CONTENTS 
THE HURAE NEW-YORKER, AUGUST 31, 1918 
FARM TOPICS 
“Back to the Hills” ''l017, 1018 
The Final Cost of Food. 1018 
Chemical Fertilizers and Live Stock. 1018 
Farm Institutes in Schoolhouse. 1019 
Plow Early for Wheat.1019, 1020 
The Hateful White Grub. 1021 
Poisoning Ants . 1021 
Hope Farm Notes. 1022 
Crops and Farm Notes. 1022 
Up-State Farm Notes. 1025 
Coming Farmers’ Meetings. 1030 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY 
Will Dairymen Support a Friend? 1025 
A Wool Growers’ Association. 1025 
A Statement About Wage Prices. 1025 
Care of Breeding Sire. 1030 
Live Stock Sales. 1030 
A High-Record Guernsey. 1032 
Raising a Calf. 1032 
Buying the Family Pig. 1032 
Dogs and Sheep. 1032 
THE HENYARD 
Putting the Hens on a Ration. 1018 
Controlling Fleas in Henhouse. 1021 
Notes from a Maryland Garden. 1023 
Weeds in the Garden. 1023 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day. 1028 
Canning and Preserving Tomatoes... .1028, 1029 
Chemicals in Place of Laundry Soap. 1029 
Cucumbers in Brine; Chow Chow. 1029 
The Rural Patterns. 1029 
Embroidery Design . 1029 
MISCELLANEOUS 
Finding a Pot of Money. 1018 
That Cosgrove Woodchuck. 1022 
A Household Corn Drier. 1023 
Editorials . 1024 
The New Draft Law. 1025 
Events of the Week. 1030 
Publisher’s Desk . 1034 
Country-Wide Produce Conditions. 1034 
Countryside Produce Conditions 
(Contimiod from page lO.'Jd.) 
the West, and they are likely to be puslu'd 
for export and as a {)artial substitute for 
meat. About 75.000 bushels per week 
have bt'en going to Belgium lately. Con¬ 
siderable quantities of old beans were 
held over for lack of ready market. The 
peach supply becomes lighter as the sea¬ 
son advances northward. Yield appears 
to be light north of the latitude of New 
.Tersey, .‘ind the movement is likelj’ to be 
scant.v from most districts in Colorado, 
Michigan, New Y^ork and Connecticut. 
I’rices have continued high, r.anging 
mostly to if4 i)er carrier, or per buslnd. 
in leading markets. Sweet potatoes have 
be(“n selling at rather high prices, rang¬ 
ing $7 to .$8.50 per bbl., in consuming 
inarket.s. Watermelons, likewise, have 
become r:ither scarce, shipments declining 
sharply the last of August, and prices at 
times exceeding .$S0() per carload in New 
York for desirai)le sizes. The extreme 
Southern crop is about done, but consid¬ 
erable shipments are coming from the 
middle .Vtlantic sections. Muskinelons 
have shown wide variations in price, at 
tinn's :i(lvancing or declining 100 per cent 
in the course of a wf'ek. Ileav.v ship¬ 
ments have been coming from (California 
in addition to the regular arrivals from 
the Southern Atlantic (’oast section. 
0. R. F. 
My immedi.’ite locality is not much of a 
f.-irming section; most farmers have some 
fide line of business, either taking Sum¬ 
mer boarders or lumbering. Butter, 45c 
at stores; eggs. 5.5c; fat calves, 14c per 
lb. T’otatoes .$2. with prospects of about 
half a crop, as every field is killed with 
I'livht. Pigs, .$5. rhicKens, ,‘15c per lb. 
Plster Co., N. Y. E. L. 
Tn this section of Morris County the 
vield of wheat was below the average; the 
same with hay ; oats very good ; prospects 
for corn not encouraging Much of the 
seed failed to germinate and many of the 
fields do not promise large yields.^ A few 
good pjitchc'S of potatoes, but blight and 
dry weather have injured niiiny of them. 
