CONTENTS 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER, DECEMBER 29, 
1917 
FARM TOFICS 
The Factory System of Farming. .1461, 1462, 1466 
The Sands of New Jersey.1462 
Value of Inventories on Rented Farms.1462 
Tractors for Truckers.1463 
Phosphate and Manure.1464 
Vitality of Mustard Seer.!'•- * 
Corn Fodder for Fertilizer.1464 
Coming Farmers’ Meetings.1466 
Crops and Farm News.1466 
The Danger from Corporate Farming.1466 
Notes on English Farming..1466 
Our Grain Crops Threatened hy Demorali¬ 
zation in Yucatan ... 
Hope Farm Notes.1470 
The Daily Papers and Farmers.1473 
Another 35-cent Dollar.1473 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY 
Notes on the Milk Situation.1473 
Heifers for a Calf Club.1476 
WTiy Raise the Duroc Hog.1476 
Dogs at the Stock Show.1476 
Abscess . 
Cough .1|77 
Keep More Hogs.1477 
Questions About Farm Cheese Making.147b 
Heat the Cream for Churning.1478 
Depraved Appetite .14 <8 
Shrink in Milk.1478 
Grubs 
.1478 
Contracted Hoofs....1478 
Ration for Heifer Calves.1480 
Improving Protein Content.148U 
Dairy Ration Without Silage.1480 
Hay Ration for Cow....1480 
Corn and Cob Meal for Cows... ... ..-1480 
Acorns for Cow; Selection of Good Milker.. 1480 
Growing Ration for Calves.1480 
THE HENYARD 
Seven Eggs from Six Pullets. 
Believes in the Chicken Business.... 
Ailing Pullets . .. 
The Squab Business—No Bed of Roses 
Division of Poultry Profits. 
Laying Ration ... • --~ - 
How We Raise Our Own Cockerels... 
Records of Black Leghorns. 
1466 
1465 
1465 
1467 
1480 
1480 
1480 
1482 
HORTICULTURAL 
A Young Orchard on Shares. 
Women and Girls as Fruit Pickers.... 
Blueberries . 
Birds Destroying Fruit. 
Notes from a Maryland Garden. 
Killing Off Large Trees. 
The Coxsackie Apple. 
Arbutus . 
Culture of Austin Dewberry. 
The Effects of Nicotine Spraying. 
Columbian Raspberry . 
.1463 
1463, 1464 
.1464 
1464, 1468 
.1465 
.1471 
.1471 
.1471 
.1471 
.1471 
.1471 
is not a paying vocation near here, with , 
the high price of land. l. w. C. 
Wayne. Pa. 
Wheat, .$2 for No. 2 red; corn, new, 
.$1.50; old, $2.25; oats, 75c; potatoes. 
.$1.25 to $1.50; apples, $1..50; cabbage, 5c 
lb. Cows, fresh. ,$80 to $150. Milk, $3.05 i 
cwt., for 4% at receiving station and 4c | 
off for every 10 points below 4% ; 4c on j 
for every 10 points above. n. J. F. ! 
Chester Co., Pa. 
I 
Oats, 02 to 72c; wheat, .$2.15; rye, ] 
$1.90; yellow corn, $1.00; white corn, 
.$1.55; potatoes, ,$1.45 to .$1.75; apples, 
,$1.50 to $1.00; onions, 5c lb.; cabbage. 
.3 to 5c lb. Mill feeds—bran, .$2.10; mid¬ 
dlings, $2.90; cottonseed meal, $3; oil 
meal, $3; gluten feed. $.3. Butter, 40c 
lb.; eggs. 00c doz.; poultry, 20c lb. 
Northampton Co., Pa. W. J. E>. 
We are having an unusually cold De¬ 
cember in Clinton County, mercury regis¬ 
tering as low as 22 degrees below zero. 
Farmers are cutting sonie^ wood when 
help can be secured, but it is almost im¬ 
possible to hire men, who easily command 
.$2.50 a day. Farmers institutes are soon 
to be held in various towns in the county. 
Farm produce still remains high. Hay, 
$19 ; oats, 85c per bu.; potatoes, $1 per 
bu.; butter*, 50c per lb.; pork, dressed, 
22c per lb.; eggs, 50 to 60c per doz. 
