Products, Prices and Trade. 
Wholesale Prices sit New York, 
Week Ending Mar. 12. 1915. 
milk. 
'rise* Rovden milk schedule to producers 
for the six months beginning with 
tuber is as follows: This is per 
Hounds as the “maximum” for 
to 4.2 
mg 
cents 
rate. 
.8 
per 
per cent. fat. 
100 pounds above 
Oc- 
100 
milk test- 
and is 20 
the “flat” 
1914. 
.$ 2.00 
2.10 
< letober . 
November . 
December . "-JO 
January . 2.0o 
Wholesale prices paid by New York 
dealers are running $1.61 and $1.71 for 
i; and (’. Hotels and restaurants using 
two or three cans per day are paying 
live to six cents per quart, single quart 
prices from bakeries and grocery stores, 
six to seven cents; delivered milk, nine 
to 10 cents. 
BUTTER. 
Prices on creamery are two cents low¬ 
er. fresh receipts being rather heavy. 
State dairy unchanged. Some demand 
for good packing stock, and a little ex¬ 
port business in ladles in noted. 
Creamery, extra.above 92 score, lb... 29b>@ 30 
Extra, 92 score . 28J6@ 29 
blood to Choice . 24 ® 27 
bower Grades. 20 @ 23 
Storage . 20 @ ~5 
State Pairy. be«t. 27 ® 28 
Common to Good. 19 @ 2o 
Ladles . 10 ® 20 
Packing Stock. It ® 17 
Process . 20 ® 23 
Elgin. 111., butter market 29 cents. 
Philadelphia, western creamery. 29 cents. 
Boston, western creamery. 30. 
Chicago creamery. 2S@28. 
CHEESE. 
one-fourth to one cent 
low- 
owing 
Prices are 
,.r, and exporters doing but little 
to the scarcity of steamer space. 
Whole Milk, fresh, specials . 
Average fancy. 
Under grades . 
Daisies. Wisconsin . 
Skims, specials. 
Good to choice . 
Poor to fair. 
EGGS 
The extremely low prices now prevail¬ 
ing on fresh eggs at New York is a dis¬ 
appointment and puzzle to many pro¬ 
ducers. With the exception of special 
contracts and eggs running unusually 
large, plenty of fresh stock—not store- 
gathered eggs—1ms been available at 20 
22 cents wholesale, and in dozen lots 
In 
17 
@ 
17 H 
Uili® 
168j 
13 
@ 
16 
15 
@ 
I0k£ 
14 
@ 
148 . 
H 
@ 
12 
7 
@ 
10 
V 
prey 
ail- 
to _ 
at five to 10 cents above these figures, 
parly Winter white eggs were forced un 
duly high, business 
price dropped 
slackened, and the 
15 cents in a few days. 
Meanwhile buyers had been using brown 
and mixed colors, and found that many 
producers were grading them as carefully 
as white, so far as quality went. Since 
then the price range between white and 
colored has narrowed rapidly, and now 
many buyers are taking the colored in 
preference, whenever they average larger 
in size. Small white eggs are very hard 
to sell at present. If served at hotels 
and restaurants the patrons complain, 
and they are disliked even for family use. 
Egg buyers for retail trade have been 
shopping around largely as is the usual 
result when buyers of any product feel 
that prices have been artificially high. 
The more these buyers shop around the 
lower prices are likely to be, as the first¬ 
hand dealers willing to do business on a 
smaller profit basis are found and adver¬ 
tised widely. Unless the egg market goes 
entirely different from other years there 
should be some improvement in tone of 
the market in April. Then the specula¬ 
tors for storage are active, and in recent 
years have been ready to buy fresh stock 
up to 25 cents at times. 
White, choice to fancy, large . 
Medium togood. 19 
Mixed colors, best. 
Common to good. . 17 
FRESH FRUITS. 
Apple trade is slow, an it 
portion of medium grades selling under 
S2. Good Baldwin and Greening bring 
mainly $2.50; Ben Davis hard to sell, 
going better later. Strawberries in open 
crates are arriving, but usually in poorer 
condition than in the ice^chests. Prices 
range all the way from 15 to 50 cents. 
