsteins 175 
Most of them just fresh or near by springers. 
THE ENTRIES TO THIS SALE INCLUDE: 
Two daughters of the famous, Duchess Ormsby Butter King, bred to 
King Segis Champion. 
Several very choice cows bred to the same bull, among them a 
25-lb. four-year-old and a daughter of King Pontiac Artis. 
A Son of a 36-lb. cow sired by a son of Homestead Girl De Ko! 
Sarcastic Lad. 
A 19-lb. three-year-old daughter of Woodcrest Pietje. 
A choice son of King of the Pontiacs, and a son of Pontiac Korndyke 
from a 19.86-lb. daughter of Rag Apple Korndyke. 
A grandson of Colantha Johanna Lad from a 26-lb. three-year-old 
daughter of King Segis. 
Several choice daughters of Tidy Abbekerk Prince. 
A 30-lb. cow and her daughter bred to a 34.89 lb. bull. 
A choice Son of Spring Farm King Pontiac. 
FOR CATALOGUE ADDRESS 
LIVERPOOL SALE AND PEDIGREE CO., Inc. 
LIVERPOOL, N. Y. 
