CONTENTS 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. August 28. 1915. 
FARM TOPICS. 
Tractor and Truck in the Hayfield.1051 
Does Asparagus Pay? .1051, 1052 
Wheat Growing in N. Y. State.. .1052 
A Rainy-day Road Talk .1053 
A Concrete Farm Storage Room......1053 
Planting Potatoes on Clover Sod.1053, 1054 
A Bunch of New York Notes .1054 
Cover Crops and Fall Plowing.1054 
Indiana Farm Notes . 1056 
The Maine Potato Crop .1056 
Coming Farmers' Meetings.1056 
Hope Farm Notes ..1058 
Cover Crop Without Harrowing In.1058 
White Grubs in a Meadow.1059 
Destroying Woodchucks . 1078 
Cutting Corn Too Soon .1078 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY. 
An Opening for Beef Cattle.1070 
Storing Butter for Winter.1070 
Net Weight of Butter Law...1070 
Dairy Conditions in Tennessee.1070 
Food Value of Skim-milk .1070 
Vetch and Wheat as Fodder ..1071 
Timothy and Clover Silage .1071 
Stock Refuse Red Mangels .1071 
Feeding Canada Peas . 1071 
Cattle Quarantine Regulations .1071 
The Business of Raising Guinea Pigs.1073 
Making the Plaster Stick.. . .1076 
More About the Gurler Silo.1076 
To Prevent Frozen Silage . 1076 
Diameter of Silo ..1076 
One-man Silo Filling . 1076 
Overheated Horses .1076 
Sick Pigs . 1076 
Foul in the Foot .1076 
A Small Silo . 1078 
Dishorning Bull . 1078 
Abnormal Milk . 1078 
THE HENYARD. 
Egg Conditions in the United States....1052 
Dipping Hens . Ioo 6 
Egg-laying Contest .1074 
White Wyandotte Eggs . 1074 
Green Rape and Eggs .. 1074 
Starting a Poultry Business .....107 4 
The Central Poultry Meeting . 1074 
Swollen Eyes . 1074 
White Wyandotte With Single Comb.1074 
The Favorite Hen Contest .. . 1075 
The Poultry Meeting at Storrs .1075 
HORTICULTURE. 
A Light Harrow for Close Orchards.1053 
Rotten Apples ..1054 
N. Y. State Fruit Growers’ Summer Field 
Meeting. Part II. .1055 
Smooth Earliana Tomatoes .1059 
Selling Botanic Drugs .1059 
The Schmidt Cherry. 1059 
New Plant Immigrants .1059 
Destroying Moles . 1069 
WOMAN AND THE HOME. 
Public School or Home Teaching.1057 
Leading Home for Education .1057 
Lack of School Facilities . 1057 
Keeping Boy Out of School .1057 
Sub-normal Child . 1057 
The Regeneration of Sarah (Continued).1061 
You . 1032 
Those Three Debatable Questions .1062 
Children War Against Flies .1062 
A Woman’s Evidence Against Snakes.1062 
Making a Living on the Lonely Road.1063 
A Brace of Ostrich Babies...1063 
Dinner for the Thrashers .1063 
Preparation for Autumn Clothes.... 1064 
Good Words .1064 
The Favorite Chicken Recipe .1665 
The Farmer’s Store .1066 
Engineering to Help Farming.. 1066 
Canning Meat . 1066 
Hints to Housekeepers .1066 
Sweet Pickled Gherkins ..10G6 
Cleaning Panama Hat .1066 
Two Pickle Recipes . 1066 
Some Principles of Child Training.1067 
"Two Blades of Grass"...1068 
The Police Woman of Paterson, N. J.1069 
Woman and the Tree Agent.1072 
The Song Music Fraud . 1072 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
Marriage of Sister-in-law .1055 
Marriage After Divorce ..1055 
Protection to Army Officer’s Mother.1055 
Sale of Infant’s Property .1315 
Adoption of Children .,10f5 
Separation . 1055 
New York State News .1056 
Buffalo Markets ..1656 
Events of the Week.1056 
Editorials . 1060 
Hydraulic Well or Water Wheel.1077 
Failure of Well . 1077 
Products, Prices and Trade.177V, 1079 
Publisher’s Desk . 1078 
Flow of Water in Pipes . 1077 
Products, Prices and Trade. 
