PRODUCE, PRICES AND TRADE, 
(Continued from par/e 315.) 
LI V H POULTRY. 
Chickens, lb .. 
Fowls . 
Roosters. 
.. 
Geese. 
DRESSED POULTHT 
Turkeys, choice.lb. 
Ua .'Coninion to good . 
Chickens choice broiles. lb. 
Broilers, common to good . 
Boasters . . 
Fowls. 
Capons, best . 
Small and slips. 
Ducks, Spring.. 
Squabs. U 07 .. 
. 15b,@ 
16!8j 
@ 
16jft 
@ 
11 
18 
@ 
20 
. 13 
@ 
14 
. 22 
a 
22)4 
14 
& 
18 
.. 23 
a 
25 
. 19 
@ 
20 
. 23 
a 
24 
. 14 
18 
27 
a 
28 
. 18 
22 
. 12 
17 
. 1 25 
4 75 
HAY AND STB AW. 
No change in prices noted. The bet¬ 
ter grades of Timothy arc selling well. 
Clover and medium grades in rather full 
supply. 
ilay. Timothy, No. 1. ton . 11150 @30(10 
No. 2... 1 50 @ 18 50 
No. 3 .10 00 (Sir 00 
Clover mixed.IT 00 @18 00 
Straw, Bye.15 00 @16 00 
GRAIN 
Wheat closes four cents under last 
week. Corn and oats two to three cents 
lower. Exporls from Atlantic and Gulf 
ports for week ending February l‘> were: 
Wheat, 6,012,000 bushels; corn. 1,400,- 
000; oats, 1,1506,000; flour barrels, 128,- 
000 . 
Wheat. No. 1. Northern Spring. 1 72 a 
No. 2. Bed . 1611 <a 
Corn, as to quality, bush. 84 @ 86 
Oats, as to weight, bush. 63 @ 64 
Bye, free from onion..... 1 33 @ 1 St 
LIVE STOCK. 
Native Steers. 7 40 <@ 7 50 
Bulls. 5 00 @7 00 
Cows .... 3 50 @ 6 56 
Calves, prime veal. 100 lb. 9 00 @13 00 
Culls .....*.5 0(1 @ 7 0(1 
Sheep. 100 ibs.3 50 @4 011 
Lambs . 7 50 @8(10 
Hogs.••••• 6 50 @ 7 50 
HOPS. 
Prime to choice. 16 @ 18 
Common to good. 12 @ 15 
Pacific Coast ... 13 @ 15 
Old stock. 7 @ 8 
BETA IT. PBICES AT NEW YOBK. 
These are not the highest or lowest 
figures noted here, but represent produce 
of good quality and the buying oppor¬ 
tunities of at least half of New York’s 
population. 
Eggs, fancy white, dot. 
.Mixed colors, new laid.. 
Ordinary grades. 
Butter, fancy prints, lb. ... 
Tub. choice... 
Chickens, roasting, lb. 
Broilers, common to good, lb. 
f ricassee, lb. 
fowls . . 
Turkeys..... 
Leg of lamb. 
Lamb chops.. 
Boasting beef . 
Stewing beef . 
Pork chops..?.... 
Loin of Pork .. 
Bound Steak . 
35 
@ 
40 
30 
@ 
35 
2i 
a 
28 
38 
a 
40 
31 
a 
37 
26 
a 
27 
25 
*> 
26 
18 
a 
20 
18 
a 
23 
23 
a 
26 
18 
a 
20 
16 
a 
2 1 
18 
a 
23 
12 
a 
18 
IS 
a 
20 
17 
a 
20 
13 
@ 
22 
* 
W i'i have just unloaded a carload of 
Timothy hay for the Dutchess Coun¬ 
ty Co-operative Association, at Mill- 
brook, N. Y., which was bought directly 
through information furnished by the 
.Montgomery County Farm Bureau. This 
hay was of excellent quality. It cost us 
$20 per ton, whereas we are paying $28 
for a poorer quality of hay locally. We 
have ordered another car from the same 
farmers, consisting of live tons Timothy, 
five tons oat straw, and a few bags or Sir 
Walter Raleigh seed potatoes, which can 
ho included in the same car. Farmers in 
Allegany County who have hay for sale 
and can only get .°>0 cents per bushel for 
their potatoes, are expecting to ship us 
combination cars to the Eastern Cou''t’ ,, w 
as soon as the temperature will make it 
safe. C1IAS. C. MITCHELL. 