T’rices for produce as follows: Corn, 
.$2.25 per cwt.; oats, .$1 per bn.; broilers, 
40c per lb. : fowls. 20c. Berries are 
scarce. Apples and peaches below the 
average. Not much truck for market 
grdwn here. Sweet corn is selling at 20c 
per dog. M. A. C. 
Morris Co., N. ,T. 
Butter. 4()c; fat calves, lOc per lb.; 
gr.ass calves, 10c jier lb.; chickens, 40c 
per lb.; hens, 2Sc per lb.; ducks, 20c per 
lb.; turkeys, 2.Sc per lb.; eggs, 50c; po¬ 
tatoes. .$2 per bu.; oats, $1 per bu.; 
buckwheat. $1.85; wheat, $2.50. Oats 
are good; corn and buckwheat fairly 
good. TTay very late, not more than half 
a crop. Potatoes look well; rye and 
wheat are not more than half of a crop, 
winter-killed. Cows sell from .$75 to 
.$100; depends on what they are. Sheep 
from $15 to $20. C. V. T. 
Albany Co., N. Y. 
Our leading crops are hay. wheat, oats, 
corn, tobacco and potatoes. The hay crop 
was short and we can get $20 for Timo¬ 
thy and $14 for mixed hay. Wheat is 
short in straw but thra.shes fairly well, 
price $2.18 per bu. and $1*2 a ton for the 
straw. The oat crop was all that could 
be expected and we get 75c per bu. Corn 
is rather short in fodder, on account of 
dryness during July, but recent rains 
seem to turn out a full cro?). We get 
$1.75 per bu. for old com. Potatoes are 
about a half crop and sell at $1.40 a bu. 
to the farmer. Tobacco looks promising 
with 710 price as yet. Bggs 20c per doz. 
to the farmer and butter 40e. Milk that 
is shipped. $2.10.per cwt. I sell all my 
milk retail at the house at 8c a <it. As 
a rule the farmers prosper because they 
are used to economy. s. H. s. 
r.ancaster Co., Pa. 
Your cniince is in Civnada. Rich lands ;i ml 
business opport unities ofYei' you independence. 
Fai-m lands Sll to $30 an iicre; iridg.ated lands 
$;?.■) to $00. ’I’wenry yeiii-s lo jiay; $3,000 loan 
in improventents, or ready-made farms. Loan 
of livestock. Taxes average under twenty 
cents an acre; no taxes on improvements, per¬ 
sonal property or livestock. Good m.ai-kets, 
clmrclies, schools, road.s, telephones. Excel¬ 
lent climate—ci'ops and livestock prove it. 
Special homeseeker.s’ fare certificates. Write 
for fi'ce booklets. Allan (iame.ro!i, fteneral 
Superintendent Land Branch, Canadian I'a- 
cific Railway, fdO Nittth Avenue. Calgary, 
Alberta. 
Fflrmpp Anpnt« teas, coffees, pure 
lailllttl tiyclIIS food PRODUCTS. Good prollts. 
Any quantity, 1 pound up. Send lor wholesale price list. 
I3IPOUTEUS MILLS CO., Dipt. H, 173 Greenwich St., Mew Terk City 
Subscribers^ Exchange 
If you want to buy or sell or exchansre. make It known here. 
This Rate will be 5 Cents a word, payable in advance. The 
name and address must be counted as part of the advertise¬ 
ment. No display type used, and only Farm Products, Help 
and Positions Wanted admitted. For subscribers only. 
Dealers, jobbers and ffcncral manufacturers' announcements 
not admitted here. Poultry, E(r(?s and other live stock adver¬ 
tisements will go under proper headin^rs on other payees. 
Seed and Nursery advertisements will not be accepted for 
this column. 
Copy must reach us not later than Friday morning; 
to appear in the following week's issue. 
