Coming Live Stock Sales 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER, MAY 4, 1918 
FARM TOPICS 
A Talk About Level Culture. 641 
The Effect of the “Money Crop”. 641 
Phosphate for Indiana Soils.642 
Soil Analysis . 642 
Quantity of Beans for Seedingr. 642 
The Farmer of Fifty Years. 643 
Culture of Yellow Eye Beans. 643 
The 1918 Cabbage Bed. 645 
Soy Beans in Silage Corn. 647 
Silo in Barn. 647 
Mountain Farmers . 647 
The Farmer and Daylight Saving. 651 
The Wheat Outlook. 651 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY 
Shoddy and the Future of the Sheep Indus- 
„ try .639, 640 
The Country Milk Co. 651 
May Milk Prices. 651 
Mutual McDermott Co. 651 
Essex Swine .' ’ . 654 
Hogs and Dishwater. 654 
Caring for Surplus Meat Stock. 654 
Toughening the Shoulder. 654 
Hemorrhagic Septicemia . 654 
Fungus Haematoides . 654 
Megrims .[ . ' 654 
Milk and Farm News. 656 
Boarding a Heifer. 658 
Slicing Down a Haystack. 658 
Pasture for the Pigs. 658 
Sharp Teeth in Pigs. 658 
Tankage for Swine. 658 
Fits . g 59 
Thriftless Pigs . 660 
THE HENYARD 
Wandering Hens in Connecticut. 647 
How I Raise Turkeys. 659 
Egg-laying Contest .] .. '. 660 
Fowls Picking One Another.660, 661 
Lighting the Henhouse. 661 
Growing and Laying Ration. . . ' 661 
Substitutes for Bran. 661 
White Diarrhoea .] 661 
•Mi.s.s., 
\. Y. 
Mnv 
0. 7. S— llolsteins. 
by C. W. Ellis, 
West Point, 
•Tr., Cortland, 
Second East- 
Eirmingham, 
Stock & Pedi- 
14, lo—TTolsteins. 
I'l'ti Kreoders’ sale, Syracuse, N. Y., by 
Liverpool Live Stock & Pedigi'oe Co., 
Liverpool, N. Y. 
^ May 10, 17—Ilolsteins. 
X. Y.. by Liverpool Live 
gree Co.. Liverpool. N. Y". 
May IS—Ilolsteins. ^Sydney, N. Y.. 
by the Tri-Co. Holstein Breedt'rs’ Asso.. 
L. E. Hisley, secretary. 
May 22—Ilolsteins. (birlisle. Pa., bv 
Cumberland ('o. Breeders. 
May 28—.Terseys. Brattleboro, Vt.. bv 
Pure Bred Live Stock Sales Co., Brat- 
tleboi'o. Vt. 
Ma.v 28, 29, .20—Ilolsteins 
Farms. Elma Center. X. Y. 
May .20 — .Terseys. Linden 
Coopersbnrg. Pa. 
•May 20, .21—Ilolsteins. Hudson Val- 
le.v Sales Co.. INIechanicsville. X. Y. 
.Tune 1—.Terseys. Hood F.-irm. Lowell. 
Mass. 
.Tune 4. 0—I Inlsteins. Brattleboro. Vt., 
by Purebred Live' Stock Sales Co.. Brat- 
tb'boro. T't. 
•Tune 11. 12—.V,\ rshires. Xew England 
.Ayrshire Club. Charter Oak P.irk. Ilart- 
foi-d. Conn. 
M ANTED—.Single man on ifairy f.ann, good 
milker; Xew Jersej'; within 40 miles of Xew 
lork; mild winters. Wages $40 and board. 
ADV ERTISER Xo. 4083, care Rural Xew-Yorker. 
V ANTED—Man and wife for dairy and general 
farm work; wife to help in housekeeping; New 
.Tersey, within 40 miles of Xew York; wages $65 
and board. ADVERTISER 4082, care Rural 
Xew-Yorker. 
