CONTENTS 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER, NOV. 9, 1918. 
FARM TOPICS - 
Care of Farm Belting.•.1257, 1258 
Seeding Alfalfa in the Mud. .1258 
The Wonderful Cow Pea Plant. 1258 
Food for the Soil—Legumes. 1259 
Advice to the Back-to-the-Lander.1259 
Crop Reports . 1261 
Corncobbing the Kaiser. 1262 
Countrywide Produce Conditions. 1262 
Sizing Up the-Produce Markets.1262 
Coming Farmers’ Meetings. 1262 
Buying Fertilizer in Advange. 1263 
Sowing Crimson Clover in November. 1267 
Hope Fanp Notes. 1268 
Selling Wheat to the Government. 1271 
Up-State Farm Notes. 1271 
LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY 
Profiteering in Milk. 1261 
Prospects, for Pork. 1263 
Rabbit' Hutches . 1266 
Milk Prices and the Dairymen’s League.... 1271 
Country Milk Company Affairs. 1271 
Milk Prices . 1271 
Care of Brood Sows. 1274 
Ration for Freshening Heifer. 1274 
Drying Off Cow... 1274 
Fattening Pigs; Cottonseed for Dairy Cows. 1274 
Cheapening Hog and Dairy Rations.... 1274, 1276 
Coughing Pigs . 1276 
Mammitis . 1276 
Wound. 1276 
Ringbone . 1276 
Indigestion . 1276 
Suspected Tuberculosis .'. 1276 
Worms ■. 1276 
Buckwheat Straw as Bedding. 1278 
Death of Hog. 1278 
Blood in Milk. 1278 
Fouls . 1278 
Grain with Mixed Hay. 1280 
Home-Mixed Dairy Feed. 1280 
Another Dairy Ration. 1280 
Ration for Thin Cow. 1280 
Ration for Jerse.ys. 1280 
Grain Ration with Mangels and Alfalfa... 1280 
Improving a Dairy Ration. 1280 
Ration -with Beets and Silage. 1280 
Ration for Pigs... 1280 
THE HENYARD 
Fresh Eggs and Patriotism. 1271 
Feeding for Egg Production. 1278 
Ailing Pullets . 
Poultry House Construction... 1278 
Egg-laying Contest . 1281 
Selecting the Layers. 1281 
HORTICULTURE 
Care and Treatment of Tree Seed. Part 1. 1259 
Notes from a Maryland Garden. 1260 
Sale for Cattails. 1260 
Winter Storage of Cannas. 1263 
Grafting Ben Davis. 1263 
Persimmon Cuttings . 1267 
A Veteran Fig Tree. 1269 
Treatment of Datura. 1269 
Eat Your Fence. 1269 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day. 1272 
More About Washing Fluid. 1272 
The Rural Patterns. 1272 
A Winter Week-End in a New York Farm¬ 
house ...1272, 1273 
Notes from Vermont. 1273 
Conventional Edging . 1273 
Apples in Many Styles. 1273 
Embroidery Designs . 1273 
MISCELLANEOUS 
Fireplace a Luxury. 1260 
Skunks and White Grubs. 1263 
Oats as Vermin Destroyers. 1263 
Home Grain Grinder. 1263 
Chemical Closets . 1264 
Water in Cellar . 1264 
Oil in Well Water. 1264 
Making Sorghum Syrup in Tennessee. 1265 
Whitewa.shing the Skunk. 1266 
More About the Skunk. 1266 
A Peace-making Cat. 1267 
Anti-rust Paint for Iron. 1267 
G.ood Roads Needed. 1267 
Editorials ..^. 1270 
Theory and Practice witlf Fuel. 1271 
Products, Prices and Trade. 1281 
Publisher’s Desk . 1282 
Produce, Prices and Trade 
(Continued from page 12S1) 
0 GAIN. 
Following :ire the ({overninent prices on 
I red wheat at various markets: 
New York. .liL'.nTyo ; Chicago. .$2.2:5; -St. 
I.ouis, .$2.21. No. 2 Yellow corn at New 
York, .$1.74').l ; Chicago. ,$l..o0. Oats, No. 
.‘5 white, New York, TSc; rye, .$1.77. 
N( 
Philadelphia Markets 
I5UTTEH. 
liest creamery prints. (5‘5 to (mc ; tub 
chtdce, t»0 to Glc; packing stock, :>{) to 
41c. 