There is a great shortage of all kinds 
of fuel'; hard stove w’ood easily brings 
.$3 per cord. H. T. J. 
Clinton Co., N. Y. 
Eggs, 50c; butter, 50c; apples, scarce, 
.$2 per bu. Chickens, live, 20e per lb.; 
pork. 15 to 22c, dressed, accoi;;clin«- to 
weight; beef, 12 to 15c. Oats, 75 to 8.5c 
per bu.; wheat, $1; corn, ear, $1 ; hay, 
,$14 to ,$16. Buckwheat flour, $1.75 for 
25 lbs. Wheat flour, .$3.30 for 50 lbs. 
Venango Co., Pa. F. s. L. 
This is a dairy and general farming 
community, mostly dairy. Whole milk, 
2()c per gal.; 58c per lb. for butter fat at 
the creamery; hay, $19 to $20; corn. 3c 
per lb.; oats, 70c. Good fresh cows, $100 
to $120; 22c for pork, 16e for fat hogs, 
live weight; veal calves, 15c, live ; dressed 
turkeys, 50c per lb. Potatoes, $1.75 per 
bu. J. J. Ji. 
Lawrence Co., Pa. 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day. 
Insertion in Filet Crochet. 
Sugarless Candies . 
The Rural Patterns. 
Potato Bread . 
Com Sticks; Pumpkin Butter. 
Home-ground Entire Wheat Flour.... 
Paper Beads . 
MISCELLANEOUS 
Removing Honey in Winter. 
Events of the Week. 
Device for Measuring Land. 
Radiating Dmm in Chimney. 
Milling Old Buckwheat. 
Waste in Milling Buckwheat. 
A Mechanic for the Country. 
Shipping Tonnage. 
Editorials . 
The New York School Law. 
Publisher’s Desk . 
.1474 
.1474 
.1474 
. 1474 
.1474 
.1474 
.1474 
.1474 
.1464 
1466 
.1468 
.1468 
.1468 
.1468 
.1468 
.1468 
.1472 
.1473 
,1482 
Crops and Farm News 
Good dairy cows from $50 to $1_00. 
Cornmeal, .$4.20 per cwt.; oats, $2..50; 
oil meal, $3 ; bran, $2.05 at the mills here ; 
wheat, $.3 per bu. More wheat was seed¬ 
ed here this Fall than for many seasons; 
it is looking fine. Farm work completed 
late on account of wet weather.^ Potatoes 
a good crop, sell for about $1..50 per bu. 
Milk is being taken to Mohawk Conden- 
sery; they pay .$2.94 for 3 per cent milk, 
.$.3.34 for 4 per cent and $3.74 for 5 per 
cent milk. Hay was a good yield but had 
much trouble in curing. Dressed pork 
brings 22c; beef, 12 to 14c; chickens, 
20c; butter about 45 to 50c; eggs, fresh, 
.50c, Lumbermen are in here buying all 
the timber they can get, sawing it into 
lumber and shipping. Quite a number of 
farms are changing hands. Labor .scarce 
and high. Dry hardwood brings .$3 per 
cord for 18-in. w’ood. Hard coal, $8.25 
per ton for chestnut, not very good, off 
the car. L. n. n. 
Warren Co., Pa. 
Cows, .$75 to $1.50; butter, 46c; eggs, 
40<*; fowls, live, 16c; Spring chickens, 
18 to 20c; geese. 18c; ducks, 20c; tur¬ 
keys, 32c. Wheat. .$2.10; oats, 75c; po¬ 
tatoes, per cwt. $1.65; cabbage, Danish, 
per ton, $30 ; carrots, per ton, $l5 ; onions, 
per bu., .$1.25. Hay, Timothy, No. 1. $16; 
No. 2, $14; clover. $12; Alfalfa, $17. 
Ontario Co., N. Y. A. b. g. 
Potatoes, $1 per bu.; butter, at stores, 
.50c per lb.; dressed pork, 20 to 22c. 
Hay beginning to look up, owing to ship¬ 
ping demand ; recent sales of pressed hay 
at .$15 per ton ; poor hay at barns can 
still be bought for about $10. Hay-press 
men charge $4 per ton for baling. Wood 
for fuel, $2.50 per cord, stove lengths. 