WAXTED—A herdsman to care for a herd of 
purebred Guernseys numbering 50 head; a 
steady position for a man that is interested in 
cattle; this proposition is open only to single 
men. Write, giving experience and wages 
wanted, to ELLIS F'. CLARK, .Supt. -Mount Fair 
Farm, Waterbury, Conn. 
W 
Pine Crove 
Crove. 
'The 
Books Worth Buying 
Giirden Rule Rook, 
, 2.00 
.$1.50 
HORTICULTURE 
of Peach Scab by Dusting— 
The Control 
Part II. .. 640 
Cross-bred Squashes . 645 
Dahlia, the Farm Flower....... 646 
Growing Gladioli _;.. .•.646 
Notes from a Maryland Garden..... 649 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day... 652 
A Farm Housewife and Her Live Stock.... 652 
The Rural Patterns... 652 
Fit nil and 
Railoy . . . 
The XursWy Rook. Railcy 
Pruning Manual, Railey.'. 2 00 
P.iish Fruit, Card. I'yr, 
Swine in -Vinerica. Coburn. 2.i~)0 
Tile R.ook of .Vlfalfa, Coburn. 2 00 
Common Diseases of Farm Animals 
Craig. 1 jr; 
Manual of Th-uit In.seets, Crosby & 
NIingerlaud 
fVXTED—Man and wife on gentleman’s coun¬ 
try home; man to do general farm work around 
place; one horse, cow, some poultry; woman to 
do general housework, family of 3; extra good 
aceommodations; state salary expected .and ref¬ 
erences. 1>. E. WOODWARD, Waldorf 
-Vlbany, N. Y. 
Bldg., 
.V THOROUGHLY reliable single man to take 
E. M. 
( HAll H-I.D, Bungay, Seymour, Conn. 
W .VXTED—Man outside the draft as assistant on 
small poultry and general farm; good home 
tor a fellow who is willing and faitlifnl; no pro- 
irernian need applj-; stale wages expected and 
enclose photo in first letter. BURR HOLLISTER, 
n asliington. Conn. 
I’roductive Swine Ilusbandrv, Day 
Poultry ■ Breeding & Manager 
iuagement, 
Fletcher. . 
2.00 
1.75 
1.00 
1.75 
1.75 
.00 
.652, 
652 
653 
653 
653 
653 
653 
Seen in New York Shops!. 
Swedish Steak .....'. 
Ice Cream Cake; Sponge Cake.. 
Canned Strawberries; Pop Corn 
Date Recipes’ ... 
Embroidery Designs . 
Two Liberty Cakes.!!!.! L !.! Y .. . 653 
Canning Experience ....'.!!!! 662 
MISCELLANEOUS 
Raising Shiners for Bait. 640 
Making Sugar Beet Syrup at Home. 640 
Letter from the Northwest. 644 
Country-Wide Markets . . 644 
Events of the Week.646 
Drying Com Under Glass. 647 
Linseed Oil as Liniment. 647 
Editorial . 650 
The Song Bird and the Cat.654 
Buffalo Markets ... . . ’ 661 
Publisher’s Desk .... 662 
Crops and Farm News 
Hay in mo\y, .$12 and ,$13 ton; cows, 
•$70 to .$100; (lress(!d-bcof, l.’Ic Ib.; dressed 
veal, 20c lb.; dressed pork, 23c lb. Eggs, 
3;‘)c do5i.; potatoes. OOc bu. Milk, 
per cwt.; butter, ;10c per lb. The 
to produce the :ibov(( costs from 
per Ib. 
Delaware Co.. X. Y. 
,$2.50 
grain 
to 4c 
J. 
Dryden 
Strawberry Growing 
I'roductive IIor.se Husbandry, Gay 
ManuaHof. Weeds, Georgia.’. 
The Potato. Gilbert. i',->() 
-'lanualof Farm -Xnimals, llarpor,... ”.oo 
Feeds & Feedings, Henry. 2^50 
Insects Iifiiirious to Household, Her¬ 
rick . 
Irrigation & Drainage, King. 
Productive Poultry Hushandr.y, Lewis. 
Soil Management, Lyon & Fip'pin. 