22 
@ 
23 
19 
@ 
21 
20 
@ 
21 
17 
@ 
19 
■a sod 
pro- 
Apples—BenDavis, bbl . 
@ 2 ro 
Russet . 
. 1 50 
<§> 2 00 
0 9 75 
Baldwin . 
_ 2 00 
@ 3 00- 
King . 
@ 3 25 
Winesap . 
.... 2 50 
@ 2 75 
8 py . 
... 2 (10 
@ 3 50 
Greening . 
. 2 on 
@ 3 50 
Box. as to variety, . 
. 90 
@ 1 50 
Bears. Ivietler. bbl . 
_ 1 50 
@ 3 00 
Cranberries, Cape Cod. bbl . 
.... 2 011 
M 4 00 
@ 4 00 
Strawberries, Fla. qt . 
. 20 
@ 50 
BEANS. 
Marrow. 100 lbs . 
@ 7 00 
Medium .. 
. 5 90 
@ (1 (10 
I’ea . 
@ 5 50 
Red Kidney . 
.... 6 40 
@ 6 50 
Wtiite Kidney . 
@ 7 50 
1 el low Eye . 
@6 25 
l/ima, California . 
,. .. 6 00 
@ 6 10 
VEGETABLES. 
No improvement in potato market. 
Most wholesale business is at 40 to 50 
cents per bushel. Cabbage is $2 per ton 
higher. Medium grade onions lower, /to¬ 
matoes arriving in better condition, a 
few bringing $3 per crate. 
Potatoes— Jersey, bbl. 125 @135 
State. 180 lbs. 1 25 @ 1 50 
Maine. 180 lbs. 1 25 @ 1 75 
Bermuda, bbl. 5 00 @ 7 00 
^weet Potatoes, bbl. 2 00 @ 3 00 
Brussels Sprouts, ()t. 5 @ 20 
Beets, 100 bunches. 
Canots. bbl. 
Chicory, southern, bbl. 
Cabbage, old, ton . 
New. bbl. crate.—. 
Horseradish, bbl . 
Kale, bbl. 
Lettuce, half-bbl. basket., 
Onions—Red, bag . 
Yellow, .. 
White . 
Peppers, bu. 
Radishes. 100 bunches . 
Spinach, bbl. 
Spring Beans, bu. 
Squash. Hubbard, bbl. 
Marrow. 
New, bu. 
Egg Plants, bu. 
Tomatoes, 6 -bkt. crate. 
LIVE POULTRY 
Chickens, lb. 
Fowls . 
Roosters. 
Pucks...... 
1 50 
1 00 
2 00 
10 00 
1 75 
3 00 
100 
. 1 00 
45 
00 
1 00 
. 2 00 
. 1 00 
1 75 
. 3 00 
. 150 
. 1 50 
, 2 00 
. 1 50 
. 100 
. H 
. 17 
. 10 
18 
11 
® 3 00 
@ 1 25 
@ 3 25 
@15 00 
@2 00 
@ 5 25 
@ 1 25 
@ 2 25 
@ 90 
@ 1 00 
@ 125 
® 3 50 
@ 2 50 
@ 2 25 
@ 5 00 
@ 1 75 
@ 1 75 
@ 3 70 
@ 3 50 
@ 3 50 
® 16 
@ IS 
@ 11 
@ 20 
@ 12 
PRESSED POULTRR. 
Turkeys, choice, lb . 
Common to good .. . 
Chickens choice broilers, lb. 
Broilers, common to good . 
Roasters . 
Fowls. 
Capons, best... 
Small and slips... . 
Pucks,.. 
Squabs, doz. 
19 
14 
25 
12 
23 
14 
24 
13 
12 
1 25 
LIVE STOCK. 
Native Steers.. 
Bulls. 
Cows. 
Calves, prime veal, 100 lb 
Culls. 
Sheep. 100 lbs. 
Lambs . 
Hogs. 
7 20 
5 00 
3 50 
9 00 
5 00 
3 50 
9 25 
6 40 
HOPS. 