Farm Help Wanted 
"WANTED—A woi'king liousokeoi)er for .a faniil.v 
of three in a fariiihonse with modern con¬ 
veniences close to the railroad and town: .a 
good home for a roeiproeatiiig t)art.v. .\ddress 
I’ROF. H.\Y’\VARD, Delaware College, Newark, 
Delaware. 
W.VNTED—Two women to do cooking and hotise- 
work in the eotintry; must not object to chil¬ 
dren and must understand living on a farm. 
A(rdress ADVER'l'ISER 4307, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
W.VNTED—Male attendants and firemen to work 
in an institution: salary $45 a month and 
malntemince. Apitly to SUI’ERIN’l'ENDENT, 
Leteliworth Village, Thiells, N. Y. 
E.VMIUV OF WORKERS W.-VN'I'E!) to t.ake charge 
of highly im|)roved small farni_ln Virginia; 
got'<l l•llnnee for the riglit pooi)le to make a 
l>rofltahle and |iernianent arrangement. .Vddresn 
1'. O. l!OX 137, Winchester, Va. 
W.VNTED—Farmer, married, good i)raetleal man, 
sohf'r and indnstrions. eai)ahle of taking 
charge: must tinderstand crop rotation, care of 
sheep and hogs, and the general care of farm 
on iirivate estate; good wages and modern lionse 
to the right man. .Vddress, giving full particu¬ 
lars. to JOHN A. FORRES, Loretto, I’a. 
M.VN to take charge of farm, $»;0: good house, 
fuel, milk, garden. ADVER'l’ISER 4321, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Married man for general work 
jroniid eonntr.v house, 70 miles from New 
York; no ohjeellon to one eluid; reference. Ad¬ 
dress ADVER'l’ISER 42.54, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
F.VMH.Y’ of four adults want mature wom.aii 
for housework and plain <-ooking; no washing; 
near snlinrhiin stalion, IH miles from New York. 
-Vddress E. I’. C., care I’osimaster, Great Notch, 
N. .7, 
WANTED—-Young tnarried farmer wiio knows 
liow to handle team: ))ermanent |)osition for 
right man to enllivate and haul trees and iilants; 
experience in nnrser.v not necessary, as work 
is such as any farmer could <lo. ROSED.VLE 
F.VRM, 'J'arrytown, N. Y. 
W.VNTED .VP ONCE—Reliable, single, middle- 
aged, iiraetleal lamltryman. MR.S. WILLIAM 
DART, Dart’s, Herkimer Co., New York. 
F.VR.MER—Dairyman wanted: married man wlio 
lliorongiily tmderstands cattle, to care for 
vahiahle Guernst-y lierd; high wages; all ttriv- 
ileges; advancement. Call or addr<‘sa SH.VG- 
R.VRK FAI!M. R. F. D. No. 3, Rox 151, Sanger- 
ties, N. Y. 
W.VNTED—Cai)ahle woman to can* for famil.v of 
two; new liouse, all modern improvements; 
7 )erinanent position. MR.S. NFILSON T. 
F.VRKER, Woodstock, Ulster Co., N. Y. 
WAN'I'KI)—Married man, general farm work, 
S. W. I’a.; stead.v job. $40 a month; increase 
If satisfactory; house, fuel, milk; garden fnr- 
nished. .Vi)pl.v, with references, ED TANSKY, 
Manager Daisy Town, Da. 
WANTED—-2 experienced i>Iowmen accustomed 
to ‘ handling draft mares: good wages ami 
board; tran«|)ortation refunded if satisfactory 
after first month; only men of gO(Hr character 
will be taken; references. LONE OAK FARM, 
Warren, Va. 
WANTED—Married man for general work on a 
farm, reliable and ext)erienced: house and fuel 
proviifed; in reply state references and wages 
expected: also a man for work in the dairy as 
milker; farm locateil near Morristown, N. J. 
ADVER'l'ISER 4325, cure Rural New Yorker. 
GENER.VL SINGLE M.VN—Cliores; experienced 
feeding, caring for pigs, drive one horse. go(><l 
milker: year-round i)osition: age, wages desired. 