-• Diseases'of -Vniinals, Mayo. 
Successful Fruit Culture, -Maynard... 
Productive Farm Crops, Montgomery. 
Injurious Imsects, O’Kane..'. 
Questions and .Vnswers on Putter- 
making, Puhlow & Troy. 
Questions and -Vhswers on Milk Test¬ 
ing, Puhlow & Troy. 
Types and Breeds of Farm -Vnimals, 
Plumb . 2.00 
I’roductive Pee-Keepintf, Pellett. l ’ 7 r> 
Productive Orcharding, Sears. 1 . 7.5 
Manual of Milk Products, Stocking... 2.00 
'I'oniato Culture, Tracy. 00 
Farni Manures, Thorne. l],50 
-Melon Culture, Troop. ,00 
Peas and Pea Culture, Severv. .»!() 
Fertilizers and Crops, Van Slyke. 2.50 
Fertilizers,-.Voorhees . i.r,o 
Forage Crops, Voorhees.’ Lr,0 
Productive Dairying, Washburn. 1.75 
Farm Management, Warren. 1.75 
Vegetable Gardening, Watts. 1-75 
Vegetable Forcing, Watts. 2.00 
American Peach Orchard, Waugh.... LOO 
Sheep in America, Wing. I.OO 
For sale by The Rural New-Yokker, 
3,33 West 30th St., New York. 
tv AX TED—Two good, sober men. draft exempt- 
one for driving tractor engines, steam and 
gasoline, and ono familiar with growing lettuce 
and cauliflower and other fanev vegetables on 
muck lamp state age, nationality, wages re- 
iiuired, with board. Reply to ADVERTISER 
40(;!i, caro Rural Xew-Yorker. 
V\ .VX'I'ED—Cook and also housemaid for faniilv 
of five; good wages; family go to seaeoast iii 
.Summer; refereneos required'. .MRS. WILI I VM 
B. WOOD, Hudson, X. Y. nu-i.i.v.M 
Situations Wanteci 
1.75 
1.75 
2.00 
1.00 
1.75 
1.00 
1.75 
2.00 
1.00 
.00 
POSITION wanted by a tboronglily proficient 
general farm and jirivate Restate manager’of 
proven ability and exceptional record; present 
liosition includes successful management of one 
of the most extensive uiul iiroininent private 
estates in the East; well qualified in eonstruc- 
tion, improvements, reclamation of soil and 
animals. WILLAltD niOST, Claveraok, N, X, 
^ middleaged woman. .Vddress 
ADV I-RTISER 4077, caro Rural New-Yorker. 
F-VRMER, 29 years, wau.t,s position on jirivate 
or big place; long experience with macliinerv 
and tractors; good references. G. M., 104 East 
St., New York. 
88 tli 
MAN, 31, subject to military duty, anxious to 
ser\e his countr.v, seeks eiiijiloynient on .a 
near New York City. No exjierieiice, 
11 Q Of '"oderate. HAROLD FRANK. .541 W. 
113 Street, Xew York City. 
farm 
salary 
PO.SITION WAXTED BY (’ARPEXq’E It—All¬ 
round mechanic; iinderstauds fariniiig; own 
toof.s; -\mericaii, married, ono small child; tem¬ 
perate and reliable; first-class references- state 
wages, ^loin-s, etc. WALTER SHERWOOD, Dnii- 
POULTRY-M.\X W.\XTS POSITION—Six years’ 
roforonce Irom last employer and others; un¬ 
derstand all branches of poultry work; eon- 
genial snrroiindiiigs prefer.able to large wages 
YoiZlT 4078, care Rural Xewl 
HLRD.s.MAN, middle aged, single, life exjierlenco 
m feeding breeding and calf-raising, milking, 
etc., fiest reference, wislies steady posifion; state 
wages. ADVERTLSER 4079, care Rural Xew^ 
Yorker. 
per bii.; eggs, 36c; hay, 
Potatoe.s, $1 
.$22; rye straw, $18. Halves, 15c per lb.! 
hve_ weight; cows, $90 to $125. Milk, 
$2..>0 per 1(X) lbs. at creiuuery. Xot much 
grain .sold and very little butter. i<’. n. 