Mr. Mitchell is secretary of the joint 
purchasing committee of the New York 
State Co-operative Association. Many 
farmers do not realize that such an asso¬ 
ciation exists, yet a great co-operative 
trade in farm supplies is being developed. 
One county may have supplies which an¬ 
other lacks, and through these societies 
the two sections are being brought to¬ 
gether. We are glad to say that Tiie It. 
N.-Y. is helping through its correspon¬ 
dents and Subscribers’ Exchange. 
* 
Feb. 0. Potatoes, 90; apples, 60 to 80; 
wheat, $1.30; oats, f>0; rye, 75; straw, 
$9 a ton ; hay, $17; buckwheat, SOe. a 
bushel; corn, 75; butter, 35; eggs, 50; 
chickens, 10 to 12; lard, 12; lamb, live, 
6%; sheep, live, 4 to 4*4 ; veal calves, 
live. 8% to 9; beef cattle, live, 6 to 7; 
beef cattle, dressed, 12 to ; hogs, 
dressed, 9 to 10; cabbage, per lb., 2 to 3 ;; 
plums, per bushel. $1 ; pears, per bushel, 
$1 ; onions, per bushel, $1 ; milk, per 
quart, 8; cows, $60 to $100; horses, $100 
to $250. J. it. 
Par roe, Pa. 
An open Winter in Vermont, little 
snow and broken weattier. Ilogs, $12 to 
$20, in barn; comment, $1.80 per cwt.; 
potatoes, 40; eggs. 36; butter, 35; pork, 
$12; flour, $8 to $9 per barrel ; cows, $50 
1o $75; hogs, $10 per cwt.; maple sugar, 
10; syrup, $1 a gallon ; stove wood. 1 fl¬ 
inch, $2 a cord; farm help, men, $26 to 
$30 a month, with board and washing; 
kitchen girls. $4 to $5 a week with board 
and hard to get. Milk, 3*4 to four cents 
a ouart at the cars. A. L. B. 
So. Dorset, Yt. 
Ingenious Egg Crate. 
'TMIH breakage of eggs in transit is a 
heavy item of loss to the poultryman. 
In one of the newer crates devised to 
prevent this loss, the eggs are suspended 
in a series of wire frames after being 
wrapped in moistened parchment paper. 
The paper is twisted at the end of each 
egg. and these twists inserted in the sharp 
bends of the wires throughout the pack¬ 
age. so that the eggs are suspended firmly 
in little hammocks, without touching each 
other. The wire frame loaded with the 
wrapped eggs is enclosed in a heavy card- 
hoard package constructed to stand rough 
usage. This package is made in one, two, 
three and six dozen sizes for mail or light 
express shipment of eating eggs, and in 15 
and 45-egg sizes for hatching stock. 
Wrapping the eggs for shipment is quick¬ 
ly and easily done in trie simple machine 
furnished for this purpose. A 30-dozen 
crate for packing in this plan is now 
being developed. It is of the same size 
ami shape as the standard crate so long 
used for car lot shipment. 
Sale of Squab Guineas. 
On page 237 you mention demand for 
squab guineas weighing one pound each. 
Do the commission men sell them as 
guineas or as partridges? e. k. 
Vermont. 
The commission men se’l them as guin¬ 
eas, and most of the good hotels and res¬ 
taurants have them on tin* bill of fare 
under their right name. They are consid¬ 
ered a substitute for game, which is 
scarce' because of legal restrictions. 
Quidding Feed. 
I HAVE a mare, about five years old, 
very thin in flesh, and when I feed 
her ground food, she drops a great deal 
and slobbers vry much. I examined her 
teeth and find nothing wrong. Her eyes 
matter very much. I have given her 
three boxes of condition powders. Her 
appetite is good hut the powders do not 
seem to help very much. Can you help 
me in any way for her betterment? 
II. a. s. 
Have a graduate veterinarian examine 
the teeth and remove milk tooth crowns 
from the molars, as these no doubt are 
causing the trouble. It may be too that 
a tooth is diseased, split or sharp, and so 
requiring attention. When the teeth have 
been put in proper condition feed whole 
oats, wheat bran, carrots and mixed hay. 
