CONTENTS 
THE BTTRAL NEW-YORKER, DECEMBER 1, 
1917 
FARM TOPICS 
Tractors Used as Mowing- Machines.1366 
Handling Swee-t Potatoes.1370 
Wash on Hillsides.1370 
Lea-ves for Fertilizer.1370 
Crops and Farm Notes.1372 
Coming Farmers’ Meetings.1372 
Hope Farm Notes.. 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY 
Rahhits as a Side Line. 
Experience with Belgian Hares.1371 
A Great Guernsey Cow. 
Amount of Butter from Cream.1380 
What Cow Shall I Breed.1380 
A Red Cross Jersey Calf.1380 
Increasing Interest in Beef Cattle.1380 
Lamb Cholera .1333 
Women as Cattle Breeders.1380 
Cottonseed for Grain.1382 
Brewers’ Grains for Cows and Hogs.1382 
Ration for Milch Cows.1382 
Ration Including Cabbage.1382 
Cough .1382 
Sitfast .1383 
Grease-heel .•,’ * V ’-I' tt . i qaa 
Beef Making in New England—Part II .... .1384 
Patriotic Sheep Meeting at Utica—Part II.. 1384 
Milk News .. 
THE HENYARD 
Getting a Private Egg Trade.1371 
Eggs by Parcel Post...1371 
Experience with Houdans.i8'i 
Egg-laying Contest ■•••••■;• . 
Chicken Thieves in the South.1380 
Autumn Hen Notes. 
Winter Dry Mash .;. “80 
Potatoes for Poultry.i3»o 
Pullet Eggs .1380 
HORTICULTURE 
Chat with a Cucumber Pioneer.1367, 1368 
Forcing Rhubarb.13«8 
Shucking Walnuts.“bs 
Handy Orchard Ladder.........“oa 
Barren Ouinces; Light Apple Crop.“oa 
Late-bearing Spy . 
Enforcing the Fruit Laws...“ba 
Protecting Orchard from Vermin.lo^u 
Safety on Spray Tower. 
Making a Garden.... 
A Massachusetts War Garden.1378 
Transplanting Dasheens .. 
Grape Notes from Missouri.“'O 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day.1378 
The Rural Patterns.. VqVs iwo 
An Economical Christmas Dinner.1378, Idva 
Two Knitting Bags.13“ 
Green Tomato Mincemeat.i8'a 
Candy Without Sugar...1379 
Home-ground Entire Wheat Flour.1379 
Seen in New York Shops.13<9 
MISCELLANEOUS 
New York State’s New Rural Police........1365 
The New York School Law.1365, 1366 
Wooden Pipes for Carrying Water.13bb 
Chinking Log House.“bo 
A Bam Hoe.“08 
Dog Law Notes..“08 
Events of the Week.“73 
Editorials .“^0 
Publisher’s Desk .138° 
Philadelphia Wholesale Markets 
(Continued from page 1383.) 
Fowls in good demand. Turkeys, nearby, 
33 to 36c; good to choice Western, 30 to 
3-4c; common, 23 to 25c ; fowls, 22 to 26c; 
roosters, 20 to 21c; broilers, best, 34 to 
36c; common run, 28 to 30c; roasters, 2.3 
to 25c; squabs, doz. $4 to $6.75. 
BEANS. 
Receipts are small and market firm. 
Best marrow, 100 lbs., $15.75 to .$16; pea 
beans, ,$14.90 to $15.10; red kidney, .$14 
to $15.25; California limas, $14.50 to 
$1,5.75. 
FliriTS. 
Choice apples in good demand at the 
prevailing high prices; many pear.s are 
averaging poor, and hard to sell. Apj)les, 
Baldwin, $4 to $6; Jonathan, $5 to .$6; 
King and Spy, $4 to $5.50; Winesap, $3 
to $5; Greening, .$4 to $6; Grime.s, $5 to 
$7; York Imperial, .$2.50 to $4.50; Ben 
Davis, .$3 to $3..50; pears. Bartlett, bbl., 
.$4 to $5; Seckel, $5.50 to .$S.,50; cran¬ 
berries, bbl.. .$9 to $12; California straw¬ 
berries, pt., 25 to 3(k*; grapes, 15-lb. bkt., 
25 to 60c. 
VEGETABLES. 