EGGS. 
Nearby choice. 05 to 07c; gadiered, 
best. 57 to 59c; lower grades, 40 to 52c. 
LIVE POUI.TKY. 
Fowls, 29 to 32c; chickens, .‘50 to 32c; 
nuit-fers, 24 to 2Sc; ducks, 2S to 32c; 
guineas, pair, 75c to .$1.25. 
DRESSED POULTRY. 
Chickens. 35 to 40c; fowls, 34 to .38c; 
roosters, 28yc; ducks. Spring, .39 to 40c; 
squabs, doz., .$0 to .$8.25. 
FRUITS. 
"Apples, bbl., .$3 to .$7.50; pears, bbl., 
.$7 to .$10; grapes, ll-lb. bkt., 24 to .32c; 
cranberries, .$2.50 to ,$3.25. 
VEGETABLES. 
Potatoes, No. 1, bbl.. $3.50 to .$4.50; 
% bu. bkt., 75c to $1.15; sweet potatoes, 
bbl.. $2.50 to $3.25; cucumbers, bu., $1 
to $1.50; cabbage, ton. $15 to $20; onions, 
100 lbs., $1.50 to $1.75. 
HAY AND STRAW. 
Sheep Meeting and Sale 
Cash prizes exceeding $1,800 are offered 
to exhibitors at the sheep meeting, exhi¬ 
bition and sale at Albany, N. Y., Nov. 
12-14. This meeting and sale is given 
by the Albany Chamber of (’ommerce, 
State .Agricultural Society. State De¬ 
partment of Farms and Markets, and the 
State Food Commission, and is purely 
patriotic in its purposes. 
’ no fees for adhiis.sion or 
exhibits; no sale charges 
There will be 
for entries of 
and hay and 
free to stock 
Berkshire Swine Sale 
33)e Berkshire County Berkshire Club 
i>f 1‘ittsfield, Mass., will hold a sale of 
Berkshire swine at Blythewood Farms 
Nov. 12. -\uimals of high quality will be 
offered. The evening previous there will 
be a banquet at the American House. 
Win. II. ^fcKee is secretary of the club. 
exhibition or sale. I’rizes 
bedding will be supplied 
consigiu'd for 
of $10 to $15 are offered for champion 
ram and champion ewe. Flock prizes on 
liens of one aged ewe, one yearling ewe, 
one ewe lamb and oiu' ram, run fi’om 
,$4 to $12; and individual ■ prizes from 
$1 to .$8. In addition, the following spe¬ 
cial pi-emiums are offered : 
James C. Duncan, for the Interstate 
IJvestock Company, offers $2.5 for best 
pen of five grade wether lambs,’ to be 
.iudged from the consumer’s standpoint, 
best pen of five grade ewe 
for 
and $2.5 
I.a m bs. 
Henry L. 
b('st ]ien of 
laim lambs. 
Wardwell offers $2.5 for the 
three registered Shropshire 
ind $25 for the best ])eu of 
three re'gistered Shropshire ewe lambs. 
Win. T. Hyde, Cooperstown, N. 5'., of¬ 
fers the following special prizes : $25 for 
the best pen of three registered Cheviot 
yearling ewes; .$25 for the best pen of 
three registered Cheviot ewe lambs. 
Oardner C. Leonard, .-Vlbany, N. Y., 
offers the following special prizes: $15 
tor the best pen of grade Shrop.shire 
ewes; $10 for the second best pen of 
grade Shropshire ewes; a pen in each 
case to consist of one aged ewe, one year¬ 
ling ewe. one ewe lamb. 
Mr. Edmund N. lluyck, Albany, N. Y., 
offers $15 for the best pen of three grade 
1 liuniishiredown ewes, and $15 for the 
second best jien of grade Hampshiredown 
ewes. A pen in each case to consist of 
one ewe, aged ewe, one yearling ewe and 
one ewe lamb. 
Entries close Saturday, Nov. 9, 1918. 
Ready 
for 
Work 
Sa'W Btove wood for yourself 
and others. Earn good money'< _ 
while helping save coal and shipping. Com¬ 
plete rigs, sizes 4 H-P to 22 H-P. Saw frames 
separate if desired. Prompt shipments. 
