Oic RURAL NEW-YORKER 
343 
Farm Sanitation 
Will Increase Your Profits 
by Keeping Live Stock 
and Poultry Healthy. 
Kreso Dip No. 1 
Easy to Use. Efficient. Economical. 
Kills Sheep Ticks. Lice, Mites and Fleas. 
Helps Heal Cuts, Scratches and 
Skin Diseases. 
Prevents Hog Cholera. 
Experiments on live hogs prove that 
a 234% dilution of Kreso Dip No. 1 will 
kill virulent Hog Cholera Virus in 6 
minutes by contact. 
We Will Send Free Booklets on 
The treatment of mange, eczema or 
pitch mange, arthritis, sore mouth, etc,; 
How to build a hog wallow which 
will keep hogs clean and healthy; 
How to keep your hogs free from 
insect parasites and disease. 
WRITE FOR THEM. 
Kreso Dip No. 1 in Original Packages. 
FOB SALE BY ALL DEUGOISTS. 
PARKE, DAVIS & CO. 
Department Animal Industry, 
DETROIT, - - MICH. 
WHERE IS HE LAMEo 
CAN HE BE CURED i 
I T is surprising how accurately it is possible to 
diagnose the most chronic, complicated and 
uncertain form of lameness,—and treat ALL such 
cases successfully by the aid of out FREE 
BOOK. It is a book of facts—nowhere else found 
—our discoveries of over 21 years. No horse 
owner should be without it. 
SAVE-The-HORSE 
is sold with a Signed Contract-Bond to return 
money if remedy fails on Ringbone—Thoropin— 
SPAVIN or ANY Shoulder, Knee, Ankle, Hoof 
or Tendon Disease. No blistering. Horse works. 
You should have this book and remedy always on 
hand in case of an emergency. No matter how old the 
case, SAVE-THc-HORSE is guaranteed to cure; 
but the best time to cure is when the trouble starts. 
If you are not sure about the case, write us describ¬ 
ing your trouble. Send today for this FREE Book, 
copy of our Guarantee-Bond and expert advice; no 
"siring" attached. Get a bottle of SAVE-The-HORSE 
and be insured against your horse being laid up 
when you most need him. 
TROY CHEMICAL CO. 
24 Commerce Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. 
rTnirifiBta Evurywharo Bell Save-The-Itorse with CONTRACT, or 
we bend by Parcel Post or Express Paid. 
MINERAL.’ 
rnuso 
over 
HEAVE5?ats 
g^OM POUN D 
Booklet 
Free 
13 Pafkage Riiaranteed to piv© satisfaction or mon 
hack. $1 Pac kage sufficient for ordinary cases. 
■IHEBAL HEAVE REMEDY CO., 461 Fourth Ave.. Pittsburg. 
ENORMOUS PROFITS 
TAKING ORDERS FOR 
TOILET ARTICLES, PERFUMES, bPiCKH, FLAVORS, 
B0AP8, AND SPECIALTIES. Over 90 bis every day 
lellera. Wanted in every home. Good repeaters-. Exclu- 
•iTo territory to MEN OH WOMEN. All or epare time. 
Why be a laboring drudge when you can enteran eawy per¬ 
manent buslneee with a big income? NO CONTRACT, 
NO BIG REQUIRED. NEED NOT INVEST ONE CENT. 
OUTFIT FREE* EXPERIENCE NOT NF.CE8SAUY. Pull 
Itnitructluni given. The chance of a lifetime. Don’t mlnn 
it. Territory going fait. 
Write for particular a giving age and occupation. 
DtO FACTORIES, Dept, II. SiO, No. Jttvo, N. Y. 
Milk Notes' 
Cows are sellitig from .'fOO to .$110. We 
are receiving about .$‘2 per cwt. for milk 
at the creamery. Farmer.s are receiving 
about $2.25 for potatoes, they cost the 
consumer 05c per peck. There are not 
many of the following vegetables ,inst 
now sold by the farmer, the following i.s 
what they cost the consumer: Cabbage. 
6c per lb.; onions, 50 and 60c per peck; 
celery, 10c bunch ; tomatoes, 25c per Ih.; 
fresh eggs. 55c per doz.; flour, ,$2.90 per 
50-lb. sack; buckwheat flour, $1.6.5 per 
25-lb. sack: apples. 35c per peck ; butter, 
46c per lb.; cheese, 28c lb. For calve.s, 
hog-dressed, dealers pay 18c per lb.; pigs. 
16c lb.; fowls, 20c live w'eight; chickens, 
22c lb.; they cost the consumer .30c per 
lb. Farmers are receiving from $8 to .$12 
for hay ; oat straw, ,$9. w. a. b. 
Montgomery Co., X. Y. 