Delaware Co., N. Y. yi. 
This is no longer a farming or a dairy 
<-ountry. It is a suburb of Philadelphia 
and there are very few dairies here. The 
farms have mostly been cut up into 
building lots, and while some wealthy men 
have bought farms of several hundred 
a^rfs. they do not raise enough on them 
to feed their own stock, and buy consider¬ 
able feed shipped from the West. 'Phese 
farms are valued at $500 to .$1,000 per 
acre, yet they yield nothing but weeds 
now, where they were splendid fields for 
crops and pasture when I knew them as a 
boy. You can readily see that farming 
New milch cows, $75 to $100; milk, 7 
to 8c per qt.; butter, 44 to 50c; apples, 
$1 per bu., poor fruit at that; potatoes, 
$1 to $1.25. Buckwheat. $3 to ,$3.25 per 
100 lbs.; oats, 80 to 90c per bu.; hay, 
$14 to $20 per ton. C. B. x. 
Schuyler Co., N. Y. 
Potatoes, $1.90 to .$2 per bu.; apples, 
rather poor grade, ,$1.50; corn, $2; ha^y. 
,$28 to $.30 per ton; straw, oat. $12.50 
per ton. ^ w. M. Y. 
Monroe Co., N. Y. 
Crops throughout Clarion County were 
poor, owing to the wet weather and early 
fro.sts. Hay is selling from $14 to $17 
per ton; .straw, $10; oats, .80c; wheat, 
$2.10; rye, $1.75; buckwheat, ,$3.15 per 
cwt.; corn, $2.1.5; potatoes, $2.20 to 
$2.35 per bu.; cabbage, 21^c per lb.; ap¬ 
ples, $1.50 per bu.; cows, $40 to .$70; but¬ 
ter, 4.5c; eggs. 45c; pork, dressed. 19c; 
veal calves, dressed, 16c; beef, dressed, 
14 to 16c per lb. H. ii. A. 
Clarion Co., Pa. 
Milch cows, $75 to $100; pigs (hog- 
dres.sed). $23 per 100; turkeys, live 
weight, 35c per lb. Butter. 50c; eggs, 
,50c; potatoes, $1.2,5 to $1.50; turnips, 
50 to 7,5c. J. s. 
Wayne Co., Pa. 
Wlieat at local mills, $2.10 to .$2.15; 
rye, $1.7,5 to $1.80; corn, new, ,$35 to $40 
per ton, and ,$2.20 to $2.30 per bu.; oats, 
7,5c bu. Butter fat at creameries, 56 to 
62c per lb. Milk, 7%c qt., less Y^c freight 
to Philadelphia, and ,$2.,82 per cwt. at 
milk stations. Beef cattle around 12c; 
fat cows, 9 to 10c per lb.; stock steers, 8 
to IOYj ; bulls, around 9i/4c; milch cows, 
$90 to $120. Hogs, dressed, 21c per lb.; 
shotes, 70 to 90 lbs., around $12; suckling 
pigs, ,$4 to ,$5 apiece. Potatoes, $1.75 bu. 
Apples, none for sale; short crop. Cab¬ 
bage, 10 to 1,5c head ; beets, ,$1.75 bu.; 
turnips, 60c bu.; Lima beaus, 18 to 20c 
qt.; navy beans, 20c qt.; celery, 10c 
bunch. Flour, wheat, $10.50 hbl.; rye, 
$8.50 bbl.; cornmeal, 6c lb. Chickens. 24 
to 28c lb., live; ducks, 20c lb. live ; geese, 
15 to 22c, live; turkeys, .30 to 40c lb., 
dressed. Fresh laid eggs, 5,5c doz. Prime 
Ihmothy hay, .$27 ton ; mixed, $24 to .$26 
ton. Corn fodder, $4 poi* 100 sheaves. 
Montgomery Co., Pa. .j. k. it. 