Tpaa Rnnlr Write for money saving prices and 
rice DOUIt Free Book showing liberal terms 
and money back guarantee. Low prices now, 
OTTAWA MF6. CO., 698 King SL. Ottawa, Kan. 
r c 1 3 CASES CULTIVATORS 
rorjaie~ 72-76 planet, jr. 
Can be inspected at U. S. Il, E. CO., 139 Malden L«oe, N.Y. City 
New-Yorker. 
Situations 
Wanted 
Manufacturers-Crate Patent for Sale we'igSt’if 
lbs; stands inside pressure 200 Ilis. No nails or screws 
useii. Costs 8 cents to manufacture. Assembled in two 
minutes time. Ave.,Kiohinond 
A COifPE'l’ENT farm manager, married, under¬ 
stands ui>-to-date machinery, care of stock, inun- 
agcnient of men, etc.; farm just sold reason 
for changing; $100 7 )er month and privileges. 
.VDVEUTISEK 4523, care Rural New-Yorker. 
W.tNTKD—Either .ill elderly eoiiple, inotlier am] 
son or father and daughter: man to assist 
with general farm work, woman to do house 
work: two adults in fiunil.v: all modern eon- 
venienees. Mrs. D. S. CUTHRIE, Prayer 
Spring Earn), Oronoque, Conn, 
HEAD TE.VMSTEU on ^lassaehnsetts farm; 
temperate, aetive, experienced single man. 
.year round position; understand general line 
farm maehines: eare farm teams; possess some 
executive aliillt.v: state age, wages expected, 
wlien at liberty. ADVERTISER 4.")24, eare Itural 
New-Yorker. 
MARRIED M.\N, c'xperieneed in general farm¬ 
ing, willing |.j do an.Vthing on modern dairy, 
fruit and vegetalil,. farm; seven-room house, iviit 
free, iiieluding water, liglits. heater, firewood 
ami garden, will; oilier in-lvileges: must he soi)er 
and industrious; position now oiien. ,\DVER- 
TISEU t."."!), care Rural New-Yorker. 
W.VNTED—Woman to do general housework, 
small Iiouse, family of five, three miles from 
railroad: wages If.'O; must liave good references. 
Address E. PERCY SMITH, Allendale, N. .1. 
AV.VNTED—Competent man and wife, niiddh;- 
aged’, in good Iiealth, and dependal)lo as earc- 
takers in cltarge of a eountry liome and three 
men: wife must he a good plain cook and a good 
honsekoeper: everything furnished and provided; 
permanent position. Address JOHN S. SELL, 
Greenstuirg, Pa. 
-- 1 
W.VNTED—Working manager for gentleman’s 
estate near Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania; cows, 
chickens, garden, fields, fruit trees, etc., to he 
cared for. Address W. 0. TETER, 111 Broad- 
wa.v. New York City. 
SINGLE M.\N—Alidtile ago no olijoctions; good 
milker, chore work, feed, care fc'W pigs, etc.; 
large farm in Massachusetts; wages S-'O, hoard, 
etc.; advance to rigid man. ADA'ERTISEU 4."2(!, 
cure Itnral New-Yorker. 
TWO good' farm teamsters, single men, lielp 
milking mornings, November to Jlay; position 
year round; ago, wages desired: farm Mass.i- 
elmselts. ADVERTISER 4525, cure Rural New- 
Yorker. 
DAIRY'MAN—Single, thorouglily oxperieneed, 
eare operating power-driven separator, steam 
boiler, etc.; no bottling, milking or liarn work; 
luitter made about tliree months in year: wages 
$(>5. l)oard, etc.; advance after G months; age, 
cxix'ricnce. full particulars, first letter. SV.\U- 
AVINET FARM, Ilarrc, Mass. 
WANTED—.V liousckeepcr for countr.v home, 
middle age; no out work; small family; liglit 
W’ashings; no cliildren; a iiermanent lionio: state 
wages, ago, and all particulars. ADVERTISER 
4519, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—I'nmarried man. <iraft exempt, for 
position as assistant in experimental work in 
Agronomy at the Delaware College Expi-riment 
Station; salary, .$1,200. Write A. B. GRAN¬ 
THAM, Newark, Del. 
WANTED—Married man as herdsman in small 
private lierd; must understand feeding, calf 
raising and ho first-class Imttor maker. Apply 
ADVERTISER 4515, care Rural New-Yorker. 