Dutchess Co., X’. Y. 
.Standard middlings, $2.65 per cwt.; 
flour middlings, .$3 per cwt.; oats, $2.85 
for 2 bu.; flour, per bag, 241/^ lbs., $1.75 ; 
stock cows, $80 to $125; calves, 15c per 
lb.; horses $50 to $300 each; young pigs, 
si.x weeks old $10 per jiair. r. n 
Ulster Co., X. Y. 
The farmers here are getting 38c for 
eggs; white potatoes, 50c for %-bu. bas¬ 
ket; sweet potatoe.s, $1.40 to $1.50 per 
hiisket, as per quality, although a few 
weeks ago sweets .sold low iu the market. 
I he early sowings of rye are looking well 
here. _ Truck crops are showing up well. 
This is a fruit section ; many acres are 
devoted to the growing of small fruits and 
there are many acres of peach orchards, 
several fine apple orchards and some few 
))ears. These orchards are looking very 
Well, and prospects for good crops are ex¬ 
cellent, but it is too early to feel sure. 
Vyhile the peach trees are not so full of 
bloom as last year, there is enough for 
piofitable ci*ops. Many late tomatoes 
are grown here for the canning factory, 
which is located at Winslow ; the owner 
of this plant is offering the growers $25 
per ton ; $,30 per ton is being paid at 
some places and the growers here think 
they ought to have $.30 also and are hold¬ 
ing out firmly for the $30. Farmers here 
are tortnnate in having canning factories 
close at Imiu.. A fine plant is going up 
here that will or ought to be a good thing 
tor oiu- neighborhood ; it is being built by 
Hamilton & Hansell, Inc., of New York, 
this plant will be a large one. The 
n.sual acreage will be plantevl to the 
various crops grown here, regardless of 
scarcity of help. The farmers here are 
tn patriotic and are subscribing to 
the Third Liberty loan royally. This 
means victory for our home laud and the 
perpetuation of tho.se institutions which 
leml to make life worth while. b b 
Camden Co., X. ,1. 
CULL BEANS 
clay. 
21 to 26% protein. Free from stones and 
Prices delivered, bags included. 
NEW YORK POINTS. «55,00 Ton 
NEW JERSEY POINTS . 55.00 
PENNSYLVANIA POINTS . 50.00 
NEW ENGLAND POINTS . 50.00 
A great feed for sheep, hogs or cattle. Order today. 
Stocks limited. 
GOODELLS ELEVATOR CO.. PORT HURON. MICH. 
DO YOU 
NEED 
FARM 
HELP? 
We have many able-bodied young 
men, mostly without far in i n g 
experience, who wish to work 
on farms. If you need a good, 
steady, sober man, write for an 
order blank.Ours is a philanthrop¬ 
ic organization and we make no 
charge to employer or employee. 
THE JEWISH AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY 
176 Second Avenue N. Y. City 
If in Need of Farm or Garden Help 
of any description, write to Mr. G. M. Hessels, Secre 
tbeAgncultuialaiKl Industrial Labor Relief 
ll-J15ioadway,NewYork. All services rendered free 
Subscribers’Exchange 
Thf/Rate“wni‘ho it known here, 
inia uatL will be 5 Cento a word, payable in advance Thu 
name and address must be countedas part of the advertmo- 
N.®. diaplay type used, and only Farm Products Hein 
fv.'il Wanted admitted, for subscribers only 
Dealers, jobbers and general manufacturers' announcements 
I’nnitry. Eggs and other li“ stock advor- 
xf' proper headings on other pages 
ttis^coTumn!”"^^'^^ advertisements will not bo accepted for 
Farm Help Wanted 
WfV.NlLD—Working foreman for genera! farm: 
single; good milker; steady po.sitioii; state 
age, referenee. and salary expected in first let¬ 
ter. 1<ARM MANAGER, Retreat, I’a. 