Potato market quiet. Cabbage slow; 
onions dull, except best. Potatoes, near¬ 
by, %-bu. bkt., 50 to 85c; Pennsylvania, 
100 lbs., .$2.25 to .$2.60; Western, $1.75 
to $2.25; sweet potatoes, %-bkt., 7.5c to 
$1; lettuce, bu. bkt., 50c to $1; Brus¬ 
sels sprouts, qt, 15 to 16c; watercress, 
100 bunches, $1.50 to .$2; cabbage, ton, 
$15 to .$25; onions, 100 lbs., $1.50 to 
$2.25; mushrooms, lb., 25 to 50c; carrots, 
%-bkt., 45 to 55c; cauliflower, doz. heads, 
$1.25 to $1.50; parsnips, %-hkt., 4,5 to 
.50c; spinach, %-bkt.. 40 to 50c; turnips, 
$1.50 to $1.60. 
HAY AND STRAW. 
Arrivals of hay light and market strong. 
Straw in good demand. Hay, No. 1 Tim¬ 
othy, $27 to $27.50; No. 2, ,$25.50 to 
$26.50; No. 3, $23 to .$24.50; clover 
mixed, $22 to ,$25..50; rye straw, $15 to 
$17; wheat and oats, $12.50 to $14.50. 
and $1.60 to $1.70 per crate for Sp.anish. 
Vegetables are fairly plenty and weak 
on account of the open weather, with 
beets 90c to $1.25; carrots, 75c to 
$1.15; cauliflower, $1 to $1.25; parsnips, 
$1 to $1.25, and white turnips, 50c to $1 
per bu.; cabbage is $4 to $8 per 100 
heads, the local crop not heading; celery, 
40 to 75c for New York grown, per 
bunch; celery cabbage. 90c to .$1 per doz.; 
lettuce, 90c to $1 for 2-doz. box; shallots, 
30 to 49c per doz hunches; squash, .$1..50 
to .$2 per 100 lbs.; yellow turnips, .$1.90 
per bbl. California grapes retail at 8 to 
10c per lb.; cranberries, 15c per qt. on 
account of the small crop. Southern 
fruits are firm at $4.50 to $5 for Valen¬ 
cias, per box; lemons, .$7..50 to $8 for 
Californias, per box ; limes, 90c per 100; 
bananas. $2.25 to .$4 per bunch; no pine¬ 
apples offering. Beans are the biggest 
failure of all, many farmers w"ho used to 
make them next to potatoes declaring 
that they will not plant any again, for 
they have got no crop in three years. 
Prices are .$10 to $11 per hu. and likely 
to go higher. Rabbits are in the market 
at 65 to 75c for cottontails and 90c for 
jacks. 
Butter is higher at 47c for fancy 
creamery, 41 to 44c for dairy, 40 to 44c 
for crocks and 37c for poor, with 27c__for 
oleomargarine. Cheese is quiet at 25 to 
26c for best domestic, 23 to 24c for fair 
to good. Eggs are up to 65c for best 
white hennery, farmers getting 50c per 
doz.; 37 to 55c for storage and candled. 
Poultry is firm and active, largely on 
account of the government request to eat 
it in place of meat. Frozen turkeys are 
34 to ,35c; dressed fowl, 25 to 28c; broil¬ 
ers, 33 to 35c; chickens. 27 to 29c; old 
roosters, 22e; ducks, 28 to 30c; live 
geese, 19 to 22c. Farmers do not like to 
feed boughten stuff to poultry. They 
have no corn and are desired not to feed 
wheat. Oats and barley do not make 
good feed unground, and buckwheat is 
prohibitive in price. J. w. c. 
Crops and Farm News 
Buffalo Markets 
Potatoes are a trifle lower, though the 
big crop elsewhere has not come in much 
to help out our short one. They are 
quoted at $1.35 to $1.50 per bu. for 
whites and $2.75 to $3 for Virginia 
sweets. Apples are steady at $4 to $7 
per bbl., and pears are easy at $1.,50 to 
.$2.50 per bu. Quinces are 50c to $1..50 
per bu. and plenty. Grapes are also 
per bu. and plenty. Grapes_are far on in 
their season, selling at 65 to 80c per 
17-lb. basket. Gnions are also quiet at 
$1.7.5 to .$2.25 i>er bu. for home-grown 
Buckwheat, $1..50 bu. on car; potatoes, 
$1.40 bu. on car. Cabbage, from $23 to 
.$,30 ton on car. or from $5 to $7 per 100 
heads retail. Wheat, $2.20; rye, $1.70; 
old corn, .$2 bu.; hay, $20 ton, tangled 
rye straw, $12 ton; long straw, $16. But¬ 
ter, 50c lb.; eggs, 50c. Cows, from $50 
up. Pork, 20 to ^c on foot; chickens, 24 
to 28c lb., live weight. o. M. s. 