Prime to choice. H 
Common to good. 12 
Pacific Coast . 16 
Old stock. 1 
@ 
20 
@ 
13 
@ 
27 
@ 
22 
@ 
24 
@ 
18 
@ 
25 
® 
22 
@ 
18 
@ 3 75 
@ S 65 
@ 7 00 
@ 6 25 
@12 50 
@ 7 OU 
@ 4 00 
@10 00 
@ 7 00 
@ 16 
@ 13 
@ 16 
@ S 
HAY AND STRAW. 
The hay market is firmer all around 
and prices mainly -">0 cents higher. Straw 
unchanged. 
Hay. Timothy, No. 1. ton 
No. 2. 
No. 3. 
Clover mixed. 
Straw, Rye. 
. 21 00 @21 50 
..19 00 @20 00 
..Hi 00 @18 00 
..17 1)0 @18 00 
..14 00 @15 00 
GRAIN 
Early in the week wheat reached near¬ 
ly to its previous high mark, but dropped 
later. Export buying is only moderate— 
not sufficient to warrant any wild ad¬ 
vance in price. Corn and oats remain 
very nearly as reported last week, being 
now less interesting to speculators than 
wheat. The recent advance in bread 
prices never warranted by wheat supply 
conditions—has been dropped. 
Wheat. No. 1. Northern Suring. 1 62 @ 
No. 2, Red . 1 66 @ . . 
Corn, as to quality, bush. 80 @ 83 
Oats, as to weight, bush. . 62 @ 63 
Rye. free from onion. 1 20 @ 1 23 
RETAIL PRICES AT NEW YORK. 
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, doz. 
. 28 
@ 
30 
Mixed colors, new laid. 
. 25 
@ 
28 
Ordinary grades. 
. 20 
@ 
23 
Butter, fancy prints, lb. 
. 
38 
Tub. choice. 
. 33 
35 
Chickens, roasting, lb. 
. 26 
@ 
27 
Broilers, common to good. It 
) . 25 
® 
26 
Fricassee, lb. 
. IS 
20 
Fo w i s . 
. 18 
23 
Turkeys. 
22 
® 
23 
Leg of lamb. 
. 18 
20 
Lamb chops. 
. 16 
20 
Roasting beef . 
. 18 
<§* 
Stewing beef . 
16 
@ 
20 
Loin of Pork . 
. 17 
® 
20 
Hound Steak . 
. 18 
22 
The value of exports sent from New 
York March 10 was $10.500,000, the 
most recorded in any one day. The to¬ 
tal since January, is $258,000,000. 
High Marks on Vegetables. 
At what time of year are the follow¬ 
ing products highest in New York: Cab¬ 
bage. tomato, cucumber, cauliflower, rad¬ 
ish. lettuce? F. P. 
New York. 
In years of normal crop and demand 
cabbage will be highest just before the 
new crop from the South arrives in com¬ 
mercial quantities—about the last of Jan¬ 
uary. Tomatoes are at tlie top in late 
July and again in late October. Cu¬ 
cumbers are more likely to be high the 
latter part of the season—just before 
frost—than early. The top price on cauli¬ 
flower frequently comes in September, 
with the arrival of some of the best 
from Delaware County, N. Y. The notes on 
above products refer to those grown with¬ 
in reasonable distance of New York—be¬ 
tween Maryland and Central New York. 
There is no special time when lettuce and 
radishes are highest, the greenhouse and 
Southern supply often being sold as low 
as the nearby out-of-door crop. 
from forming and causing cough. Wet 
all feed. Do not feed any bulky feed at 
noon, or work the horses soon after a 
meal, nave the teeth attended to by a 
veterinarian. Give half an ounce of 
Fowler’s solution of arsenic night and 
morning, until a quart has been used, j 
then gradually discontinue the medicine, j 
This medicine is given with the suspicion 1 
that stomach cough is present, and 
heaves impending or already present. 
A. s. A. 
“You can’t stand on the step.” warned 
the conductor, mindful of the safety-first 
campaign. “It’s all right; he ain’t on the 
step,” proclaimed another patron, “he’s 
riding on my foot.”—Buffalo Express. 
WE CAN SUPPLY 
Women Help for Farm Families 
At Nominal Wages and Good Home—No Charge. 