Thrillers P gs. 
M V neighbor has four small pigs, and 
I hey are not doing well at all. He 
has a good comfortable pig house 
and run. He has been feeding small po¬ 
tatoes and carrots in small quantities, 
what they clean up well, and rye mid¬ 
dlings mixed with blood-warm water. 
What can he done to prevent them from 
soiling their bed? J- W. S. 
Connecticut. 
Fence off the bed in the pen and only 
allow the pigs access t<> it at night. Let 
them have the run of a large pen and a 
yard during the day and let them root 
in the manure pile. If you can cover the 
floor of a shed or basement stable with 
litter after sprinkling whole oats and 
shelled corn on the floor the pigs will 
take plenty of exercise rooting for the 
grain. That is a good plan of insuring 
exercise for brood sows and other swine 
when snow covers the ground deeply. 
Feed slop of wheat middlings, cornmeal, 
oatmeal without hulls and oil meal. 
Omit rye middlings and do not feed corn 
and cob meal. Better give a dram of 
dried sulphate of iron in the slop for 
five consecutive mornings for every hun¬ 
dred pounds of body weight of pigs to 
destroy intestinal worms probably pres¬ 
ent,. a. s. A. 
Laborers — Drivers — Other Workers 
Ask work, by the hundred. AVillimr to learn farm work. 
No employment fee ehnrfrcd. C. K. Blatciily, United 
Charities Building, 103 K 28d St., New York City. 
Subscribers Exchange 
TEN CARS Upland Mixed Hay, $20.50 cash 
loaded. GEO. E. REED. Monroe, N. Y. 
the NEW yoke state School of Agriculture 
is in a position to recommend well trained 
young men for positions as farm managers, fore¬ 
men, herdsmen, etc. Correspondence will be 
cheerfully answered. Address DIRECTOR F. G. 
HELYAR. Morrfsville, N. Y. 
WANTED—Partner, woman, in poultry and 
strawberry business; also to assist as house¬ 
keeper In family of two, mother and son; own 
a farm of fifty acres; some capital required; 
can give good references. Address POTTI/THY¬ 
MAN. Box 41, care of Rural New-Yorker. 
OCR GRADUATES will be ready to accept posi¬ 
tions as Dairymen, Poultrymen, Horticultur¬ 
ists and General Farm Help on March 1, 1015. 
A»plications will lie considered in the order re¬ 
ceived. Address BARON I>E IIIRSCH AGRI- 
(TLTCRAL SCHOOL. Woodbine, N. J.. Dept. B. 
POSITION WANTED as Superintendent of Gen¬ 
tleman's estate; college education; experi¬ 
enced' in farm and estate management and pro¬ 
duction of high (lass dairy products; seven 
years one place; can arrange to come nt once. 
Address M. A. It., care Rural New-Yorker. 
SUPERINTENDENT OR MANAGER—American, 
ago 50, married, good habits, desires position 
on gentleman’s estate or commercial farm, qual¬ 
ified' by experience in cropping, reclaiming and 
draining land, road building and in use of farm 
machinery: can make dairy pay cither register¬ 
ed or grades, familiar with all details of pro¬ 
ducing and marketing milk, both wholesale 
and retail and keeping accounts; references; 
present and past employers. Address B. M. C., 
Box 202, Greenwich, Conn. 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Complying with several suggestions received 
recently, we open a department here to enable 
RURAL NEW-YORKER readers to supply each 
other's wants. If you want to buy or sell or 
exchange, make it known here. This Rate will 
be 5 Cents a word, payable in advance. The 
name and address must be counted as part of 
the advertisement. Copy must reach us not 
later than Friday to appear in the following 
week. No display type used, and only Farm 
Products, Help and Positions Wanted admitted. 
For subscribers only. Dealers, jobbers and gen¬ 
eral manufacturers’ announcements not admit¬ 
ted here. Poultry, Eg; ? and other live stock 
advertisements will go under proper headings on 
other pages. Se"d and Nursery advertisements 
will not he accepted for this column. 
WANTED Experienced farm hand. OSCAR 
UI1ER1NGTON, Catawisra. Pa. 