For Sale-^u's'EV Mammoth Incubators 
1916 Model Location, central Ohio 4600—191.5 Model New 
Jersey 2400—191.5 Model. Eastern Ohio SOOO—Hall. 1917 
Model Eastern Mass Also Prairie Stateand Cypherslanin 
incubators Attractive prices for quick shipment. WATSON 
MFC CO 2022 Lancaster, Pa. Dept 2022, 4aW Division St., Chicago,III 
LONG ISLARDTRUCK FARMERS 
Wonderful opportunity to pureh.ase 100 acres of 
level ricli potato land, nearly all cleared and 
under highest state of cultivation. Only 8 miles 
from City Lino, adjacent to stone road to market. 
This land yielded from 300 to 350 bushels of 
potatoes this past season. The price is just 
one-half that asked for other land in this sec¬ 
tion For all particulars address at once 
THEO. S. HALL, 47 West 34th St., N. Y. C. 
For Sale-Opportunity Seldom Offered ntn®r®J?ty 
Oneida Clay and sandy loam, no hills, 85 acres are tiled 
underdrained. Alt tillable except two small wood lots. 
Now seeded. Ill acres wheat, 40 rye, 40 hay. Buildings line 
condition. 10-room house with furnace, hath and full 
plumbing, also good tenant house. Main barn 36x120, 
holding 60 head, additional buildings for hogs, ice, 
poultry, wagons, etc., ail good condition and up-to-date. 
Running water in house and barn. Changes in our oper¬ 
ating plans reason for selling. It will pay you to invest¬ 
igate. Pricejon application. Terms reasonable—a li.argain. 
THE HURT OLNEY C.VNNING CO., Oneida. N.T. 
Farm Help Wanted 
IV.ANTED—Practical working foreman, capable 
of taking charge of farm devoted to sheep 
and cattle raising. Man willing to work him¬ 
self and capable of directing the work of others. 
Send full particulars In first letter. NO. 2714, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—.At once, conscientious, competent 
man for general farm work and care of good 
stock; excellent home and year* round position; 
state references and salary expected to RIVER¬ 
SIDE FRUIT & STOCK FARMS, Hartwiek 
Seminary, New York. 
RELIABLE married man for general farm 
work; small family; house rent, firewood, milk 
furnished. State particulars, first letter. OL¬ 
IVER TULLER, West Simsbury, Conn. 
WE have a good home for a woman who will 
assist in housework usually found on a small 
farm; all conveniences: steam heat, water, elec¬ 
tric light; four in family; a middle-aged woman 
who reall.v wants a good, permanent home, used 
to country life, should find this place ideal. 
NO. 2720, care Rural New Yorker, 
WANTED—Reliable farmer to work on shares 
nearly two hundred acres; twenty cows, twelve 
horses; good crops of hay, corn and wheat; full 
eiiuipiuent of machinery; one hundred ton silo, 
good barns, etc. DdBire man with some capital 
to make this a first-class commercial proposi¬ 
tion. Farm is situated near Philadelphia and 
the Eastern markets. NO. 2727, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—.April 1st, working foreman, married, 
to occupy new house on 130-acre farm, % 
mile from village: must be absolutely temperate, 
capable of directing others, experienced; prin¬ 
cipal lines, grain, hay, fruit and pigs. State 
age. experience, number in family, wages. POST 
OFBMCE BOX 5, Albany, N. Y. 
WANTED—A thoroughly reliable working farm¬ 
er; good buildings; small dairy, for owner’s 
use only: half mile from city limits; good 
school; steady yearly employment for first-class 
married man. L. M. BOWERS, Binghamton, 
N. Y. 
W.ANTED—Fanner; married, sober, for fruit 
and dairy farm; good wages, house, wood, 
milk and garden furnished; wife could have part 
time employment if desired. Address BOX TO, 
Ransomville, N. Y. 
FARM HAND wanted; single man to work on 
grain farm by month, from first of March or 
April; must be a good teamster, sober, and no 
cigarettes; good reference required; state wages 
expected. NATHAN ALLEN, Oxford, N. J. 
WANTED—Young man to manage and work 
poultry plant and farm, located in Berkshire 
Hills, Conn.: must be experienced in both; also 
know something of gas engines. References 
required. Small salary and percentage of prof¬ 
its. Would consider married couple who would 
invest small amount and take interest. Home 
well furnished, and all modern conveniences. 
NO. 2732, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—A man with family to go on farm 
in Virginia and raise hogs on a oO-.bO basis; 
must have some cash and lots of ambition. 
HARRY VAIL, New Milford, Orange Co., N. Y. 