WANTED—Single man on dairy farm; use milk¬ 
ing machine; little hand milking; wages $40 
per month and board; year-around job for right 
references. AD- 
VERllSLR 407o, ca re Rural New-Yorker. 
" Two herdsmen for a herd 
of bO cows; must produce A1 grade milk with 
DeJ-aval milking machines; no other work, but 
stables and cows must be kept clean and fed for 
*!«'’cing. FAIROAKS EAR-M, 
I. O. Box 103, I rovidence, R. I. 
lOULfRYM.VX—Unmarried young man desires 
position as working manager of poultry farm; 
live years’ experience; Goniell training; familiar 
with all mod'ern inethod.s of management and 
hreeding for egg proilncUon; best of references; 
draft exeinpteil, ADVERTISER 4072, care Ru¬ 
ral New-Yorker. 
SHEEPMAN would' like 
or will establish sucli 
.viring and ajiiirecial ing 
first-clas.s proposition 
to manage slieeji ram-h, 
a farm for any ono de- 
coinjmtent service; only 
consi(h“red; referenee. 
ADVERTISER 4081, care Rural -New-Yorker. 
E-NPERIENCED FAR.M MANAGER wants posi¬ 
tion on farm wliere comjietent, hone.st manage- 
inenl will be aiijUM-ciated; Ihorouglily exjierienced 
in tile care of slieej), also cows, swine and jioul- 
Iry; wife first-class butter-maker; best of refer¬ 
ence. ADVERTISElt 4080, care Rural New- 
1 orker. 
AGRIGI’LtuRIST. graduate of Ooniell, experi¬ 
enced 111 most branches of fanning and iu es¬ 
tate numugenient, desires manager’s position on 
a jilace where business sinu'ess rather than per¬ 
sonal servi.-e is sought; highest references: two 
claldrcn; will hoard no licl]); u])ou Soptenihor 1 
or later. .VDVEKTISER 4074, care Rural New- 
1 orker. 
years, inunied, graduate of a 
Netherland Agricultural High School, with 
many years of experience as a farm manager 
and^ ,is a gardener, looks for a jiositioii as su- 
jierintendent or working munager on gentle¬ 
man’s estate or large farm; tirst-clas.s refer¬ 
ences. Write to .MR. M. HESSELS \gri- 
i-nlturai and ludnslrial Labor Relief ll'>3 
Broadway, New York. 
NOTICE—To Those Interested in Poultry and 
Dairy I'amiing; Bocanse of ad'ded business re¬ 
sponsibilities, the jirosent owner must dispose 
of his farm in Southern New England. This has 
been developed under his personal supervision to 
a jioint where the proceeds from poultry and 
dairy products are now running at .$4,2(X) per 
year. From this point revenue can be increased 
M% to 100% by extension of either or both 
lines. Present poultry capacity, 1,000 hens 
Valuable goodwill, built up through 8 years of 
advertising and sale of hatching eggs froin 
yards trap-nested, high-egg yielding and 
prize-winning birds. Present dairy c-ajiacity 15 
bead. Eight cents a quart being paid for milk 
at the d'oor. This l;i2-acre projierty, halt of 
which Is corn and potato land, lies on a high, 
soutlieast slope, with nninterruptwl 10-miIe 
view, including a lake and range of hills. Never- 
failing gravity spring water system; two brooks 
—one through pasture and the other through 
poultry yards; 75 apple and plum trees. Bun¬ 
galow sites might be sold off withoutdetriment 
to the remainder. Branch of Boston & Albany 
R. R. station at foot of farm. Markets, churches 
and schools near at hand. Buildings could not 
be duplicated for $14,000. These include a good 
J-rooni liouse, barn, modern henneries with ce¬ 
ment foundations, and' a 100-ton silo, all iu 
splendid repair. Machinery and tools, alp mod¬ 
ern, inventory at over $1,500. Cows and horses 
alone would sell for more than .$2,000. Scientific 
arrangomont lias eliminated the labor jiroldem' 
Ready for you to step right on to without laving 
out a cent beyond purchase price. 'I'lie above 
including everything, which must be insiieeted to 
have its soundness as an investment apjireeiated 
IS being offered for $13,000. 'I’erms if desired! 