Wholesaie Prices at New York. 
Week ending Aug. 20, 1915. 
(Continued from page 1077) 
WOOL 
Native Steers. 
.... 7 50 
@10 00 
Hulls.. ... 
@ 7 110 
Cows.. . 
@ 6 50 
Caives. prime veal. 100 lb. 
,... 9 00 
@13 00 
_ 6 Oil 
@ 8 00 
Sheep. 100 ibs. .. 
. 3 60 
@ 5 50 
Lambs . 
@ 9 15 
Hogs.. 
@ 9 00 
BEANS. 
Marrow, 100 lbs. 
.7 00 
@ 7 50 
Pea . 
.4 90 
@ 6 00 
Red Kidney. 
.... 5 70 
@ 6 00 
White Kidney . 
@ 7 50 
Yellow Eye . 
.4 70 
@ 4 75 
Lima. California. 
.. .. 4 85 
@ 5 15 
FRESH FRUITS. 
Apples offered are largely poor. An 
occasional car of Oldenburg brings up to 
$2.75 per barrel. Peaches in very large 
supply and averaging lower. Rear mar¬ 
ket weak and lower. 
Apples—Duchess, bill. 150 @2 75 
Transparent, bbl . . 2 00 @3 00 
Alexander, bbl. 1 50 @3 00 
Gravenstein. 150 @3 00 
Blush . 1 50 @ 2 50 
Wealthy.2 01! @3 00 
Culls, bbl. 50 @ 1 25 
Raspberries, red. pint.*. 4 @ 7 
Grapes. 181b case. 50 @ 65 
Currants, qr. 2 @ 5 
Blackberries, qr. 5 ® 8 
Huckleberries, ar. 4 @ 10 
Nova Scotia, qt. 10 @ 13 
Plums, carrier.. 30 @ 00 
bib but. 10 @ 15 
Pears—Kieffer, bbl. 1 50 @ 2 25 
Clapp bbl. 3 00 @ 4 00 
Le Conte, bbl. 1 50 @ 3 00 
Bartlett, bu. bkt. 1 25 @ 1 50 
Peaches, Del. and Md. bkt. 20 @ 35 
Del. and Md., carrier. 40 @ 75 
' Jersey, bkt. 20 @ 40 
Up-river bkt. 15 @ 35 
Mo. and Ark., bu-bkt. 50 @ 1 26 
Muskmelons, bu . 1 00 @ 2 75 
Watermelons, carload . 75 00® 225 00 
Figs, Fresh, qt. 10 @ 11 
Chicago. Apples, bbl.. 1 25@2 25. 
• St. Louis, 75@2 75 
Pittsburg. 2 50@4 00. 
Cincinnati, 2 00@2 75. 
Buffalo. 2 00®3 50. 
Boston. 2 00@3 00. 
VEGETABLES. 
Potatoes are again in surplus, some 
selling below $1 per barrel. These are 
mainly the large kinds or rough stock, 
which has been plentiful this week. On¬ 
ions in large supply, but prices about as 
last reported. Tomatoes running poor, 
many being overripe and leaky. Cauli¬ 
flower. low, except a few up-State, which 
brought $3.50 per barrel. Peppers in 
good demand, going mainly at 50 to 75 
cents barrel. 
Potatoes—Long Island, bbl. 1 25 @ 1 50 
Del. and Md.1 10 @ 1 25 
Jersey . 50 @ 1 00 
Sweet Potatoes. Jersey, bu. 1 50 @ I 75 
Eastern Shore, bbl. 3 00 @ 4 00 
Beets. 100 bunches. 75 @ 1 00 
Carrots. 100 bunches. 60 @ 1 0(1 
Cucumbers, bu. 30 @ 1 00 
Pickles, bbl. 1 0<) @ 2 00 
Cabbage. 100 . 50 @ 1 50 
Lettuce, half-bbl. basket. 50 @ 1 00 
Onions. Orange Co., bag . 50 <§> 75 
Jersey, white, bu. 40 @ 1 25 
Long Island, bbl. 1 00 @1 25 
Peppers, bbl. 50 © I 00 
Peas, bu. 50 @ 1 50 
String Beans, bu. 50 @ 1 50 
Lima Beans, bu. 30 @ 75 
Celery, doz. 10 @ 35 
Okra, % bu.1 00 @ 1 25 
Turnips, white, bbl. 50 @ 1 00 
Cauliflowers, bbl. 50 @3 50 
Squash, bbl. 50 @ 1 00 
Sweet Corn, 100 . 50 @ 1 25 
Egg Plants bu. 50 @ 60 
Tomatoes. 6 -bkt. crate. 25 @ 56 
Jersey, bu. box. 15 @ 65 
Chicago. Potatoes, bbl., I 26@1 60. 