GUILD OF THE INFANT SAVIOUR 
105 E. 22d St. ... New York City 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Comply !.ig 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. Seed and Nursery advertisements 
will not be accepted for this column. 
WANTED—Man and wife, man for dairy work 
and to help milk; wife to do general house¬ 
work; references required. Address Box "II." 
Lenox, Mass. 
POULT HYMAN desires position. American, 24 
years old, teetotaler, not afraid of hard work, 
references. POULT HYMAN, 47 Garrison Are., 
Jersey City, N. J. 
I WANTED—A man to g<> to Vermont to work on 
a farm. Call at 238 Clermont Ave., Mont¬ 
clair, X. .T. 
WANTED—Experienced single man on large fruit 
and general farm; responsible position^ good 
wages. 8 . F. BURTON. Bansomville, N. Y. 
WANTED—Man and wife, general farm and' 
housework, on small village farm, fair wages. 
VAN IIORNE, Flanders, N. J. 
WANTED—Customers for guaranteed fresh eggs, 
15 to 30 dozen a week, whites and' browns. 
MEItLYN TERRY, Peconic, L. I. 
AMBITIOUS young man. 22, wants position on 
poultry farm, two years' experience, a lmstler, 
no liquor. MARTIN MOLLElt. Bridgeport. Conn. 
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE. 18, wishes work on 
farm with Christian family, inexperienced. 
E. SI 1 RIG LEY', 30 Albertis Ave., Corona, N. Y. 
HEADMASTER OF SCHOOL wishes to soi-ure 
position for capable farm foreman. Three 
years' excellent reference, wages, $50. Apply 
RIGGS, Gladstone, N. J. 
POULTRYMAX desires commercial or private 
position, understands poultry broilers, squabs, 
ducks, years experience, sober industrious, best 
references. Box 51, care of Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Position as superintendent or fore¬ 
man of a farm by married man. life expe¬ 
rience, course in agriculture at Cornell. Address 
J. C., Box 136, Washingtonville, N. Y. 
DAIRYMAN general farmer wishes position, 
single, on up-to-date farm, who likes live 
stocks, also experienced chauffeur, can do all 
kinds of mechanical repairs; well recommended. 
8 . I., care It. N.-Y. 
YOUNG MAN wants work on a poultry or dairy 
farm, cannot milk. Address J. LLOYD DAVIS, 
Knox. Pa. In care of E. N. Gray, it. No. 3, 
Box 38. 
WANTED—Young man, 21, at Agricultural Col¬ 
lege one year, some farm experience, desires 
position on farm, with good people, within 150 
miles of New York City. Address PERRY 
YOUNG, Cuddebackville, Orange Co., New York. 
SINGLE MAN wants place on New York d'airy 
farm, where small herd is kept and Alfalfa 
grown, experienced in farm work and can fur¬ 
nish references ns to ability and character. Box 
55, care R. N.-Y. 
POSITION WANTED—By young married man 
on farm or country estate, understands the up¬ 
keep of both, good baud around horses and cat¬ 
tle, strictly temperate, can furnish A 1 refer¬ 
ence in regards to character, honesty and ability. 
Address Box 53, care R. N.-Y. 
POSITION WANTED as general farm superin¬ 
tendent with practical experience, nine years 
in present position of a large estate in tlie East: 
reason for making a change place is for sale; 
nothing but first-class position will be accepted, 
understand thoroughly all farm machinery, for¬ 
estry, landscape gardening and poultry, regis¬ 
tered cattle and sheep, also keeping of farm ac¬ 
counts: American, married, one child: at pres¬ 
ent employed: can furnish best of references. 
Address Box 48, care of Rural New-Yorker. 
Cough. 
I HAVE a fine pair of horses that have 
had a cough for the past two months. 
They are in fine condition and spirits, 
eat well, are fed ground corn and oats 
equal amount, four quarts three times a 
day, and clean Timothy hay. I have 
been feeding oil of tar. They do not ! 
cough much, once or twice a day, special¬ 
ly going down hill or grade. There is a j 
little discharge from nostrils when they 
get warmed driving. One is mare eight 
years old, in foal; weight 1450 pounds; 
horse is seven years old, weight 1410 
pounds. 15. M. G. 