AdV ress G. W. PIKE, P. <). Bo.x 1411, Sju-ing: 
held, .Mass. ‘ 
FOR S.\LH—300 acres on beautiful Seneea, Lake 
line hniestone region of Western Cenlnil -New 
iiTk: ..() acres best hearing orchard; tine Col¬ 
onial house: several other houses; modern dairv 
harn: land smooth and drained; six miles I'o 
Geneva: one mile to station; .annual 
000; lu'iee, .$45,000; $10,000 cash; 
R. S. POWELL, Geneva, N. Y. 
sales, $15,- 
hahince 5%. 
W.VNTED—House from May to October 9-io 
rooms, widiiii 50 miles New York: imist be 
located iu bealtliy neighborhood' and eonvenient 
Ironi railroad si a tion or Hudson River boat- re¬ 
plies must give full information reganling size 
iniiirovements, liow to get there from New York’ 
photograph of house. AIl- 
V EKII.SER 40(0, caro Rural New-Yorker. 
COM.MERCIALLY profitable 35-acro fruit farm 
lor sale: complete succession from .Tune to 
November: in first-class horticultural condition; 
Colonial liouse, eleven rooms; amjile outbuild¬ 
ings; two miles from Newburgh, N. Y., on State 
road, overlooking the river. Call on or address 
WM. McGANN, Newburgh, N. Y., Star Route. 
I'OR SALE OR RENT—Ten-acre farm, thirty 
miles from New York. For Sale—House and 
IVs acres of land. 20 miles from New York- 
also iH-.hcre lot. For particulars, address .1 r’ 
SPURRIER, 521 Prosjiect Ave., Bethlehem, Pa! 
I OR SAI.E—1,55 acres; house, barn; 8.50 fruit 
trees: team horses, .Ter.sey cow, calf, pigs, 
wagon, plows, tools, jiotatoes, for $7,000; first 
payment. .$2,500. ADVERTISER 4008, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
BE.yrTIFUL STONE COTTAGE and 25 acres 
suited to bees, jioultry, fruit, near Amherst, 
Ma.ssuelmsetts; price $1,700, part mortgage, 
•Vdu'ress R. G. DAYTON, Danbury, Conn. 
GOOD MILKER, willi small investment, share 
pi'olits and sa lary, inodoni Jersey farm; Phila¬ 
delphia. ADVERTISER 4073, care Rural New- 
Y orker. 
WILL PERSONS WITH -MONEY who would be 
interested in a sheep ranch, address WARREN 
BATES, Cayuta , N. Y., .Schuyler Co.? 
F.YILM of 100 acres, at Suiiside, Greene Co., N. 
y.; 40 acres tlllahle; halance timber and jius- 
tiire; 100 young pear trees; good house, barn 
wag<jn house and other buildings; as I have 
another farm adjoining tliis one of 100 acres! 
cannot work them botli. and will siicrilice above 
one to (jiiick buyer for $1,000. R.VLPH Itl'- 
LAND, .Suiiside, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm containing 15 acres 
one-foiirtli mile from town of 3,500 population. 
Yvitli splendid schools and churclies, situated oii 
Du Pont Boulevard; farm equijipod as follows: 
incubating capacity, 9,000 eggs; brooding ca¬ 
pacity, 12.000 chicks; laying houses for 4,000 
bens; oOO apple trees; large bou.se 
11 rooms; the owners are engaged 
ness and cannot give this the 
'I’HE DEL.VWARE EGG 
containing 
in otlicr busi- 
proper attention. 
FAR.Yl, Milford, Del. 
FOR SALE—I’oiiltry lot; about 1 acre: house 
buildings. Address A1..M.\. \ AX- 
WINKLE, R 1, Alleiiwood, I’a. 
WAN I ED Small farm or country lujnie, ,5 to ’’o 
acroS’ within five miles of New York Central 
or New Haven R. IL, and forty miles from New 
loik t.ity; house must bo iu first-class eoiidilion 
.and not exceeding eight rooms; give full par¬ 
ticulars .and lowest price in first letter, witli 
returned. Address J. 