Cincinnati, 1 00@1 25. 
Pittsburg, 1 75@1 85. 
Denver, 1 5U@2 00. 
Indianapolis, 1 5U@1 75. 
HAY AND STRAW. 
The fancy prices continue on old hay, 
which is scarce. New selling fairly well 
when sound, mainly above $25. 
Hay. Timothy, No. 1. ton . 30 00 @31 00 
No. 2.28 60 @29 50 
No. ..25 00 @27(0 
Clover mixed.24 00 @27 00 
New, as to quality .24 00 @27 00 
Straw. Rye.13 00 @15 00 
MILLFEED. 
Bran, car lots.24 00 @26 00 
Middlings.27 50 @32 00 
Red Dog .36 00 @37 00 
Corniueal.33 00 @34 00 
GRAIN 
Wheat has continued several cents 
lower all the week, mainly because of the 
large crop outlook. Canada is expected 
to have 185,000,000 bushels for export, 
or nearly twice as much as last year. 
Corn crop outlook continues good. 
Wheat. No. 1. Northern Spring, new.. 1 15 @ 
No. 2. Red, new . 1 16 @ 
Corn, as to quality, btislt. 89 @ '<0 
Flour, carlots. at N. Y. bbl.5 50 @ 7 00 
Oats, as to weight, bush. 54 @ 55 
Rye. free from onion. 1 00 @108 
RETAIL PRICES AT NEW YORK. 
These are not the highest or lowest 
prices noted here, but represent produce 
of good quality and the buying opportuni¬ 
ties of at least half of New York’s popu¬ 
lation. 
Eggs fancy white, doz. 35 @ 40 
Mixed colors, new laid. 80 @ 85 
Ordinary grades. 25 @ 28 
Butter, fancy prints, lb.. 33 @ 34 
Tub. choice. 30 @ 32 
Chickens, roasting, lb. 28 @ 30 
Broilers, common to good, lb. 30 @ 33 
Squab Broilers, pair.. 1 00 @125 
Fricassee, lb. 18 @ 20 
Fowls . 20 @ 22 
Leg of lamb. 20 @ 22 
Lamb chops. 20 @ 22 
Roasting beef. 20 @ 24 
Pork chops . 18 @ 20 
Loin of pork . 17 @ 20 
Lettuce, bead. 2 @ 3 
Radishes, bunch . 2 @ 3 
Cucumbers, each. 1 @ 5 
Sweet corn, doz. 18 @ 25 
Cabbage, head . 3 @ 6 
Muskmelons. each. 4 @ 08 
Potatoes, peck . 20 @ 25 
Peaches, qr. 5 @ 10 
Tomatoes, qr. 3 @ 5 
Colic. 
What will cure the colic in horses? 
I. L. B. 
There are many forms of so-called 
eo'.ic, and appropriate remedies have to 
be given according to the kind of colic 
present and the special symptoms shown 
in the particular case to be treated. If 
the horse is bloated he often has to be 
“tapped” on the right side, high up in 
the flank, at the most distended part. It 
is best to have this done by an educated 
veterinarian. If the stomach is distend¬ 
ed with gas and feed fatal results may 
be expected unless an expert veterinarian 
can be employed to pass the stomach tube. 
If enteritis (inflammation) of the bowels 
is present ordinary colic remedies, and 
especially irritating physics, will be like¬ 
ly to hasten death. That also is true in 
hernia or “gut tie” of the intestine. If 
you care to describe the symptoms shown 
by a horse sick with the form of colic 
you have had to deal with we shall be 
glad to give advice. A. s. A. 
