IShe RURAL NEW-YORKER 
SPBEaPER PERFECTIOH jQ 
Comes in Galloway’s now 1917 Modala No. 
8, No. 6 and No. lA. Their light draft, new oBm 
wide-spreading adjnstableV-rake; low down, 
only 42 in. high at center of box; all four 
wheels under the load; improved all steel beater; sol¬ 
id bottom; endless apron; positive force feed, make 
Galloway machines the peer ef all spreaders on the 
market today. An all steel tongue, double chain 
drive, roller feed, all steel wheels, seat folds out of 
way—these and many other exclusive Galloway fea¬ 
tures, protected by Galloway patents back up what 
we say about these modern manure spreaders. My 
patented automatic stop uniform clean-out push- 
board, worth $10 extra on any spreader—exclusive on 
the Galloway, but costs you nothing extra. Remem¬ 
ber my book tells you how I sell spreaders on 
Six Selling Plans-Cash or Time 
Don’t bu7 a sprea^r of any make or kind xintll yoa have 
read this book and tried a Renuine Galloway 1917 model 
WITHOUT OBLIOATtNQ YOURSELF in any Way. THIRTY DATS’ 
FIELD TRIAL and returnable to ua within ONE year if not 
perfectly satisfactory. Remember we manufacture this 
spreader tn our own factories and sell It 
direct FROM factory to farm. Do not 
confuse the Galloway spreader with 
low priced machines made to sell 
for a price which are all cheap, 
WORTHLESS IMITATIONS. Thousands 
upon thousands of Galloway spread¬ 
ers in actual use back up every state* 
mei t we make. Get this ncwl917 book. 
Kea 1 it! It will frive you complete par¬ 
ticulars and details of all the spreaders 
Md spreader boxes that wo miJee. Aak 
for it now, A postal gets it. 
Wm. Galloway, Pros., 
WM. GALLOWAY COMPANY 
Manure Spreader MfR. Specialists 
e Galloway Sta., Waterloo, Iowa 
S KEMP CUMAX SPREADER 
A LIGHT WEIGHT TWO HORSE SPREADER 
The dmni Is to the manure spreader what the cutter bar 
is to the mower. This New Kemp Climax has reversible, 
Self-Sharpening Graded Flat Teeth, with enclosed drum 
that will handle all material at one-third less power. 
It shreds the material. You get over 40 years experience 
in this machine. Write for catalog. 
THE N. J. KEMP CO., Batavia, N. Y. 
ECONOMY BOILER 
Quick Heater 
Smoke Pipe Passes Through 
Tank. No Lost Heal. 
Save Fuel. 
Save Money 
Lx>ok at the price 
$ 8.00 
for a 40-Gallon Cooker 
Clip out this a<l and send it 
with Money Order or Check. 
Write Name and Address Plainly 
Cooker will be sent promptly 
LEWIS MFG. CO. 
62-76 0wego St., Cortland, N.Y. 
Cnnit $nr Hnr Maul HSTS Farms, Hotels, Boardinghouses. 
OuflU lUI UUt lien Calskill Farm Agency, Leeds, Greene Co., N. Y. 
EnrtiU Corma Beautiful Porkiomen Valley near Phila,. 
rBlIllordlnla dclpliia. Catalog. W. STEVENS. Perkasie, Pa. 
S3,900WillBuy65-Acr8Farin S'” 
iiigs; flno stream; tienr Trenton and Philadelphia 
markets; to close an estate. HORACE G. REEDER, Newtown, Pa. 
Your chance Is In Canada. Rich lands and 
business opportunities offer you Independence. 
Farm lands $11 to $30 acre; irrigated lands, $35 
to $50. Twenty years to pay; $2,000 loan in im¬ 
provements, or ready made farms. I.oan of live¬ 
stock, Taxes average under twenty cents an 
acre; no taxes on improvements, personal prop¬ 
erty or livestock. Good! markets, churches, 
schools, roads, telephones. Kxcellcnt climate— 
crops and livestock prove It. Special home- 
seekers’ fare certificates. Write for free book¬ 
lets. ALLAN CAMERON, General Superinten¬ 
dent Land Branch, Canadian Pacific Railway, 303 
Ninth Ave., Calgary, Alberta. 
THis Exi^ine Mas 
to ^^alc.e Good. 
Yes, sir. A Jacobson Engine must give’ 
you your money’s worth. You buy it on 
a thirty-day, money-back agreement. 
JACOBSON ENGINES 
Gas, Gasoline and Kerosene 
are made from 2H H.P. to 16 H.P. Even-wear¬ 
ing, steady governor, interchangeable bear¬ 
ings. Speed can be changed while engine is 
in motion. Webster magneto—no battery—no 
violent cranking—engine starts easily in any 
weather. Our gasoline engines have the Fire 
Underwriters’ approval label attached. A 
Jacobson Engine is the RIGHT engine for you. 