Pennsylvania. 
See that the stable is kept clean and 
well ventilated to prevent irritating gases' 
POSITION as foreman on farm by married man 
life experience in farming, and in all its 
branches, best of references. GEO. UOWIE, 
Valatie, N. Y. No. 1. 
GROOM and Poultryinan, single, desires position, 
six years’ best of reference. E. F., R. E. D. 
No. 2, New I’altz, N. Y. 
YOUNG WOMAN wishes position in the country 
as working companion or to take charge of 
poultry. "EXPERIENCE,” care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
GERMAN WOMAN, 30, with girl of 0, wishes 
position on farm as helper to housewife or 
outdoor work, no boarding house. Box 00, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
COUPLE wants position, man as dairyman, good 
buttermaker or herdsman, wife to board help, 
or laundress, references. CHARLES REIGEL- 
HUTH, Milford, Conn. . 
PRACTICAL FARMER wants position by Aj> il 
1 . as working foreman or manager of genile- 
man’s farm or estate, life experience, college 
training in general farming and stock raising, 
single, age 2<i, Presbyterian, best of reference. 
.1. W. McCRKARY. Brld'ge Port, Montgomery 
Co., Penna. R. F. 1). 
FOR SALE—Ten ton mixed liav, $15. at my 
station. A. M. WHITNEY. Clymer, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—A ear of Ohio grown Alfalfa, never 
wet. $17.00 ton. ROBINSON BROS., Plain 
City. O. 
POTATOES—Carload F. O. B. Red Bank. X. J.. 
for sale or exchange for oats, state price. X. 
Y.. care Rural New-Yorker. 
NINE International Hovers, clean, A 1 condi¬ 
tion. installing coal brooders. $4.50 eaeh; nine, 
$3(1. JUSTA POULTRY FARM, Southampton, 
X. Y. 
FOR SALE—Cyphers Buffalo Incubator, 300 egg. 
perfect condition, used only once, good hatch¬ 
er, best offer takes it. IT. SHUMWAY, Addison. 
X. Y. 
WANTED—Two wooden silos, complete, good 
condition, state size, capacity, lowest price, 
freight station. Box 57, Rural New-Yorker. 
^25 TONS HAY—Must move quickly, save stor 
age. $18 f. o. b. Monroe. GEO E. REED, 
Monroe, N. Y. 
NULL'S Famous Melilotns Honey, 10-pound pail. 
$1.50. express prepaid. W. D. NULL. Demo 
polis, Ala. 
WANTED TO EXCHANGE—Shell oysters for 
apples barrel for barrel, or two gallons large 
solid meats for barrel apples; get price on gal. 
to five gallon lots prepaid. WM. LORD. East 
New Market, Md. 
WANTED—Farm in exchange for one family 
house. E. NAMCY Ridgefield Park, N. J. 
50-ACRE FARM FOR SALE—Modern house: fur¬ 
nace, bath, etc.; land good state of cultiva¬ 
tion, conveniently located to three railroads; 35 
miles from Buffalo. Price. $4,000.' For partied 
lars ad'dress IRA S. JARVIS. Hartwiek Semin 
ary, N. Y. 
MAPLE SYRUP—Direct from producer; steam 
evaporated, guaranteed pure. JESSE L. MIL¬ 
LER. Columbia Cross Roads, Pa. 
TEN CARS Upland Mixed Hay, $20.50 cash 
loaded. GEO. E. REED. Monroe, N. Y. 
GRAPEFRUIT—Fancy bright. $1.75 per box: 
quarter box, 75 cents; Golden Russets, $1.50 
per box; quarter box, 50 cents. F. O. B. Miami. 
Fla.: Russets are ttie same in all respects as 
j Brights, except In outside appearance. Price 
I delivered by Express quoted' oil request. GEO. 
B. CELLON, Tropical Grove, Miami. Fla. 
585 ACRES—-Dutchess County; choice dair. 
farm: two sets buildings; lake. Inquire E. R. 
KEATOR, Attorney-at-Law, 22 Exchange Place. 
New York. 