Paralysis. 
Tell me what the trouble is with my 
cow? About three weeks after she calved 
she seemed to become lame in her hind 
ounrters, aud she has no use of them at 
all. She has been down about 10 days 
and cannot stand now. She eats well. 
What is the trouble, and is there any 
cure? g. E. O. 
Maine. 
It is unusual for a cow to go down so 
long after calving. In milk fever the 
paralysis comes on quickly and is asso¬ 
ciated with unconsciousness. It seems 
likely that the cow may have tubercu¬ 
losis, affecting the vertebra* of her loins 
and possibly the joints of her hind legs. 
The only way to find out would be to 
apply the tuberculin tost. Otherwise we 
should first scare the cow with a dog, as 
failure to rise sometimes is imaginary 
and the cow will get up instantly when 
the dog is used and especially so if her 
calf can be put near her when the dog 
is brought in. Treatment would consist 
in giving strychnine with a hypodermic 
syringe, increasing the closes gradually 
until the cow gets up. This is best done 
by a trained veterinarian. If you can¬ 
not employ one give a dram of fluid ex¬ 
tract of mix vomica three times a day in 
water and increase each dose a drop each 
time, until the cow gets up. If any 
alarming symptom appears go back to 
the first dose and repeat. a. s. a. 
The Connecticut “ Deer Law.” 
Will you print the new Connecticut 
deer law? I find there are many farmers 
around here who do not understand it. 1 
myself shot a deer on August 3 and noti¬ 
fied the local game warden, but he said I 
must write direct to the Commissioner at 
Hartford, as he didn’t have anything to 
do with it now. k. b. o. 
Connecticut. 
The State Game Commissioner of Con¬ 
necticut sends the following copy of the 
new law: 
An Act Concerning The Killing of 
Deer. 
Re it enacted by the Senate and House of 
Representatives in General Assembly 
convened: 
Section 1. The owner of real estate, 
or the lessee of land leased for agricul¬ 
tural purposes for a period of not less 
than one year, or any member of his fam¬ 
ily or bona fide employee, with the per¬ 
mission of such owner or lessee, may kill 
with a shotgun or capture any deer, buck, 
doe, or fawn on land owned or so leased 
by him. provided this act shall not be 
construed to permit any person to set or 
use a salt lick, or capture, take, or at¬ 
tempt. to take any deer, buck, doe, or 
fawn by means of any trap, snare, or de¬ 
vice. Any deer killed or taken pursuant 
to the provisions of this act shall be the 
property of the owner or lessee of the land 
upon which the same was killed or taken, 
provided the person who shall kill or take 
such deer shall, within twenty-four hours 
thereafter, report, the same to the commis¬ 
sioners of fisheries and game. 
Section 2. Any person who shall fail 
to report the killing or taking of any deer 
to the commissioners of fisheries and 
game, as provided in section one. or who 
shall kill or take any deer, unless he shall 
be a member of the family or bona tide 
employee of such owner or lessee, shall he 
fined not more than one hundred dollars, 
or imprisoned not more than sixty days, 
< r ! oth. 
Section 3. Section 311-1 of the general 
statutes as amended bv (section one of 
chapter 218 of the public acts of 1907. as 
amended by chapter 1-1 of the public acts 
if 1911. and chapter 108 of the public 
acts of 1905, as amended by chapter 44 if 
the public acts of 1909. are hereby re¬ 
pealed. 
Approved, May 19. 1015. 
Subscribers Exchange 
FOR SALE—Aeruiotor windmill, galvanized iron 
in good condition, and at a reasonable price. 
JOHN I,ORTON LEE. Carmel. X. Y 
SINGLE MAN wants to learn pasteurizing of 
milk. So’ier anil > toady. PASTEURIZER 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
POT T.TR\MAX -Experienced'in all its branches. 
cluck raising a snecialty: at present employed, 
would like to make a ehange; commercial or 
private estate. Exeel'ent references. Address 
BOX 185, care It. N’.-Y. 