W.A.NTED—Competent single man on milk farm; 
neither dead or night hawk; good milker; slate 
age. wages ex|ieeted; give references: good 
ivages to right man. S. D. NEWELL, Bristol, 
Conn. 
WANTED—Gardener; married, no children, pre¬ 
ferred; private country home; understand 
growing vegetables, flowers, hot-house, cold 
frame, lawns and the setting out trees and 
handling men; give reference and state wages 
in first letter. ELTING HARP, New Paltz, 
New York. 
WANTED—Dairyman’s helper, able" to milk. 
Preferably a Hollander 18 to 22 years old, 
elean, reliable and honest. Pay to start .$3i) to 
.f35 and board. Westchester Co. private estate. 
NO. 2735, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WA.NTEI)—Single reliable, sober teamster; must 
be all around farmer. No milking. Permanent 
position and good home. Salary .$40.00 per 
month and board. Give age, nationality and 
jiast employment. NO. 2734, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
WANTED—Correspondence with farm boys who 
desire to be farmers. Good opportunity for 
one or more boys ambitious to become eflicient 
farmers. I). A. KNEELAND, Mountain Home 
Farm, Waitsfield, Vt. 
Situations Wanted 
W.ANTED, April 1, 1918—Position as farm man¬ 
ager or superintendent. Married American, 
understands construction farm buildings and con¬ 
crete work; reference: practical and scientific 
fanning. In answer give full particulars, wages 
paid, etc.; only first-class position considered. 
NO. 271G, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRY SUPERINTENDENT, scientific train¬ 
ing, 33, married; honest, reliable, sober: for 
the last 7 years in charge of the poultry depart¬ 
ment of an Eastern experiment station. Is still 
employed there. Wishes to change for com¬ 
mercial estate or institutional work; thoroughly 
experienced; can handle any proposition: exjiert 
in iilanning and building up a plant; can handle 
help; highest references. Nothing under .$1..500 
considered: agreement only. Address NO. 2725, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM MANAGER with small family wishes 
position; Cornell training in poultrj' husband¬ 
ry; references. NO. 2723, care Rural New- 
Y’orker. 
FARM or estate manager desires position April 
1 or earlier; nationaltiy, Scotch; married; 
small family; have practical life experience in 
all branches of agriculture and the breeding, 
rearing and care of all farm stock, both for 
commercial and exhibition purposes. Give par¬ 
ticulars in first letter. NO. 2724, care Rural 
Neiv-Yorker. 
AMERICAN, 30, wants position as superintend¬ 
ent on gentleman’s estate by March 1st: 
strictly temperate; 20 years’ exiierienci*; best 
references; not less than .$100 considered. NO. 
2731, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Ry reiiable and honest married man 
with two sons, Ki and 18. position on large 
farm or estate as working manager or assistant: 
life experience in all branches of farming and 
small fruit; wife will board help; can give best 
of reference; no booze or cigarettes used: give 
particulars and wages paid in first letter; at 
iiiierty any time from January 1st to April 1st. 
NO. 2730, care Rural New-Yorker. 
YOUNG MAN, 18, not afraid of work, desires 
position on farm wliere lie can get experiencej 
good liotne preferred; state particulars. N(J 
2729. care Rural New-Yorker. I 
POULTRY MANAGER desires position as mana¬ 
ger on commercial or private plant; several 
years’ experience managing poultry plant: col¬ 
lege training; can show good results; best of 
reference. S. WAGNER, 375 E. 184th St., 
New York, care Vaksliall. 
POSITION wanted by January 1 on farm or 
estate by a German, 27, married; life exiieri- 
enoe in general farming; experience in raising 
German police dogs; no liquors; honest and re¬ 
liable; good references. NO. 2728, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
PR.ACTICAL PARMER, single, desires position 
as ivorking foreman or manager witli assist¬ 
ant. Thorouglily understands modern farm nia- 
cliinery and caring of live stock; raising crops: 
good liorsetnan. Address NO. 2733, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
YOUNG MAN (.32), American, single: desires 
work on farm, permanent, with good future 
outlook in return for faitlifu!. willing service. 
'I’liroc years' practical work with poultr.v; one 
year creamery. .Amliitious, and would like to 
specialize. Address .1. C. AUSTIN, 1249 SI. 