300 ACRE FARM FOR SALE—23 miles from 
Washington, one-half mile off an excellent 
State road, county road running entire length of 
farm, 114 miles to good school and churches, 10 
room house, painted' last year; good barns, 
stables and shed; 1,000 rods of woven wire 
fence: 135 acres in cultivation, 30 acres I 11 
wheat and rye, 10 acres of two-year-old apple 
orchard, including stock, implements, feed and 
furniture, $9,000, reasonable terras. C. K. GRA 
HAM, Hampton, Va. 
ELECTRIC LIGHT. PLANTS furnished and in¬ 
stalled complete; gasoline engine or water 
power; estimates covering rost of Installation 
and' operation cheerfully furnished: results guar 
an teed; correspondence solicited. A. J. WOOD 
WORTH, Wiscoy, N. Y. 
I’OU SALE—Farm 123 acres between Glens Fall 
and Lake George, N. Y T ., rich soil, highly eul 
tivated, beautiful view and pure water. Box 
43. Glens Falls, N. Y. 
OPPORTUNITY for stock farmer to rent No 
Hampshire farm cheap; give references ami 
full particulars. A. X., care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Fertile farm of 130 acres, 110 tilla 
ble. 50 suitable for gardening, beautiful scen¬ 
ery, fine boating, bathing and fishing; possession 
at any time to suit buyer. W. G. KANE. 
Ivyserike, N. Y. 
COUNTRY HOME, Northern New Jersey, 3> 
miles out, 52 acre farm, 11-room house fur 
nislied or unfurnished, steam heat, barn and out 
buildings, poultry plant for 1.000 fowls, farming 
implements, pond' water power, streams, sev 
eral hundred fruit trees: account of death will 
lease $(IOO furnished; $500 unfurnished; sell at 
attractive price. II. I. COGGESHALL, Adm., 
35 Nassau St., New York City. 
PLEASANT VIEW FARM—Fancy Maple Syrup. 
$1.15 gallon here crated: Russet. Lady Sweet 
Apples, $2 barrel. DANIEL WILLIAMS, Hough 
ton, N. Y. 
WANTED—Chicken farm near market, send full 
particulars with photos. MATTHESEN, 19 
Highland Are., Orange, N. J. 
RENT 
OR 
SHARES— 
-Fortv-aere farm near 
• Trcn 
ton, 
partly stocked; 
COWS, 
poultry, 
truck 
:, good 
market. F 
1. PALMER, Stock 
ton. N. 
J. 
A MONEY 
MAKING 
Poul try 
Farm. 
For 
partic 
lars 
add) 
[•ess C. I!. 
BLAK1- 
1 , Northville, 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE—125-acre farm, one-half mile rail 
road station, large buildings, general farming. 
$3,000. HERMAN W. KANDT, Oswego, N. Y. 
FOR SALE or Rent—Muck farm near railroad 
station. HERMAN W. KANDT. Oswego, N. Y. 
FARM WANTED—-In exchange for hardware 
and house furnishing store, best location in 
New York City; reason sickness. Box 52, care 
It. N.-Y. 
MODERN Poultry Plant with all improvements 
and fully equipped; cheap to early buyer. 
HENHAYKN POULTRY' YARDS. Cortland'. 
N. Y. 
WANTED—To rent or work on shares, farm 100 
acres, tillable land by practical farmer. A. J. 
PERKETT, care It. N.-Y. 
VIRGINIA APPLE and General Farm for sale 
83 acres, two miles Charlottesville, one mil • 
street ears, excellent residence. Box 54, ear- 
It. N.-Y. 
FOR SALE—Four tenement house, nearly new. 
in good condition, would exchange for good 
improved farm. Pennsylvania farm preferred. 
F. W. SHAW, Forest Depot. Va. 
FOR SALE—Productive 147-acre farm, large 
wood lot, excellent buildings. S miles froi 
Rhinobeck. Dutchess County. X. Y. MARY 
ROWE LANT, East Chatham, X. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fruit and Poultry Farm, new 8 -rooi 
house, one-half mile of city limits on stref 
ear line. 8 1-3 acres, room for <100 head poultry 
everything new. 1 ). W. JARDINE, Staunton. Va. 