ADVERTISER 4337, care Rural New-Yorker. 
HERDSMEN—Holstein lierd; milking machine; 
modern barns; $70; house, wood for fuel, gar¬ 
den. milk. ADVER'l'ISER 4320, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—.Vssistant farm manager and agricul¬ 
tural instructor: dormitory and athletics. 
Ai)ply RIGGS, Lakeville, Conn. 
WAN'l'ED—Connfr.v woman, middle-age, for 
general housework In a country home, with 
modern imitrovements: no lanndr.v work: 3 in 
family; answer: reference. .VDVERTISER 4323, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM 'I'EAMS'l'ER—I^arge farm; temiterate, ac¬ 
tive single man; state age. wages desired; 
t)ermanent situation. WAUWINET F.VRM, 
Rarre, 'lass. 
W.VN’I'ED—-Man for general farm work; dry- 
hand milker and teamster; state age. iia- 
tionalitv. ex|ierienee, wages in first letter. P. 15. 
WHITEHEAD, Qnakertown, I’enna. 
W.VNTED—Married man, farm work and assist 
with registered herd beef cattle; $05; house, 
etc; permanent: Westchester. ADVEICriSER 
4331, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Single man for orchard; experience 
in pnining and' s|)ra.ving necessary; wages $80 
tier month. -Vd<lress JOILN A. FORRES, Lo¬ 
retto, Pa. 
W.VNTED—Holstein herdsman with knowledge 
of sheep; references required: state wages ex- 
Iieeted and experience. -Vddress ADVERTISER 
42.57, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Kxi)erieneed man for general farm 
work: some milking and teaming to do; good 
Ann'iiean Iiome in Western Massaelinsetts. 
SUNSET FARM, Shelburne. .Mass. 
IIERDSM.VN W.VNTED for small herd of regis¬ 
tered (Riernse.vs: must he tlioronghl.v exiteri- 
eneed: lierd recently started on new place; barns 
and lierdsman’s house, new and motrern; $70 
and iirivileges; advancement to riglit person; 
send copy of references, exiierienee. ete. AD¬ 
VERTISER 4311, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Situations Wanted 
ORCH.VRDIST—Years of practical experience 
growing, packing .and marketing fruit on a 
large scale: nothing but a first-cla.ss iiroposition 
considered, where there is snllicient help and an 
up-to-date equipment. Inquire ADVERTISER 
4288, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POSITION WANTED h.v experienced farmer and 
gardeii<*r. REN DORZENSKI, Rox 432, Roslvn, 
L. I.. N. Y. 
F.VRVf SUPERINTENDENT or manager, good 
worker, wishes position gentleman’s farm or 
estate; temperate. ex]iert ’witli all farm ma- 
chi ler.v. rotation of farm and garden crops; good 
herdsman and veterinary, handling large estate 
and herds of registered stock; liandy with tools: 
do all repairs; can drive antoniohile; tiiarrleif; 
references. ADVERTISER 432(!, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
GENER.VL MECH.VNIC (35), 20 years exiie- 
rienee In eariientry; can al.so repair and oper¬ 
ate farm macliinery, sneh as motors, pumps, 
generating idants, etc.; emidoyed at present as 
licensed <'lianfC»*nr and mechanie; position on a 
large farm iireferred. M. RPn'ER, 192 l.exing- 
ton Ave., New York. 
EXPERIENCED POULTRY.MAN, married, to 
manage any commercial or tirivate tilant; can 
also manage farm. .VDVERTISER 4318, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
I’OIT.TRV'M.VN, single, draft eiennit. desires 
situation: several years’ practical extierience 
In .all branches; reliable and conscientiona 
worker; references. ADVER'l'ISER 4319, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
MARRIED M.VN, competent in farming and 
vegetable gardening, exiierieiu'eti' in raising 
chickens, liandy with all kinds of tools and re- 
Iiuir work, can show ri-snlts, wishes position. 