Tiuzerne Co., Pa. 
Apples, $1 bu.; potatoes, $1.75; corn, 
ear, $1 bu.; oats, 75c; wheat, .$2; rye, 
$1.60; buckwheat, 100 lb.s. $3.10; hay, 
.$18; straw, $9; beef, 1(X) lbs, $16 ; beef 
hides, lb., 16c; pork. 100 lbs, $20; chick¬ 
ens, live, 18c; eggs, 40c; butter, 40c; cab¬ 
bage, the best we can do, 5c head; lard, 
20c lb.; milk, 10c qt. Garden crops we 
have not much market for; some we give 
away, some go to waste, and for some we 
get half the cost of raising it. L. A. 
Armstrong Co., Pa. 
Cow,s, .$.30 to $90; butter, 40 to ,50c, in 
lb. prints. Beef, 1.3 to 20c by the quarter; 
potatoes, half crop, injured by blight and 
frost, $1.50 bu. Beans, tomatoes apd 
sweet corn killed by frost. Buckwheat in¬ 
jured by frost, $8 to .$9 cwt. for flour; 
not enough oats raised for home use. 
Farmers using some lime. Wheat flour, 
$1.3 bbl.; sugar, 10c lb., three to five lbs. 
sold to each home. o. o. w. 
Flster Co., N. Y. 
Wheat. .$2.10 bu; buckwheat, $3.10 
cwt.; potatoes today (November 7), $1 
bu.; have been as high as $1..30; eggs, 
40c; butter, 46c lb.; corn, $2.08 bu.; hay, 
as to quality, from $16 to $20 ton ; apples, 
dropped, 85c per lOO lbs.; picked apples, 
$1.7() per 100 lbs. Milch cows, anywhere 
from $.35 to $75, as to breed and quality. 
Hogs, dressed, have been bringing from 
18 to 24c lb.; turnips, 50c bu.; chestnuts. 
15c lb. w. w. P. 
C’olumbia Co., Pa. 
Dairy cows, about $100 for anything 
fresh or about to freshen. I bought four 
last week that averaged $13,5 each, grade 
cows; purebreds are much higher. Two 
sold here recently at $500, with their 
calves $250 each. Hogs, $6 for five- 
weeks-olds. Thre are no sheep to men¬ 
tion. Milk, wholesale, 10, 12 and 14c re¬ 
tail. Hay at feed stores a penny a lb., 
and farmers get about the same for loose 
hay. Oats, 79c; no corn raised here. 
Very few silos; no fruit; potatoes were 
$1.80, but are down to about $1 now; 
quite a few are rotting. j. n. m. 
Horses bring at public sales, $150 to 
$250; cow.s, fresh, $50 to $80, common 
grade; milk, delivered at railroad station, 
20c gal.; pigs, six weeks old, $10 to $15 
pair; potatoes, retail, .$2 bn.; apples. $2; 
quinces. .$3; pears, .$2; cabbage, $1.50 
cwt. We have been having very cold, 
freezing Aveather, and potatoes not all dug 
yet. o. s. L. 
Westmoreland Co., Pa. 
Corn meal, .$4 cwt.; hominy, $3.18; 
bran, $2; middlings, $.3.25 ; oil meal, .$3; 
corn, $2.18 bu.; oats. 7.5c; wheat, .$,3; 
hay, .$12 ton; hogs, ddressed, $22 cwt.; 
potatoes, $1.80 bu.; butter, 5()c lb.; eggs, 
50c. large acreage of potatoes undug 
yet; also a large quantity of buckwheat 
out yet on account of wet weather. No 
corn husking done yet. w. j. s. 
Bradford Co., Pa. 