John's Place, Brooklyn. N. Y. 
CARETAKER—No children, wants position on 
estate or other property, understand care of 
machinery, highest references. NO. 2731!, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
EXPERIENCED farmer and stockman, married; 
sober; can handle men; understands A. R. O. 
work; only high-clas* position considered. NO. 
2707, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FOR SALE—Farm of 135 acres. One of the best 
potato and grain farms in New York State; 
located on State automobile road, 1 1-4 miles 
from milk and shipping station and 3 miles from 
city of 13.000 poimlation. Net revenue this year 
over 25 per cent of price asked. Selling on ac¬ 
count of sickness. For description and price 
address NO. 2718, care Rural New-Yorker. 
320 ACRES Canadian wheat land for sale; 80 
acres under cultiyationf fitaine buddings; 
good well and fences. In best mixed farming 
district of Alberta; 30 acres wild hay land on 
farm situated in well-settled district on main 
line. Owner will saerlflee for .$3,000 cash: $10 
per acre with terms. Liberty bonds accepted. 
H. WICKENDEN, Tyrone, Pa. 
FARM FOR SALE—90 acres; 8 cows, 25 hens, 
good team horses; orchard, 50 trees; all tools; 
running water to house and barn; 9-room house. 
For further information, address M. A. HAL- 
WIG, Barton, N. Y., R. D. 1. 
W.\NTED—Tenant with family able to work 
large dairy farm; convenient new buildings, 
ample equipment; Guernsey cattle; excellent 
markets; good land; grows Alfalfa, corn, oats, 
potatoes, etc. Most liberal terms to competent 
tenant. For full particulars write, stating .your 
experience and qiialllications, to W.M. Il'lLIv, 
Bethany, West Virginia. 
TENANT F.VRMER; 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 Leliigh Valley Sta¬ 
tions. References. NO. 2722, care Rural New- 
Y'orker. 
FOR RENT—Well-established feed and mill bus¬ 
iness, in a good dairy and grain section, on 
the Lehigh & Hudson Railway. For partlenlurs 
apply to ARTHUR DANKS, Mgr., Tranquillity 
Farms, Allaniucliy, N. J. 
MUST sell farm this Spring to settle an estate; 
easy terms; scliool and street car <4ose. VL 
R. GARDNER, Factoryville, Pa. 
FOR SALE—Farm, 235 acres; modern 10-room 
dwelling, out buildings, apple orelianl; fim^ 
view of I’otoniac River; good fishing; an ideal 
truck or grass farm; eight miles from Washing¬ 
ton, D. C.; well watered. A. R. G. BASS, 
owner, Hayinarket, Va. 
FARM FOR S.VLE on famous Eastern Shore of 
Maryland; 235 acres; 100 acres in high state 
of cultivation; 75 acres in good timber; located 
in wheat, corn and tomato belt of Talbott Coun¬ 
ty; two railroads, two steamboat lines; twenty 
to forty biisliels of wheat; fifty to ninety of 
corn; crops will pay the owner five or six tlioii- 
sand dollars the coming year. This quality of 
land seldom conies on the market. Fine climate. 
Price $85 per acre; (')5 acres growing wlieat goes 
to quick buyer. W. S. HOOVER, owner, lirorfd- 
wa.v, Va. 
SEVERAL EXCELLENT FARMS for rent. 35 
miles from city, in Jersey, Including two 
poultr.v plants and two hog farms. C. D. 
BLACK, 233 Broadivay, N. Y. 
310-ACUE FABM, with dairy, 5 miles from rail¬ 
road; hasement barn and silo; $10,(K)O; ,$3,000 
down; balance, easy terms. J. D. SIIELMIDINE, 
Lorraine, N. Y. 
Miscellaneous 
FOR S.VLE—.\t half price, ten electric street 
lighting fixtures tliat cost .$5 eacli. A. D. 
PALEN, Rockland, N. Y. - - 
W-VNTED—Stand ni make 
sene tractor; ml 
ed. WELLS LOG! 
ORANGES .ti 
per box. li 
mixed boxe^ 
more boxes 
Philadelphia] 
ho.v, and c.' 
des.tination 
LON, Tro: 