Portable and stationary types. Send for cata¬ 
log and bulletin. Also ask about our Junior 
Sturdy Jack IH H.P. engine-a low-price, high- 
grade engine that outranks its class. 
JACOBSON MACHINE 
l>«pt. U — 
IF you want books on farming of 
any kind write us and we 
will quote you prices 
THE RURAL NEW YORKER 
333 West Thirtieth Street, New York 
Milk Notes 
Organizing Pennsylvania 
_ A pretty well organized State to be¬ 
gin with; in fact, Pennsylvanians seem 
to take to organization like ducks to 
water, but, like the farmers of other 
States, those who till the soil here have 
been slow to realize the necessity of put¬ 
ting more business into their business 
and adopting some of the methods which 
have enabled other interests to prosper, 
too much at their expense. A few weeks 
of close contact, as a Dairymen’s League 
organizer, with the farmers along the 
West Branch of the Susquehanna from 
Sunbury to Williamsport have given a 
New York Yankee an opportunity to ob¬ 
serve some of the characteristics of this 
splendid section of Pennsylvania, and to 
learn something of the problems which 
face these food producers. Pennsylvania 
Dutch, they like to call themsevles, but 
the original Dutch blood has been strung 
out now through too many generations 
to keep its distinctiveness and it shows 
in the younger generations only in stur¬ 
diness, thrift and a certain conservatism 
supposed to be peculiar to the residents 
of Missouri. 
Dairying in this section has only just 
begun. To a New Yorker who has been 
in the habit of seeing from JO to 20 cows 
and one or more silos on nearly every 
farm large enough to be called a farm, 
and from 40 to 60 cows on the larger 
ones, the from four to seven cows feed¬ 
ing from a barnyard straw stack or lying 
under the barn “overhang” on the.se roll¬ 
ing acres look as though they might form 
the nucleus of a dairy^ but seem hardly 
deserving of the full dignity of that 
name. On the other hand, few New 
York dairymen have a thousand bushels 
of wheat, and perhaps as many more of 
corn, to haul to market in the Winter, 
Dairying is coming in, however. The 
need for live stock on these broad 
meadows is evidently being felt, and the 
growing Pennsylvania towns are reach¬ 
ing out their dippers for more milk. 
Shipping stations are being erected on 
the numerous short lines of railroad 
that cross the country, and silos are be¬ 
ing added here and there to the very 
substantial barns. It does look waste¬ 
ful though to .see corn stubble left 18 
inches high, or more—that means no 
.silo, of cour.se—and it strikes a New 
Yorker as a peculiar proposition to have 
non-resident farm owmers limit their 
tenants very clo.sely in the number of 
cows that they may keep, or rather pas¬ 
ture, on the rented farm. The more the 
merrier,_ is the New Yorker’s attitude. 
But it is easy to see the increasing 
interest which these farmers are taking 
in the dairy cow, and one admires the 
foresight with which they are preparing 
to meet the marketing problems pecu¬ 
liar to dairymen. Local milk producers’ 
associations have sprung up about the 
shipping stations and some of the.se 
have combined to form district associa¬ 
tions of consdierable size. The more far- 
seeing among the leaders of these milk 
producers are appreciating the necessity 
of atBliatiug with the great organiza¬ 
tions that cover the territory supplying 
Newr York and Philadelphia and consol¬ 
idation is rapidly going on. At the in¬ 
vitation of local organiz.‘’Mon.s in North¬ 
umberland County, organizers from the 
Dairymen’s Le:igiie in Now York State 
have been at work in this section for a 
few weeks. They have found the milk 
producers ready to unite with those of 
the adjoining States in one great body, 
and the Dairymen's League now has 
about a thousand membc'rs in this 
vicinity alone. The work will go on un¬ 
til Pennsylvania is as well organized as 
New York, and those who siqiply the 
great milk markets of New’ York and 
Philadelphia have joined hands to pro-- 
tect their mutual interests. M. b. d. 
Butter 40c to 45c per lb. .Stores are 
selling a good deal of oleo, as many buy 
it because of the high price of butter. 
iNLlk League prices. Becau.se of the 
high price of grain feeds, farmers buy 
but little or none at all, to feed their 
cows, thus reducing the output of milk. 
Forage crops were good last year, and 
hay is in good supply, selling at auction 
sales for $9 to $10 a ton at the barn. 
Cows sell for from $50 to $200 and up¬ 
ward, according to grade. Potatoes $1.50 
at some points delivered to the railroad. 
In Oneonta, which is the largest town 
near here, they are quoted at $1.85 per 
bushel. At Schenevus in Otsego County, 
$2.25 per bu. is reported as being paid 
by shippers. Potatoes started in here 
last Fall at $75 and advanced to $1 and 
$1.40. It may be safely said that more 
potatoes were sold at the first named 
price than for more. Two years ago 
they .sold for 25c to 30c per bu. Apples 
last Fall were a drug in the market, not 
W’orth gathering and packing. Large 
quantities were sold to shippers for .$5 
per ton, for cider and vinegar. po.s.sibly 
also for canning and evaporating. 