1 Farm Help Wanted 
WANTED—Refined woman to assist with work 
in return for her board. Pleasant home for 
the right person. For further particulars ad¬ 
dress NO. 2650, care Rural New-Yorker. 
I'ARMER wanted who has had experience in 
growing fruit as well as other crops; one with 
growing sons preferred; tenant house and garden 
furnished; give experience and references and 
salary wanted; advancement to the right man. 
Address P. 0. BOX 5, Clayton, N. J. 
WOMAN—Preferably a widow, to board help 
on a large dairy. L. T. HALLOCK, Clayton, 
N. J. 
POULTRYMAN who has liad experience on com¬ 
mercial poultry plant; married man preferred, 
wife to assist him with incubators and feeding; 
state experience and salary wanted; good oppor- 
tnnlt.T for the right people. Address P. 0. BOX 
5, Clayton, N. J. 
MILKERS—Good, fast, dry hand. .$40 per month 
and board or $60 otherwise. L. 'T. HiH.LOCK, 
Clayton, N. J. 
WANTED—A young man of good habits that 
wants experience in general farming, from 16 
to 25 years old, that is Interested in purebred 
Holstein-Friesiaii cows; will pay good wages. 
NO. 2645, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WAN'i'ED—Working foreman and herdsman for 
farm near Pitt.sburg, Pa.; registered Guernsey 
herd of twelve head; modern bouse furnished. 
State full particulars in first letter. Address 
NO. 2665, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Reliable teamster; wages. .$2 per 
day and board in private family, G. H. BUR- 
RIl'T, Bradford, Pa., R. 1. 
WANTED—Herdsman in certified dairy of 250 
head. Good wages paid to man of excep¬ 
tional ability and exiJerience. No others need 
apply. NO. 2664, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Young man over 18 for horses 
(stable and farm); state experience and send 
copy of references in first letter. ELM VALLEY 
FARM, Bedford, N. Y. 
WANTED—At once, married man; burn and 
dairy work; must l)e clean, good dry-hand 
milker; .$60 month; house, fuel and milk; $60 
bonus at end of year. SPRING FARM DAIRY. 
Monessen, Pa. 
WANI’ED—Refined, quiet woman for house¬ 
work in country; all Improvements: a good 
home for widow with one cliild, or other Indus¬ 
trious woman. Apply P. 0. BOX 45, Cross- 
works, N. J. 
A GOOD opportunity for a boy to acquire a 
good education by helping himself; must be 
honest and willing to study. 0. P. STORK¬ 
ING, Williamstown, Mass. 
WANTED—Couple, preferably without cliildren, 
on small hospital farm in Westchester County; 
man to care for seven to eight cows and do 
general farming. Wages $60 year round, house, 
coal, light ami milk. Address NO. 2063, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WAN’I’ED—Active man, young woman or good 
boy for work on New Jersey modern poultry 
farm. Give age, references, nationality, poultry 
experience, if any, etc. NO. 2669, care Rural 
New-Y’orker. 
FARMER and Working Superintendent, for farm 
of 50 acres on Long Island; honest, sober, en¬ 
ergetic, middle-aged man with no cliildren pre¬ 
ferred. Wife to be a neat housekeeper and to 
board two or three in help; man to be practical 
all-around farmer, handy witli tools and famil¬ 
iar with gas engines and farm macliinery, suc¬ 
cessful in breeding and raising of cattle, hogs 
and poultry. Good liome with all Improvements 
ami permanent position for a capable economical 
working manager. Give age, references, wages 
and experience in first letter. FARMER NO. 
2672, care Rural New-Yorker. 
A CAPABI.E, refined woman housekeeper, plain 
cook, light laumlr.v, may Iiave an exceptional 
place in cliarming little cottage; every modern 
convenience; in the country; gentleman alone 
most of time; family of three holidays and Sum¬ 
mer; moderate compensation. NO. 2067, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FARMER who understands horses and garden 
work; wife to board one or two men. Rooms, 
including light and heat, supplied; state wages 
in first reply. Address ADVERTISER, Box 100, 
Bedford, N. -Y. 
Situations Wanted 
WANTED—Position as superintendent or man¬ 
ager on farm or estate; married; American; 
references; practical and scientific training. 