VV-Vt.NLR, 1 ernbrook St., Yonkers, N. y. 
B. 
ESTABLISHED poultry business, well adver- 
tised, fully equipped: a high-class custom; 
1,500 hens; brooding capacity 
-..)00 chicUs; incubator, new, 0,000 eggs* run- 
n ng water system; barns, stables, horse, cow 
all larming implements; motor truck, etc.; now 
L ?• opportunity. Address 
^D\ LRIISLK 30(9, care Rural New-Yorker. 
SINIjLL man wishes iiositiou on large fruit 
runii or ('state; e.xcellent refen'iiccs. AD¬ 
VERTISER 4007, caro Rural New-Yorker. 
YVAXTKD—I’ositioii by jiractiiail duiryniau or 
lierdsmaii; single: no draft; Swedish; I thor¬ 
oughly understand purebred Jerseys: good milker 
and lirst-elass butter-maker: A1 reference; open 
lor .May 1st; prefer private place. .VDVER- 
TISER 4055, caro Rural New-Yorker. 
ORCHARD FARM FOR SALE—A fine, all-round 
larm, 800 young trees, 1,000 bbls. a y('ar, good 
biiildings, pleasantly located. Write to O. A. 
BRY.VNT, R. p. D. 2, Livermore Falls, .Maine! 
Miscellaneous 
FOR SALE—0 tons of dough scrap; finest feed 
for pigs on niarkel: juice $20 per ton f. o. h. 
Whitestone, L. I. REN. REYER. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
W anted— lO acres, 5 in good bearing vineyard 
in the grajie bidt. witli fairly good buildings. 
E. N. GR.VY, Route 3, Knox, I’a. 
FOR SALE—Boarding liouses ami farm: i;i(: 
acres, at Freeliold. Greene Co., New York; 
The Oiikwood”; 1,800 feet altitude; best mouii- 
taiii view of (‘iitiia^ Catskill range; aeeomiiio- 
dating (5 guests; large harn: iee house; garage; 
other oiitbuilil'ings. j’or j)arli( ulars, address 
owner, E. A. BROOKS, Freehold, Greene Co., 
York. 
New 
FOR SALE—Farm, 2,35 acres; 100 acres under 
cultivation; balance in saw timber; 5 miles from 
Easton, county seat of Talbott Co., -Maryland'; 
70 acres growing wlieat, 40 for corn, 12 for 
tomatoes; balance sod: fine buildings; good 
roads; school, church and cannery,- '/, mile. W. 
S. HOOVER, owner, Route No. 2, Easton, Md. 
FOR ,S-\r,E—Very clioice 
jier gallon, (’. O. D. 
124, Eloomville, N. Y. 
new majile syrup, $2 
ERNEST HELD, Rox 
FOR SAI.E—Eight cais extra nice 
Iiress(‘d: Long Island customers 
large bales. T. S. EGGLESTON 
Springs, N. Y. 
bay, now 
jua'ferred: 
Saratoga 
I'HOU'E.ST Vermont maple syrup and sugar, di- 
rcct from the best cauips to customers; uuiple 
s.vruj) in one-gal. euns. $1.85; half gal. cans 
.loo per can; niajile sugar in 2, 7 and' 13 lb tins' 
2i)c j)er lb. F. o. R. Rupert, Vt. Remit with 
order. J.VY T. S-MI'I'H, Rupert, Vt. 
SALE—Two new 'I'wo-way John Deere Ridi-g 
firiee $55 each; bargain. SUDLER 
BROTHERS, Bridgeville, Dela. 
FOR SALE—Avery Tractor, 5-10 II.I*.; sliglitly 
used: perfect order; reasonable. REUBEN 1*. 
ELY, Hill.side Farm, New Hope, Pa. 
TRACTOR FOR SALE—Mogul 8-l(i, used oiilv 
one week; in storage for year; now at Rye'. 
N. Y. Ajiply ADVERTISER 40t!5, care RuVal 
New-Yorker, 