Address WILLIAM .MOP.UENWECK, 702 I’ark 
Ave., Weehawken, N. J. 
FARMER—Exiierieneed in dair.v. garden and' 
all around; soiall family. TRIMPE, Rox 3!), 
Peekskill, N. Y. 
F.VRM OWNER wants position as manager of 
small farm or eonntry place. Gov. taking 
own farm reason for cliunge. Aibfress ADVER¬ 
TISER 4332, care Rural New-Yorker. 
HERDSMAN—Single, deferred elasslfleation, ag- 
rieultnral si'liool graduate, four years A. R. 
experience and production of certified milk; ex¬ 
cellent Imtterniaker; state wages and jiroposl- 
tion in first letter. ADl'ERTISER 4.3.33, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
POSI'ITON W.VNTED—A working farm manager 
wUli wide e.xi«*rieiiee wishes a etiange; mar¬ 
ried, .Vmeriean, tinderstanding all Iiranelies, 
dairy, garden, iioiiltry, ami fruit, amf liitndlliig 
men: location williin 100 mib'S of Roston. Ad¬ 
dress ROX 17, Minis, .Mass. 
P.VSTRY COOK fr.'in a eonntr.v hotel, able to 
milk, cliiirn. etc., seeks work on a fartn. 
Wages $5 weekly. Replies |o ADVERTISER 
4330, care Rural New-Yorker. 
EXl’ERIENCED M.VN wants iiosition on gentle¬ 
man’s tilace. ADVERTISER 4328, earc Rural 
New-Yorker. 
POSITION W.VNTED as working nianager; many 
years practical exiierienee; stock, poultry, 
farm crops, vegetables, fruits, llowers, cte.; 
capable, temperate and reliable; please state 
particulars. ADVERTISER 4334, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
F.VRM M.VNAGER, witli fourteen years jiraetleal 
experience on. two high-class farms in N. Y. 
State, open for (•ngagement; can bring herds¬ 
man, milker, t(“amster; married: no small eliil- 
dren; draft exempt: best references. .VDVER- 
TISKR 4327, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POCLTRYM.VN, managed one plant sneeessfnll.y 
12 years, (fesires position as working manager 
on large plant or estate; expert inenhator and 
brooder man; living salary and profit-sharing 
basis; .Vmeriean. niiirried. .VDVERTISER 4.32!t, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
F.VRMER—Experienced in all lirancli(*s <if np- 
to-d'ate farming and gardening: married; no 
children; will considt'r also proposition as part¬ 
ner in up-to-date place. H. I’ETERS, 322 E. 
(iOtli St., New York. 
WANTED—Position as farm manager or fore¬ 
man by practical, competent, tlioronghly ex¬ 
perienced farmer; tun married, witli family; can 
give A-1 reference. .VDVERTISER 4.340, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRYM.VN, at present emplo.ved, d<‘sires 
to make a cimnge: thoroughly experieneetf and 
eapahle of tiiking full charge of plant: sliow 
results; temperate; best references. ADVER¬ 
TISER 4335, care Rural New-Yorker. 
AT LIRERTY—competent farm manager; can 
take full charge of an.v large farming busi¬ 
ness, dairying, stock-raising; years of experience 
In up-to-date farming: seientilic knowledge, 
backed by experh'iiee; single man, trustworthy, 
ellicient. KINCAID, Rox 27. Rellows Falls, Vt. 
PRACTIt'.VL F.VR.MER seeks position on up-to- 
date place wliere results count: life experience 
witli all farm crops, ninctiincry, tractor.s; also 
milking macliines; A-1 stock and dairyman; 
would consider working well equipped place on 
sliares after first year (Conn, or Mass); Anier- 
ii-aii. 38, married, small family. solH*r; no to- 
liacco. .VDVERTISER 433(!, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
EI.DERLY SINGLE M.VN, care of furnace and 
chores, or caretaker ef small place for Winter. 
LOCK ROX 3. I.iiiie Rock, Conn. 