AMERICAN YOUNG MAN wants position on 
commercial poultry plant. H. J. S., c. R. 
N.-Y. 
YOT'XG WOMAN—Wishes position ns working 
companion on farm. II., care Rural New- 
Yorkor. 
FARM MANAGER wishes engagement; best col¬ 
lege and practical training. RESPONSIBLE, 
rnro K, Now-Yorkcr. 
YOUNG MAN. temperate, experienced, indus¬ 
trious, wants porition as herdman. HERD- 
MAN. in care of B. N.-Y. 
FARMER, single, with 15 years’ experience In 
f irming on a large seale._ wants position as 
foreman. Box 30. care It. N.-Y. 
SINGLE MAN wants position; experienced 
teamster. farm hand, understands cattle, 
strong, willing and honest. A. K., e. R. N.-Y. 
FIRST CLASS HERDSMAN desires position; ex¬ 
perienced in best certified dairies: A1 refer¬ 
ences; married. Box 30, care Rural New- 
Yorlrer. __ 
(■r|-y MAN. unmarried, wants to learn sanitary 
milk production. City or Country. Board ami 
sin fill wages expected. Steady, care "Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FARMER—Scotch Protestant, practical in all 
details, wishes gentleman's well equipped 
farm to run on shares. W., Care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
WANTED—Energetic young man wishing to 
work and learn modern methods in commer¬ 
cial hearing orchard In Northern Michigan. G. 
O.. c. R. N.-Y. _ 
SINGLE AMERICAN. 40. wants position on prl- 
vate estate or institution, experienced carpen¬ 
ter painter and vegetable gardener; reference. 
E. C., c. R. N.-Y. _ 
YOUNG MAN, 20, no bad habits, wants position 
on poultry farm; lias some experience with 
incubators and poultry. TRUSTWORTHY, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
YOUNG MAN, State School Graduate, wishes 
position on private estate, fruit or poultry 
farm; farm experienced with good references. 
Box 37, care R. N.-Y. 
POSITION WANTED -Experienced Orchard 
Manager in care of voting trees, general farm¬ 
ing; Canadian: married; host references. ROY 
STILES, Aurora, Canada. 
WANTED—Competent working farmer, married, 
strictly temperate, preferably young; refer¬ 
ences required; state wages expected. R. P. 
HA IN BRIDGE, Athens, N. Y. 
POSITION WANTED—Experienced. general 
farming, handling dairy cattle, testing and 
butter making: scientific, practical, single. Box 
40, care of Rural New-Yorker. 
POSITION as competent Farm Manager (stock 
preferred), 40. married, grownup family, ref¬ 
erences. active, honest, sober. FARMER, 09 
Marshall street, Rochester, N. Y. 
THE RUTGERS College Poultry Association 
have n number of students wishing positions 
on commercial poultry plants. _ Address Poultry 
Department, New Brunswick, N. J. 
YOUNG HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE—Desires 
work on up-to-date farm: understands fnrm- 
work; ready for the job. MARTIN OROEI’LER, 
14 Overlook Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. 
WANTED—Man to work seven-acre truck farm, 
New Jersey. Address Department 4, 243 E. 
18th St., New York City, stating experience and 
other qualifications, also salary desired. 
YOUNG MAN, 22. ambitious and active, wishes 
position on farm, good place with on> nr- 
tnnitv to learn more important than salary. 
CHAS. SETAPKN, 201 E. 02d St., N. Y. 
WANTED—Working foreman for fruit and 
dairy farm; only married reliable men need 
apply; state experience, salary expected and 
references. L. W. IRISH. Nlvervllle, N. Y. 
EXPERT Cornell Poultryman wants position; 
able to manage plant or build up one; also 
understands other stock, farm crops and green¬ 
house; married; best references. Box 34. care 
It. N.-Y. 
WANTED—Position ns working manager of farm 
or estate, practical life experience in all 
branches; no commercial fruit or dairv; mar¬ 
ried, American. SCIENTIFIC FARMER, care 
R. N.-Y. 
SITUATION WANTED—As farm superinten¬ 
dent; have had 2 years college work and 5 
years experience as superintendent on a general 
crop and stock farm of 400 acres. Box 38, care 
It. N.-Y. 