The price of daii'y cows in this section 
is $75 to $100 per head; dry cows, five 
cents per lb.; dressed beef from 
10 to 15c per lb.; live hogs. 
lO^/^c per lb.; live chickens. 16c jier 
lb.; fowls. 15. We receive 5c per qti for 
“A”_ milk delivered in Geneva wdiolesale. 
Choice dairy butter, 38c; eggs (fre.sh), 
50e; choice apples, ,$1.50 per bn.; pota¬ 
toes, .$2 per bu.; hay, $10 to $15 per tmi ; 
corn, $1.15 per bu. (60 lbs.) ; oats. 60c; 
barley, $1.50; wheat, $1.75. J. ,s. ir. 
Ontario Co., N. Y. 
The staple industries in this section are 
dairying and general farming; consider¬ 
able beef cattle raised, but not many 
sheep. The Continental Condensery at 
Mill Hall gets a good part of the dairy 
products at prices about same as quoted 
by other condeiiseries. Last seasou was 
a very late cold Spring, followed by a 
very dry Summer and Fall in this sec¬ 
tion, with some very light crops. Hay 
and apples were about an average AVitli 
all gardening crops and potatoes very 
light. Retail prices are about as follow's 
on curb market at Lock Haven: I’ota- 
toes, $1.80 to ,$2.00 per bu.; apples. 60c 
to $1: butter, 40c; eggs, 45e; chickens, 
live. 18c lb.; dressed. 25e; cabbage, 6 to 
8c lb.; beans, 10 to 14c lb.; turnips and 
beets, 40c per peek; all other vegetables 
high with prices inclined to advance. Hay. 
$16 to .$18 per ton; corn, $1.15 to $1.20 
per bn.; oats, 60 to 65c; chop, ,$2.20 to 
$2..35 per 100 lbs.; bran, $1.70; flour, 
,$2.40 per 50 lbs. e. y. 
Clinton Co., Pa. 
Rutter, 40c; milk, from 8 to 10c re¬ 
tail; 6 to 7c wholesale; eggs, 48 to 50c; 
fowls, 16 to 18e live; 20 to 22c dressed. 
Roasters, 22 to 24c dressed, 20c live; po- 
tatoe.s, ,$2 to $2.25 per bn., wholesale, and 
$2.50 to $3 retail; cabbage, 10 to 15c 
head; ,$50 to $60 per ton. Apples, 75c to 
$1 per bn., or from ,$2.25 to $2.50 per 
banvl. Beef by the quarter, 13 to ISc 
per lb.; hogs, dressed, 13 and 14c. Wheat, 
$1.60 to $1.70; corn, $1.40 to $1.50; oats, 
68 to 70c; rye, $1.20 to $1..30 per hn. 
Hay, loose, .$18 to $20 per ton for Tim¬ 
othy; clover, $16 and $17; straw, $10 to 
$12. Baled hay, $19 and $20 in carlots. 
Schuylkill Co., Pa. m. m. 
Hay, $9 to $12 baled ; oat straw, .$8 ; 
buckwheat, .$1..30 for .50 lbs. at present, 
has brought $1.45. Potatoes very scarce, 
are bringing ,$2 per bn. Beans very few 
grown, have brought $7 per bn. Cows, 
grade Holsteins, h-om $40 to $80. Wo 
have a co-operative cheese factory here, 
which runs from May 1 to November 1, 
and pays the farmers better than selling 
milk to others, so. there is very little but¬ 
ter made_ for market here. Eggs are 
bringing in the local market 45c. 
Montgomery Co., N. Y. G. w. M. 
January was a very cold and .stormy 
month. Farmers have been busy filling 
their ice houses and getting up their wood 
supply. Stock wintering well and most 
dairymen will have coarse fodder enough 
to carry their stock through the Winter. 
-Ill kinds of farm protlnce very scarce and 
high. Milk about .$2..35 per cwt, at the 
stations. Cornmeal, ,$2..30 per cwt. But¬ 
ter, 40c per lb. Hay, $18 per ton. T»ota- 
toes have reached a record breaking price 
of .$2 per bu. ir. T. J. 
Clinton Co., N. Y. 
Good cows, $40 to $100; butter, 35e to 
40c; milk, wholesale, 22c to 23c gal.; 
cliickcns 18c to 20c, wholesale eggs, 40e 
to 4.5c; potatoes, $1.80 to .$2, as to kind; 
mbhage. $60 to $80 per ton. Wheat, 
$1.80; flour to consumer, $12. These are 
wholesale prices; i-etail prices are 25, 50 
to loo iier cent, higher. p. E. A. 
AVestmoreland Co., Pa. 
IVe had a fine hay crop all through this 
.section; oats were a failure on account of 
heavy windstorms. Buckwheat was a 
very light crop. Mill feeds are very high 
and farniei-s are feeding sparingly. Cows 
are selling at from $.35 to $50; good single 
horses, $175 to .$-2(X). Hay, $13 per ton; 
jiotutoes, $1.40 per hn.; eggs, 48e. These 
are jirivate sale prices. No auctions at 
present. a. f. ir. 