YOI'Nt! M.VN. American, wishes iiosition on 
up-to-date farm or estate as teamster, or op¬ 
erating farm tractor; best of experience in farm¬ 
ing amf dairying; strietl.v temperate: best of 
reference. ADVERTISER 4338, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
HERDSMAN wishes situation in a registered 
herd; life experience; good calf raiser and 
feeder; also fitting for the sliow ring; would like 
situation on private estate: married, 2 eliildren; 
Seotehman. .3.3 years of age; hustler; good wages 
and good cottage expected; references. Address 
ADVERTISER 4310, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FDR SALE—Poultr.v farm containing 15 acres, 
one-fonrth mile from town of 3,500 population, 
with splendid schools and chnrclics, situated on 
Du Pont Roulevard; farm equipped as follows; 
incubating capacity, 9,000 eggs; brooding ca¬ 
pacity, 12,000 chicks; laying houses for 4,000 
hens; 500 apple trees; large house containing 
11 rooms; the owners are engaged in other busi¬ 
ness and cannot give this the proper attention. 
THE DELAWARE EGG FARM. Milford, Del. 
W.VNTED—Experienced and relialde farmer to 
work on shares good farm in Ulster Co., New 
York; suitable buildings, bouse, etc.; liberal 
arrangement to riglit man; owner liies on 
premises. P. O. ROX 3.3(;, New Rrnnswiek, 
W.VN3'ED—10 to 50 acres; .Icrsey preferred; 
will consider a place without buildings If 
cheap; 3 acres must he cleared. .VDVEH- 
TISER 4324, care Rural New-'Vorker. 
F.VRM FOR S.VT.E—Would make a gooif sheep 
farm. Imiuire of FREDERICK W. TURNER, 
Gales Perry, Conn. 
.V T..VRGE F.VRM in Western Massaelinsetts 
wants a eompetont farm foreman to take 
<*liarge of outside farm work; preference given 
an .Vgricnitural College man witli practical ex¬ 
perience in Iiand'ing large farming operations 
and a proven record of sneeessfni management 
of men; applicants, pleast* state fully age, ex¬ 
perience and training: time employed'in various 
positions: enclose copy of references. .VDVER- 
TL8ER 4339, care Rural New-’V’orker. 
W.VSHINGTON is tiie best market in .Vmerica, 
and it is onr market. Have 200 acres best 
land in Virginia to rent on better terms tlian a 
man ever received, but he must tie a good man; 
stream entire front of farm; silo, sliipping sta¬ 
tion on place; if man wanted to ship milk or 
general farming and market gardening; a great 
eliance for a good man; have all teams anrl im¬ 
plements needed. H. E. T.T.VIDS, Oakton, Va. 
FOR 8.VI.E—-Reantiful salt-w*ater front farm. 
Eastern shore of Maryland; 240 acres, 100 un¬ 
der onltivatlon, lOO more tillable if cleared; 
enongU timber to more tiian pay for farm, if 
tnarketed properly; splendid lieaeli, fine linntiiig, 
lisliitig; good buildings; price $J5.000; terms. 
W. J. VESSEY, 8helltown, Maryland. 
REURY AND TRUCK FARM—42 acres. 20 till- 
aide, halanoe tiinher and eordwood; 5-room 
house, 5 ontliuildings; 2 miles to shipping sta¬ 
tion; 3 canneries: Iiorse, wagons, all farming 
implements, crops Included; price .$l,<‘i00, part 
easli. C. VOSS, IMttsville, Md. 
FOR S.VLB or 3’R.VDE—100-ncre farm In Dela¬ 
ware for Biiinll place In Penn, or Ohio. AD¬ 
VERTISER 431*!, care Rural New-Yorker, 
W'.V.'93'ED—Good farm, Southern New England. 
ADV Ein'ISER 4317, care Rural New-Yorker. 
N-K'E 8(5-.VCRE village farm, Colnmhla (Wnniv; 
good set bniltfings. exeelleiit soil. ADVEil- 
TI.SER 4322, care Rural New-Yorker. 