YOUNG MAN (22), technical training and prac¬ 
tical experience, desires location on commer¬ 
cial or gentleman’s place; experienced stock 
and registered' cattle; Babcock test; references. 
Box 35. c. R. N.-Y. 
WANTED—Position on poultry farm by cannblo, 
energetic young man: single; Cornell Winter 
course in poultry; experienced in general farm¬ 
ing and care of stock; best references, J. it.. 
Care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—About April 1. experienced Ameri¬ 
can farmer with helpful family on 118 acre 
Connecticut farm; place has tools and partly 
stocked; liberal share proposition. F. P. HAM¬ 
ILTON, 209 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. 
WANTED—Man for general farm work, capable, 
industrious, temperate; good opportunity to 
learn; state wages, previous experience and 
where, nationality, everything in detail in first 
letter. A. O. CHAPIN, Sharon Springs, N. Y. 
WANTED—Competent married man on milk 
farm: wife to hoard help: must be good cook, 
competent for the place: if not don’t applv; 
state wages expected, number in family and 
give references. S. D. NEWELL, Bristol, Conn. 
150-EGG Prairie State Incubator like new, 
$12.50. OWNLANl) FARM, South Hammond. 
N. Y. 
CYPHERS 300-egg Incubator, with nursery 
trays for $15; also Cornell Gasoline Brooder, 
$0. Box 13, Everett, N. J. 
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—One 200-egg size 
Excelsior Incubator in good order. MRS. C. 
M. GRIFFIN, Charleston. 111. 
WANTED—Five hundred pounds of onion sets. 
Yellow Danvers and Red Globe. JOSEPH B. 
DILLON, it. 12, Box 32, Marion, Indiana. 
SPRAYER FOR SALE—Hurst's Man Power Po¬ 
tato and Orchard Sprayer, spraying four rows 
at one time. GUSTAVE I’OLSTER, Warrenton, 
Missouri. 
FOR SALE—Tubular, double water way Star 
cooler, capacity 200 gallons per hour: all cop¬ 
per and brass, practically new. It. BENTLEY 
THOMAS, Elinor, Mil. 
WANTED—Two or three cars of second' cutting 
green, leafy Alfalfa; delivered here at Derby, 
sublect to inspection. Address, stating price, 
BASSETT FARM, Derby, Ct. 
FOR SALE—Country mill, roller flour process, 
stone for feed, never freeze, fine neighborhood, 
wood working machinery attached. Write for 
information and description if interested. J. O. 
GREEVEIt, Lexington, Va. 
ELECTRIC LIGHT PLANTS furnished and in¬ 
stalled complete; gasoline engine or water 
power; estimates covering cost of installation 
and'operation cheerfully furnished; results guar¬ 
anteed; correspondence solicited. A. J. WOOD- 
WORTH, Wiseoy, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Seven passenger “American” tour¬ 
ing car in first class condition; could' lie made 
into powerful truck; will sell for cash or ex- 
change for registered Ilolstelns having value of 
$600: might consider other live stock trade. 
G BEEN FIELD FARMS. Center Square, Penna. 
FOR SALE—Alfalfa (second' and third cuttings 
only), one ton, $19; two or more, $18, F. O. 
R. Manlius, cash with order; sample 10c. post¬ 
age; also timothy hay, one new tauk sprayer 
(100 gallons) five new bee hives, one clipping 
machine, one Acme harrow. FRED TUTTLE, 
Manlius, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Oklahoma wheat farm, $20 per 
acre. G. BARBER, Green Bay, Va. 
FOR SALE—80-acro farm; ample buildings; 
everything best condition. L. LEE, Broadul- 
bin, N. Y. _ t _ 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm in the Adirondncks, 
suitable for a slimmer home. W. H. TUT¬ 
TLE, Canastota, N. Y. 
DAIRY FARM—105 acres, good buildings, maple 
orchard, water. $3,000; small payment. IDA 
SHERMAN, So. Rutland, N. Y. 
SELL OR RENT—117 acres good land, maple 
orchard, fruit, water, ample buildings. Write 
DANA CAMP, Oriskaiiy Falls, New York. 
700 ACRES. $5,000. 1 >4 miles from (county scat) 
Columbia. N. level, black, cut-over pine 
laud on which cattle pasture all winter. JAY 
FINCH, Cortland, Ohio. 