WANTED—On or before Nov. 1 . 1915, working 
farmer in Central New York: married, no 
children: good wages, house, garden, other per- 
miisltes: protestant preferred’. BOX 186. care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—By young man (21), lust through 
one year at Agricultural School, place on fruit 
O’.-m. wages no object. A. I,. RUSSELL. .11!., 
Ill Park St., Westfield. N. J. 
EXPERIENCED HERDSMAN" desires position, 
thoroughly understand balancing rations, feed¬ 
ing, raising calves and A. It. O. work: married, 
no children; a good worker and' can get results. 
References furnished; at liberty Aug 18. Ad- 
dr c:-. I ( X 184, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—A single gardener and poultry man; 
must be experienced in all kinds of gardening 
and care of poultry. Willing to milk or work 
at anything. A permanent position for the 
n'g’ t man: only reliable, competent men need 
apply; wages. $30. J. L. HAMILTON, Supt., 
Derrydale Farm. Goshen, N. Y. 
WANTED—To sell or trade excellent eighty 
acre farm in Colorado for smaller place in 
East having stock, crops, tools: or would trade 
for interest in large equipped farm to be run 
1 v me on shares. Address BOX 187, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WILL EXCHANGE 160 acres. Lee County, Fla.. 
far New York farm. Price. $20 per acre. 
AARON .T. FELTHOUSE. Elkhart. Ind. 
FARM of 25 acres, good soil, main road 1 to Lake- 
wood. crops, stock, tools, cheap to quick buy¬ 
er: account sickness. BOX 183, care 1!. N.-Y. 
FOR SALE or exchange for farm, hardware and 
house furnishing store, best location New York 
City. BOX 188, care R. N.-Y. 
FOR SALE—100 acres, soil and buildings: good. 
well watered, fruit: terms easy. Telephone 
JOHN GUNN, Thomaston, Conn., Route 2. 
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 admitted 
here. Poultry, Eggs and other live stock adver¬ 
tisements will go under proper headings on other 
pages. Seed and Nursery advertisements will 
not be accepted for this column. 
PEACHES FOR SALE—Between 800 and 1.000 
baskets of peaches for rale. Address FRANCIS 
W. PEIFER. R. F. D. No. 1, Fishers Ferry, Pa. 
FOR SALE—A new ensilage cutter and blower, 
it's a Ross cutter with blower - attachment 
comp, with pipe and distributor. Guaranteed 
to do the work. Price. $70 F. o. It. Perkasie, 
Fa. JERSEY GLEN FARMS. Perkasie, Pa. 
WANTED—To rent or run on commission dav- 
old hatchery. EXPERIENCE, Ilox 190, care 
It. N.-Y. 
122 ACRE Alfalfa Farm for sale. Central New 
York: well located'; good buildings. $8,000. 
F. H. RIVENBURGH, Munnsville, N. Y. 
250 ACRE Delaware Co. farm for sale. C. M. 
DAVIS, 2 Rector St., New Y'ork City. 
FOR SALE—42 acres poultry, truck and fruit 
farm, peach and apple orchards and fruits of 
all kind's; 3 good markets, running spring water. 
Telephone in I he house. For full particulars 
call or apply to FRANCIS W. PEIFER, R. F. D. 
No. 1, Fishers Ferry. Northumberland Co., Pa. 
FOR SALE—12-ncre fruit farm, containing 600 
young peach trees in full fruit, other fruit. 
Alflafa, 6 -room house, barn 33x35 feet, never 
failing water at house and barn. Cheap to quick 
buyer. A. W. BRADFORD, H. D. No. 1, Coop- 
orsburg, Pa. 
FOR SAT.E—Farm 68 % acres, stock and tools. 
one mile to school and cheese factory. F. II. 
WINTERS, Burlington Flats, N. Y. 
WANTED—First class farm superintendency, 
covering both field and dairy branches, by man 
of years of successful experience along modern 
lines; no small proposition will be entertained; 
or would consider leasing for terra of years large 
dairy farm, cash rental if all stocked, tooled, 
etc., ready for hustling work: eminent creden¬ 
tials. AddVess "BUSINESS,” care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FARM WANTED—Possession this Fall or next 
Spring. Reasonable price. Send full descrip¬ 
tion. CORWIN, 1920 Anthony Avenue. New 
Y’ork City. 