W.VNTED—.Milker and' caretaker of cattle; sin¬ 
gle man wlio is a good dr.v-Iiand milker, in a 
herd of twenty Guernseys; must he of good 
iialiits and a willing worker. DU.AWER I, 
Beruardsville, N. J. 
W.VNTED—Trustworthy middle-aged American 
woman to aid in housework for family of two 
adults and four children on farm; no washing 
expected', hut must be good sewer and ■willing 
to lielp with mending and plain sewing and care 
of children; be treated as one of tlie family; 
wages Jf.SO per montli; permanent position for 
right person. ADVERTISER 4489, care Rural 
I inn FINE WHITE ENVELOPES NEATLY PRINTED with your 
return name and address on corner, postpaid, 
only 50o, Samples free. A. HOWIE, Printer, BEEBE, VT. 
360-Acre Farm I 
11.000 oa.sli. HARRY 
7 miles Scottsville, Va. Adapted 
slieej), liogs, or farm crops 
‘.evel. Good buildings. Se.SOO; 
VAIL, Slllford, Orauge Co., N. ¥. 
176-ACRE AIONEY-MAKING FARM 
2 miles from town and railroa;!; Ist-classliouse; new 
basement barn; otlier buildings; good water suiiply; 
sugarbusii; I.icows, team horses, crops; 15,600; 12,000 
cash. Write PERRY FARM AGENCY. Canajoharie, New York 
Subscribers’Exchange 
If you want to buy or sell or exchange, make It known hero. 
This Rate will bo 6 Cents a word, payable in advance. The 
name and addreas 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 ffeneral manufacturers’ announcements 
not admitted here. Poultry, Ekk.s and other live stock adver¬ 
tisements’will go under proper headings on other paees. 
Seed and Nursery advertisements will not be accepteufor 
this column. 
• 
Copy must reach us not later than Friday morning 
to appear in the following week’s issue. 
Farnn Help Wanted 
WANTED—Man to woi'k in cow Imrn.s; citlier 
marriecl’ or single; permanent position; strict¬ 
ly modern stables; milking liglit: purebred cut- 
tie only are handled; wages to single man, $45 
per month and hoard: married man, $75 and 
house. FRANK S. PEER, Cranford. N. J. 
WANTED—An elderly woman to assist in house¬ 
keeping; three in family: no laundry work; 
modern improvements in hou.se: 'must lie 
tomed' to live in the country year round: 
ciiec. ADVERTI.SER 4501, care Rural 
Yorker. 
accus- 
refer- 
New- 
WANTED—A general farm hand, married, wlio 
understands tlie care of cattle, pigs, ducks and 
cliickens; to tlie riglit man good salary and 
house to live in. Address BOX 93, Kliz'ubetli, 
New Jersey. 
WANTED—Man to work on farm whore regis¬ 
tered Holstelns are kept; must be a first-class 
milker; can use single or married man; smul 
references and state wages. FORSGATE FARMt?, 
Jumesbnrg, N. J. 
WANTED—A man to work a hundred-acre fanu 
■in Putnam County, X. Y., on shares or small 
rent or lease; immediate possession. Address 
ADVERTISER 4522, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Couple to do entire work for family 
of five, small house, five acres, no stock, wage's 
$80; must have good references. AdUress 
B, PERCY .S.MITTT, Allendale, N. J. 
THOROUGHLY experienced poultryman wishes 
position as working manager, 9 years’ practical 
experience; married; one child; references. BOX 
242 I’rineeton, N. J. 
GARDENER—flood laniiscape and general gar¬ 
dener, eldcrl.v single man, desires a position on 
a suhurhan estate: one having greenhouse; good 
referenc(“S from past and jiresent employers. 
MAURICE F. GEARY, Lake View, N. Y. 
SINGLE M.'VN WISHES position on poultry 
farm; some experience; can give best of ref¬ 
erences as to character and ability. ADVER¬ 
TISER 451C, care Rural New-Yorker. 
ATTENTION!—Live wire on pnrelired' horse and 
liog management, crops, farm machinery, In¬ 
cluding tractor, wants ver.v responsible position; 
.voiing, single, draft exempt. ADVERTISER 
4529, care Rural New-Y'orker. 