Delaware Co., N. Y. ii. h. m. 
Mhe.at, $1.75 per bu.; oats, 50c.; 
corn, $1; butter, prints, 38c.; eggs, .S6c.; 
Onions, $7.50 bu.; cabbage, Sc. lb.; po¬ 
tatoes, $3 bu.; hogs, dressed, 15c. lb.; 
Beef cattle, from 6 to 9e. Horses as to 
quality, $50 to $250; cows, as to 
quality, $40 to $80. n. e. h. 
Northumberland Co., Pa. 
439 
Direct to you 
cutting out all profits except the man¬ 
ufacturer’s, and all deterioration 
caused by standing around in ware¬ 
houses. 
We ship from East St. Louis, Chicago, 
Kansas City, Mo.; Cincinnati, New 
Orleans and York, Pa. Quick delivery^ 
assured. 
lays better, lasts longer, yet costs less (according to 
quality) tbau any other roll roofing made. 
The Felt in Century Roofing 
is of special, long fibre that 
defies freezing and thawing 
The Saturation in Century Roofing 
is made by our secret formula, from 
Asphalts with melting points vary¬ 
ing from 50 degrees to 350 degrees. 
It is applied in 80-foot vats, at 350 
degrees, after the Felt is perfectly 
dried over steam-heated 
drums. Saturation is 100%. 
No air-holes left to start leaks. 
The Coating on Century Roofing is a 
harder blend of Asphalts, applied at 
lower temperature after Saturation 
has cooled. It seals and protects the 
Saturation from drying out, thus 
making it wear years longer than 
ordinary roofing. This is why 
AVe Giia.ra.]iitee Every Roll 
as follows: 1-ply, 15 years; 2-ply, 
20 years; 3-ply, 25 years; and pre¬ 
pay freight on 3 rolls or more in N. Y., Pa , 
N. J., Mass., Conn., Md., Me., Vt. or Del. 
at the prices quoted below. 
Correspondingly low prices to other 
states. Write for free sample, or 
order for immediate shipment. Orders at¬ 
tended to at once. Money back if not 
satisfied. 
1-ply, d**| QC 
35 lbs. ^ JL e^O 
2-ply, 
45 lbs. 
$ 1.50 5 ^ 5 * $ 1.75 
CENTURY MANUFACTURING CO. 
East St. Louis, Ill. 
Send for our catalogue of buggy bargains. 
HOG MEAL 
The secret of hog profits lies in making 
hogs eat and properly digest the greatest 
quantity of good but low priced feed, and con¬ 
vert it into high grade pork in the shortest possible time. 
Sucrene Hog Meal 
Palatable, Nutritious, Economical 
A complete, scientifically balanced ration—takes the place 
of all grain feed in developing pigs and fattening hogs. 
Composed of molasses, com meal, gluten feed, blood meal, ground 
and bolted wheat screenings, linseed meal and a little salt. 
Guaranteed analysis—16% Protein, 5% Fat, 
46% Carbohydrates and only 10% fibre. 
Promotes Health and Rapid Growth 
The Blood Meal in Sucrene Hog Meal is the finest bowel 
corrective known. Strong in animal protein, which hogs crave. 
The molasses makes the feed appetizing and aids the digestion 
tends to prevent and expel worms. ’ 
Hogs eat rnore, digest more, develop more rapidly—make a short 
cut to hog profits—A splendid derveloping feed for young pigs and shoals. 
Sucrene fed hogs are more sturdy thi ... 
ment better—bring more money. 
If unable to get through dealer, order 
100 lb. trial sack. 
Fill out and mail us this coupon or 
write us a postal. 
ay than com fed hogs; stand ship- 
American Milling Co., 
Sucrene Station 5 Peoria, Ill. 
Best Hog Feed He Ever Used 
Joseph L. Leffel, Logansport, ind.. 
writes:—"Am glad to recommend 
your Sucrene Hog Meal to my neigh¬ 
bors as the best hog feed 1 have ever 
used. I have used almost all kinds." 
.’jj •r‘*~-T-i‘f 
Free 
and 
Bcien 
.'I* 
Book 
On care_ 
tific feeding of pigs 
and hogs. Reliable 
information, indis¬ 
pensable to success¬ 
ful hog raising. 
Please send me your free book on Scientific Hog 
Feeding and information on feeds checked below. 
—Sucrene Dairy Feed ,—Sucrene Alfalfa Horse Feed 
—Sucrene Calf Meal —Sucrene Poultry Feeds 
—Sucrene Hog Meal —Amco Fat Maker (for steers) 
—Amco Dairy Feed (a strong protein feed (or milk making.) 
My dealer is.. 
. State. 
State_ 