FOR SAT.E- Excellent New Jersey 97 acre fa-r-i 
on Pennsylvania Railroad. 32 miles from New 
York. J. DANIELS, 8 A, Wakeman Ave., 
Newark, N. J. 
FOR SALE—133 acres, 80 acres timber, eight- 
room house, barn, other buildings. Price. 
$3,500: mortgage, $1,200. BOX 14. Route 2, 
Clinton, Conn. 
NOTICE—Desiring to move my family to the 
farm. I will rent or sell at reasonable terms to 
suitable persons, my sixteen-room house. No. 121 
Maple St., favorably located as a family resi- 
6 'Mice or for first class roomers or boarders. 
THEO. A. STANLEY, New Britain. Conn. 
MY NICE 30-acre poultry farm must be sold 
Ibis Fall: good market, bargain for somebody. 
RUNNY SIDE POULTRY EARM, Warwick. 
Mass. 
FOR SALE—ICO-acre fruit and dairy farm. 1,000 
peach bearing, apple and other trees; 10 min¬ 
utes to station, $8,000. E. 1). HUFFMAN, 
Marshalls Creek. Pa. 
FOR SAT.E ICO-acre dairy and potato, farm, 
Delaware Co.: spring water, fruit and sugar 
bush: $1,000 down. ODELL TEED, Tacoma, 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Hiland' Poultry Farm. 17% acres. 
Most complete and up-to-date plant in Amer¬ 
ica. Hall hot-water system throughout; 3,00b 
S. C. W. Leghorns go with sale if desired: built 
in 1911. Cost $ 11 , 000 . Will sacrifice owing to 
sickness. BOX 54. Poplar Ridge, N. Y. 
SITUATION WANTED—Gardener or superin¬ 
tendent, married', thoroughly competent to 
take charge gentleman’s estate. Life experi 
cnee in greenhouses, landscape work, farming 
and stock: excellent references. A. M., 166 W. 
23d St., N. Y. C. 
POSITION WANTED—As working foreman or 
manager of trucking, dairying, gardening or 
general farming, practical experience, short 
course graduate at Rutgers. Age 28. single. 
Strictly sober. BOX 159. care I!. N.-Y- 
WANTED—Man on dairy farm, grade Jerseys. 
Must tie a good milker and' understand general 
farm work. Reference required. Wages $25 per 
month and board without washing or $12 per 
week. No fares paid. HENRY S. IIULSE. 
Port Jefferson, N. Y. 
WANTED—An industrious dairy man: sober, 
good habits, experience required; give refer¬ 
ence: state particulars i i first letter: permanent 
for right man. Address BOX 58, Loretto, Pa. 
POSITION WANTED—Farmer and gardener. 
Scotch, married, life experience in all 
branches., expert at making lawns, transplant¬ 
ing trees, etc.: open Sept. 1 st: excellent refer¬ 
ences. J. It. MILNE, Katonah, N. 5’. 
SUPERINTENDENT at present employed desires 
change, capable stockman and general farm¬ 
ing, drainage, etc. Address BOX 191, Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Immediately, married man and wom¬ 
an, no children; man must be good teamster, 
woman good cook and able to ilo general house¬ 
work; modern house, three adults, farm mile 
from village. Address JEWETT BROS., Skau- 
eateles, N. Y. 
WANTED—Young man having some experience 
with poultry', not necessarily expert. Refer¬ 
ences necessary. BOX 189, care I!. N.-Y. 
WANTED—Thoroughly experienced married poul¬ 
try man; no children; wife to care for dairy 
utensils and lxiard two men. Man must under¬ 
stand' incubators and brooders and also if pos¬ 
sible have some knowledge of pheasants and 
waterfowl. When writing please state nation¬ 
ality. age, habits and wages expected. Must 
furnish go<Ml references. G. D. TILLEY. Darien. 
Connecticut. 
WANTED—Thoroughly experienced single dairy 
man to take entire care of small herd ol thoi 
oughbred Jersey cattle. Must be expert milker 
and willing to help at general outdoor work 
when not busy in cattle department. When 
writing please state nationality, age, habits and 
tvages expected. Must furnish good references. 
G. 1>. TILLEY, Darien, Connecticut. 