In answering, give full particulars, wages paid, 
etc. High class position. Address NO. 2051, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
MIDDLE-AGED COUPLE, reliable, steady; no 
children; want work at anything they can do; 
man is higli-class horseman, stock and general 
farming experience; wife good cook and house¬ 
keeper; state what you want with full i)articu- 
lars. Address NO. 2658, care Rural New-Yorker. 
I’OT'Ll'RYMAN — Experienced, single, desires 
Iiosltiou on private or gentleman’s estate; 
nmlerstamls thoroughly incubation, brooding and 
up-to-date methods of poultry management; 
state salary in first letter. NO. 2(i73, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRYMAN, married; present contract ex¬ 
pires Dec. 15; highest recommendation from 
present employer; contract position only. NO. 
26(M), care Hnrul New-Yorker. 
AMERICAN, sober young man, practical and 
college training, wants position on estate pre¬ 
ferably; references; capable in handling swine, 
poultry, orcliurds, etc. Address NO. 2()47, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM MAN.\OER wishes position by January 
1st as a working foreman; am capable of 
Imndling a large farm; tlioroughly understand 
farming and all its l)ranclies; also machinery; 
American; married, aged 4<i; have three large 
sons, wife and daugliter, or would lake a good 
stocked farm on sliares. J. M., BOX 12, Mill¬ 
stone, N. J. 
PRACTICAL FARMER, sueeessfnlly farming for 
liiniself, wants managing position; Cornell 
training. NO. 2671, care Rural New-Yorker. 
MIDDLE-AGED AMERICAN, now in charge 
large estate in Southern New York, wishes to 
change; no small proposition will be considered. 
NO. 2662, care Rural New-Yorker. 
HOUSEKEEPER — Middle-aged widow, desires 
position with elderly gcutlemuu; good cook 
and manager. NO. 20(M;, care Rural New. 
Yorker. 
FARM OR ESTATE MANAGER—At liberty Jan. 
1st. Scotch, age 42, many years of practical, 
successful experience In all branches of estate 
management, dairying, sheep, swine, poultry and 
horses; familiar with all modern methods and 
machinery, building roads, construction work, 
renewing run-down land, Alfalfa culture, keep¬ 
ing records and accounts; can also supply flrst- 
class dairyman and herdsman; also stud groom 
and several experienced farm hands. Nothing 
but a good proposition considered. Address NO, 
2628, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FOR S.VLE—110 acres, Pennsylvania village 
farm, five miles from Trenton; ideal location; 
trolley passes door on State road; one-half mile 
from station; 10 acres woodland; terras reason¬ 
able, NO. 2054, care Rural New-Yorker. 
W.\NTED—Small farm within hundred miles 
New York, under $2,500; State road pre¬ 
ferred. MYERS, 205 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn, 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Farm of 128 acres in high state of 
cultivation; running water that never fails in 
house and barn; adapted to dairying and general 
farming. CAMPBELL & HYATT, Cazenovla, 
New York. 
W.VNTED—To rent, with the privilege of buy¬ 
ing, somewhere in the Southern tier of coun¬ 
ties, a farm with stock and tools and fully 
equipped: would prefer a dairy or stock; will 
pay casli rent for tlie year. Address AR¬ 
THUR McKERCIIER, Sturgeon Bay, Wis. 
FRUIT TRUCK F.\RM, exchange for house in 
town. NO. 2659, care Rural New-Yorker. 
'TO RENT—200-ncre farm; 170 acres tillable; 
good buildings. MRS. K. MORRIS, Esperance, 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE OR LEASE—Near Princeton, N. J., 
144 acres productive land, with 2 houses; 1 
9 rooms with all modern conveniences; good 
barns; 10 acres timber; river frontage; one-half 
mile from railroad station. Price, $16,600. NO. 
2601, care Rural New-Yorker. 
W.INTET)—To rent or work on shares, farm with 
stock and fowls, or would take working fore¬ 
man’s position. Address NO. 2608, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
'W.\N'rED—Young farmer to run 200-acre farm 
on siiarcs. Part stock and equipment fur¬ 
nished. Small investment required. 858 Sum¬ 
ner Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. 