F.VR.M of IS acres; good linildiiig, eight-room 
house, five hundred fruit trees, near shipping 
pidiit A. L. EVERTSON, Atlieus, tireene Co., 
N. Y. 
Di-ACRE TOP.ACCO F.VIOI FOR SALE-^Iii Lan- 
easter Comity, Pa., 11 miles east of LaiK’aster; 
bank barn, 42x94, 9-rooin brick house, 2fi.x4*>, 
ail modern coiivenieiiees; clii<*ken bouse; send for 
description and photograph. WILLIS R. KNOX, 
Intercourse, Pa. 
AT'rR.VCTIVE F.VRM FOR SALK—9.5 a<*res, on 
State road, 7*1 miles from New York eit.v: 
price $10,500. RROOKHURS'P I’.VltM, Hopewell 
Junction, N. Y. 
FOR RENT—Unnsnal opportunity to rent farm 
'll the Rlne Ridge Moimtains, 2*1 miles from 
Harrisburg, Pa.; equipped for raising poultry 
and pigeons on large scale; rnniiing water in 
every building; fifteen acres cultivated: railroad 
adjoins property; very attractive proposition; 
will be offered to right party. .Vddress M. R. F*., 
453 Title Bldg., Baltimore, Md. 
F.VRM W.VNTED—Give description and price in 
first letter. ADVERTISER 4300, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
Miscellaneous 
CIDER PRESS AND GRATER for sale. F. 
P.VIjMER, Coscob, Conn. 
YELLOW LOCUST TIMBER WANTED for Gov¬ 
ernment ships; best prices paid for standing 
timber, logs or plank; will contract with local 
saw mills for entire output; write or wire at 
once, giving details as to timber available in 
your vicinity: we manufacture exclusively for 
the T'nited States Shipping Board Emergency 
Fleet (’orporation. FOREST CORPOR.VTION, 
'I'arrytown, N. Y. 
FOR S.VI.E—Ihire woolen yarn .spun from the 
wool freiii onr own sheep; gray sock size only; 
75c skein, lb. WISEMAN FARMS, R. F. j). 
No. 2, Lewiston, Me. 
W.VNTED—Stump-puller; kind, price. C. B. 
Munson, R. F. D. 1, Burks, Va. 
FOR S.VLE—Two new tractor pbiws below cost. 
.VD\ ERTISKR 4301, care Rural N*'w-Yorker. 
WILL SELL or trade for Cande**. Si*ven Cyphers 
Iiunbators, and <*ash. Y.VRMOND POULTRY 
FARM, Freehold, N. J. 
INCT'H.VTOR HAROAINS—Candee 3.*)00: Prai¬ 
rie State 390, 240; Cyphers .390, 244, 144; 
Newtown Brooders No. I>, 7. 12; like new_ 
elieap. JUST.V POULTRY F.VRM, Southampton, 
N. Y. 
FOR S.VLE, or exchange, 8 lamp Inenhators, for 
brooder stoves. A, C. JONES, Georgetown, 
t)el. 
12-WOOI) SWING STANCHIONS, 1 Porter 
manure and 1 Porter feed carrier. 2(X) feet 
or more of track for same, used hut 2 years; 
will sell f. o. b. for two-thirds cost now. 
JOHN V. HAAS, Millington, N. J. 
FOR S.VLE—Hoover potato digger, with picker 
attaeliment: practically new; no use for it; 
sell at half price. B. F. KK.VN, Stanley, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—1 new 10-in. type 15, International 
Feed Orinder and sacking elevator; 1 new 
No. 20 Martin Ditcher and (Jraifer; 1 new reap¬ 
ing altaehment for 5-ft. Deering Mower. R. 15. 
H.VLL, Medway, Ma.ss. 
W.V.N'I'ED—Carload of .Vlfalfa hay: state qual¬ 
ity and price f. o.' b. J. P. IIYLAN, Stone- 
ham, Mass. 