Delaware Co., N. Y. 
Cattle, from $50 to .$100. according to 
what they are. Pork, dressed, 12 to 13c; 
beef, dressed. 9 to 11c: veal, dressed, 14 
to 16c; fowls, 18c. Hay, $14 to $‘20; 
straw, $7 to $12; beans, lb.. 15c; pota¬ 
toes, bushel, $2.20; dry hardwood, cord, 
•?3. G. w. s. 
St. Lawrence Co., N. Y. 
^1- 
Uvcr% 
P. M. Sharpies made the first separator in America (38 years 
ago). Sharpies has been the foremost and highest-class Ameri¬ 
can separator ever since. The Sharpies Separator factories are 
the largest and longest-established in America. Sharpies 
machines are found in every dairying country of the world. 
The reason for this popularity is that Sharpies separators have 
invaluable patented advantages found on no other make. 
SHARPIES 
fS SUCTION-FEED ^ 
Cream separator 
—the only separator that will skim clean at widely-varying speeds 
—the only separator that gives cream of unchanging thickness—all speeds 
—the only separator that will skim your milk quicker when you turn faster 
—the only separator with just one piece in the bowl—no discs, easy to clean 
—the only separator with knee-low supply tank and a once-a-month 
oiling system 
The Sharpies has entered a new field of cream- 
saving which no other separator has yet 
touched. This is owing to the wonderful Suc¬ 
tion-feed, which enables clean skimming at wide¬ 
ly-varying speeds—which saves $100 yearly 
(sometimes more) on the average farm, 
over every other separator. 
The Sharpies is not only capable of doing 
good work, but will always automatically 
do good work under the most unfavorable condi¬ 
tions. We have spent years of experiment in 
perfecting a separator that is an Insurance Policy 
against Carelessness. That ideal has been re¬ 
alized in the Sharpies Suction-feed. Write for 
catalog to Dept. 12 . 
Sharpies Separator Co., West Chester, Pa. 
Also Sharpies Milkers and Gasoline Engines 
Branches: Chicago Saa Francitco Portland Toronto 
Sio 
IVlulcIier 
& Seeder 
mulcher, smoothing; harrow, cultivator,^ 
weeder and seeder—all In one. Forms dust mulch 
—a blanket of loose soil—preventing; soil hardening; 
and molsturo escaping. Increases yield of com, 
potatoes, oats, wheat, etc. Kills weeds. Flat teeth. 
especially adapted to form mulch. Lever and 
pressure spring control depth of teeth. Sold with 
or without seeding boxes for grass seed, alfalfa, 
oats, etc. Teeth cover the seed to depth desired. 
Adapted for a large variety of work. In stock near 
you. Send for catalog. 
EUBEKA MOWEB CO., Box 842 , TTtica, N. 7. 
Fonr sizes, 
3, 8,10 
and 12 ft. 
'NtTED 
'miHCPUMT/ 
. At this wonderfully low price you 
can ©njoy the convenience of electric lights— 
light without fuss, without trouble —anywhere you want it 
by merely pushing a button. 
USE YOUR OWN ENGINE. Saves the cost of extra x>ower. 
. VT ^ Nothing automatic to cause 
trouble. Needs only one simple adjustn 
your engine. A woman or child can oper 
SELF'STARTINO their convenience. No knowledge of 
. ^ electricity required. Made in threo sizes-* 
a to meet ^ur needs. Comes complete. Ready to run. 
GUARANTEED. Write at once for complete description. 
UNITED ENGINE COMPANY, OepL E 13 LANSING, MICH. 
Farmers —Prepare I ! 
EROY 
CHILLED PLOWS 
for tho difficult Spring Piowing, by getting one of the famous and popuiar 
Made for Every Purpose.,^: 
We make the Light Draft Le Roy'^^V 
Two Way Sulky Plow especially de- ■ 
signed for the up-to-date fanner who 
wants a steady, durable, reliable plow 
which saves driving around ends, leaves no dead 
furrows or back furrows, and so easy to handle 
that a boy can operate it, and works equally well 
in all kinds of soil. We make General Purpose 
^ Plows, Steel Beam Reversible Hillside 
oc Swivel Plows, Wood Beam Chilled 
Plows, Potato Hillers, The Miller Bean Har¬ 
vester, known everywhere as the best Bean 
Harvester ever made. The most popular 
Shovel Plows now in use. Le Roy Steel 
frame five tooth Cultivators all of the best 
materials. We are not in any combine, or 
We make the best and our prices are right. Don’t buy 
owned by any trust. _ 
until you have seen our goods 
Ask your dealer and write for catalogue. 
LE ROY PLOW CO., Dept. R, Le Roy, N. Y. 