TENANT FAR.MER—Hay, grain and fruit; good 
buildings; 110 acres. Lake belt Western New 
York; one mile to high and grammar schools 
and New York ’Central and Lcliigh Valley sta¬ 
tions; references. NO. 2670, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
WAN'FED—Tenant farmer. Owner of 25-acre 
farm, not far from New York City, desires 
tenant farmer; good farm house, large barn, 
cliicken houses, etc.; unusual opportunities for 
earning money by sale of products to nearby 
commuters and by working for same; moderate 
rental for farm may be paid for in such ser¬ 
vice. Address Owner, NO. 2657, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
TENANT WANTED for farm on shares. An 
unu.sua.l offer will be made to the proi>er man. 
Purebred Holsteins and pedigree seed potatoes. 
Only a man of the very best qualifications con¬ 
sidered. H. B. SWEET, 17 Clarendon Building, 
Utica, N. Y. 
Miscellaneous 
FOR SALE—Several carloads baled hay; mixed 
clover, Timothy and Red-top. Buyer must 
inspect here. L. M. BOWERS, Binghamton, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—Late model Newtown Giant Incuba¬ 
tor, for cash. Write DR. PRUDHOMMB, 
Thurmont, Md. 
FOR SALE—One 4,800 Candoe Incubator, $250 
net cash; one 1,200 Newtown Giant, new, $160 
net casli. LOCK BOX 27, Southold, N. Y. 
WII,L S.ACRIFICE for immediate sale one Hall 
Mammoth 6.000-egg Incubator and eighteen 
Hall Colony Brooders. I. W.M. 'IWMOR, 3,34 
41h Ave., N. Y. City. 
I WILL SEND you, for a dollar, in time for 
Christmas, a full quart of delicious mince 
meat as made In our family for over a hundred 
years; twelve quarts for $10, delivered any¬ 
where within 600 miles. MRS. F. E. PERKINS, 
Burlington, Vt. 
WANTED—power root cutter. BEECH DALE 
DUCK FAR.M, Bird-in-Hand, Pa. 
FOR SALE—1 C.vphers Incubator, 244 egg; 2 
Cyphers Columbia, 140 and 250 eggs; 1 Cy¬ 
phers Superior, 130 eggs; 2 Prairie State In¬ 
cubators, 390 and 240 eggs; 2 Prairie State 
Keystone, 100 and 60 eggs; all new machines, 
never been used; can use in exchange hand 
cultivator. Planet, Jr., or Iron Age, or pullets 
from a good laying strain; American breeds 
preferred. H. E. LANE. Walton, N. Y. 
WANTED—Locust logs and lumber. C. 0. 
GALBRAITH & SON, 47-49 West St., New 
York City. 
FOR S-\LE—New 5-10 horsepower Avery trac¬ 
tor; in perfect condition; has been used only 
to plow and harrow ten acres; owner has sold 
farm and will sell tractor, for half price. 
GEORGE WOODW.VRD, Hebron. .Maine. 
FOR S.\LE—-Bullock Cateri)illar Tractor, 10-20 
H.P.; 3 Bottom Grand Detour Plow; 24 disc 
double action Clark Cutaway Harrow; both Im- 
idements are easily pulled by the tractor. Trac¬ 
tor cost $1,250; plow, $125; harrow cost $50. 
■Will sell outfit for .$600 and guarantee same in 
good and serviceable condition. MORGAN 
GOETCHIUS, Smithtown Branch, N. Y. 
500 HOT-BED SASH FOR SALE—3x0-ft. cy¬ 
press; 0x8-in. glass; very strong and well 
made; used one year. Real estate improve¬ 
ments are crowding us out, hence the sacrifice. 
Price, $2 each. MANAGER RIVERSIDE MAR^ 
KET GARDEN, Wilburtha, N. J. 
NECESSITY S.\I.K—Lefever 20-ga. ejector. L. 
PREDMORE, I'erth Amboy, N. J. 
WANTED—15 gals, boiled cider, 10 bbls. carrots, 
10 bbls. parsnips,, 10 bbls. beets. THE 
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL, Tompkinsville, 
N. Y. 
1,800-EGG Newtown Giant complete, %vith auto- 
;(Aiau) paitt.iD ’u 'O YI ‘Jauani-33o 05 J«m 
owner drafted. CARL E. VAIL, Peconic, L. I. 
CABBAGE for Poultry Food in any quantity: 
large unmarketable loose heads in splendid 
condition, $10 i)er 1,000, f, o. b.; any quantity. 
- BOX NO. 2<i74, care Rural New-Yorker. 