FOR SALE—Oneida (V>., dairy farm of 00 aeres, 
good Alfalfa and' grain land, buildings first 
class, iff, miles from depot and' condensery; 
te-uis reasonable. Write for particulars. HENRY 
BUSS, Deansboro, N. Y. 
FARM FOR SALE—130 acres; orchard, small 
fruit, sugar trees, woodland, watered pastures, 
house seven rooms and bath, steam heated; in 
fine conditions; barns, sheds. Address ROBERT 
I.1N KB, Barnard, Vermont. 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm selling baby chicks 
and pullets; yields $2,500 annually; new and 
up-to-date: conveniently located, near New 
York. Price, $9,000. For particulars and circu¬ 
lar, address Box 32, Care R. N.-Y., 333 W. 30th 
St., N. Y. C. 
FOR SALE—An all tillable Northern N. J. farm 
of about 45 acres. New York 2 hours; lime¬ 
stone soil well drained, well watered, free from 
stones; location unsurpassed; lake front; $8,000: 
half mortgage; lower cash value. BRIGHTON 
LAKE FARM, Andover, N. J. 
FOR SALE—150 acres, 50 A. of the best tim¬ 
ber in Richland Co. Second bottqnl land, 
drained. Large springs. Buildings complete. 
On State road. 4 miles from county seat. $85 
acre. Stock anil chattel sail", March 10th. J. 
It. NISSLEY, Mansfield, Ohio. 
2(4 ACRES RICH LAND with new 4-room house, 
suitable for poultry or truck, adjoining town 
1.000 people, 2 miles from town of 2,500, 37 
miles from Wilmington, Del., a city of 90,000, 
with stone road all way: will sell or rent cheap 
for one-half cash to quick buyer. G. F. G., Box 
124, Smyrna, Del. 
OWNER will sell his farm of 400 acres three 
miles from Syracuse on State road, plenty of 
good buildings, fine dairy or truck farm, 200 
acres in Alfalfa, clover and Timothy. 120 acres 
fine muck land, part of which produced' 750 
bushels onions per acre last year, balance for 
grain and pasture. Address BOX 309, Syracuse, 
N. Y. 
FARM FOR SAT.E—50 acres, 3 acres wood, with 
good (5-room frame house and frame barn, 45x 
55, three miles from L. V. R. It. station and 
good market, one mile from village store and 
good fishing; healthy, pleasant location; te!o- 
I hone line: daily mail. Price $1,500 cash. 
Write to DANIEL HOGAN, R. D., Wyalusing, 
Bradford Co., I’a. 
BACK TO THE LAND—Maurice River Town¬ 
ship, in Southern New Jersey, is the coming 
location for Poultry Farms, fruit, trucking, 
and general farming with or without irrigation; 
good schools and transportation facilities; low 
priced meadow and upland farms and village 
lots; our co-operative poultry plants mean lower 
expense ratio and increased profits. For par- 
tienlars address J. IT. SCHUMAN, Township 
Clerk, Leesburg, New Jersey. 
390 ACRE FARM FOR SAT.E—23 miles from 
Washington, one-half mile off an excellent 
State road, county road running entire length of 
farm, 1% miles to good school and churches, 10 
room house, painted’ last year; good barns, 
stables and shed; 1,009 rods of woven wire 
fence; 135 acres in cultivation, 30 acres in 
wheat and rye, 10 acres of two-year-old apple 
orchard, including stock, implements, feed and 
furniture. $9,000, reasonable terms. C. K. GRA¬ 
HAM, Hampton, Va. 
FARM 00 miles from New York for sale. 
rent, or would accept capitalist with $25,000, 
to invest, most picturesque farm in Putnam 
county, 500 acres woodland, chiefly oak; 20 to 50 
years old; 250 acres meadow land, suitable for 
any crops; invaluable hunting grounds, water 
fall, brooks surround estate; unfailing medi¬ 
cinal springs of great value, mountains of build¬ 
ing stone, 1,800 feet elevation, 11 buildings for 
all purposes, stock includes horses, cows, chick¬ 
ens, all farming utensils, carriages, wagons, 
etc.; full particulars. JOHN AZ/.1MONT1, 40 
Union Square, New York City. 