C.VKPENTER and general ntilit.v man wants 
position on estate or farm witliin 100 miles of 
New York: married; small faniil.v; A1 refer¬ 
ences. ADVERTISER 4527, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
SITUATION WANTED by middle-aged' single 
man, 45 years’old; understands all liranches of 
farming, dairying, and can run tractor. HEN¬ 
RY SCANNELL, Cotuit, Mass. Cape Cod. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FOR SALE—Delaware farm, about 30 acres, 
sandy loam, in rielii healthful trucking and 
grain section; situated one-lialf mile from live, 
progressive town of Millsboro; higli schools and 
chnrclu's: farm fronting one-half mile on river 
and main road: some growing pine timber; ex¬ 
cellent all-year fishing, 20 to 30 bushel.s perch, 
herring, etc., at a cateli not uncommon; no 
Imildings; wonderful natural site for home, af¬ 
fording beautiful view of river north and south: 
locution ideal for pig. ponltr.v, fruit and gen¬ 
eral tnieking; price $3,000, half (fown. balance 
satisfactor.v terms; no agents. L. J. HICKM.VN. 
Millsboro, Delaware. 
FARM FOR SALE—200 acres: ver.v i)roductive; 
church, school, store and railroad station ad- 
.loining; up-to-date 12-room house, all iinprove- 
nienls; 3 good barns, silo, sheds and outhouses; 
write for ternis, price and crescription. R. $. W., 
Box 25. Snsiiuehunna Co., Brandt, I’a. 
tVANTED—Direct from owner, one-man farm, 
Delaware N'alley; location, size, if hilly, how 
(Iocs clover do? Crops, orchard, timber, springs, 
running water tlirongli farm, fences, buildings 
and their condition: stock, tools, taxes, price; 
how much to own farm clear of all incumbrances. 
ADVERTISER 452.S, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR S.\L1^—85-acre farm, Hudson River Valley, 
$3.0»HJ. ADVERTISER 4521, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
MDNKY-M.VKIN’t! farm, 145 ati'es, station Penn. 
K. R. on the farm, 42 miles south of Pliila- 
dclphia; Imildings wortli tlie inonev, $1G,0<)(1. 
Owner, CIIARI.KS TVAI.TON, Iron. Hill, .Md. 
TEN .VCRES sidendid land. Winter resort region 
of Texas; artesian water beneath; cost eight 
liumlrt'd dollars; will sacrifice for Giant incu- 
halor. BOX 3G, Newark, N. J. 
FOR S.LLE—38G. acre farm, all tillahlo; sub¬ 
stantial hiiildings: near town: hourly train ser¬ 
vice to Philadelphia. J. L. SCOTT, Pm'kasic, Pa. 
TVANTED—On account of war (•omlitions, we 
desire to lease a largo fruit and dairy farm, 
situate williin ciglity miles of New York City 
and having good markets. Correspondence so¬ 
licited. Answer .LDVER'l'ISER 4517, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
FOR S.\I,E—Delawaii' farm; must sell 1G5 ami's, 
all tillable; ])erfecl natural drainage; splen¬ 
didly adapti'd to apple, peach or grapes: near 
railroad and boat landing; finest market in 
State; 12-room house, t(‘nant liouse, good Iniild- 
ings; t('rms. TRUSTEE, Box 3.5G. Dover, Del. 
FOR .S.VLE OR EX('Il.VNGE—Twenty-acre poul¬ 
try and truck farm, near station,' school and 
Church, SO miles from Philndelplihi; 110 from 
New Y'ork. Houses for 500 layers? 1,500 chicks, 
stable, etc.; excellent eight-room dw('lling: 
owner now in war work; will soil or exchange 
for small poultry farm; price .$4..500. N. W. 
PLUMMER, Hammonton, N. .T. 
FOR RENT—Cash or sliares, 200 acres, Coliimida 
County farm, d'air,v and general farming: 
must furnish own implements and horses. AD- 
I'ER'I'ISER 4.520, care Rural New-Yorkm-. 
FRUIT FARM, near Camp DIx, man 18 or older, 
for general work; no dairy. State particulars, 
first letter. ROBERT COX, Pemberton, N. J. 
FARM FOR S.VLE—in Rhode Island; stock and 
tools included. Apply ADVERTISER 4.500, 
care Rural New-Yorkor. 
WANTED—A good farm in Western Maryland 
or Southern Pennsylvania; .50 acres under mil- 
tivation; State road; particulars and R'rms in 
first letter. ADVERTISER 4.502, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
FOR LEASE—50-acrc farm; small farm house, 
barns, etc.; rim as dairy farm for years; 
nearby market; cit.v water and electric power: 
one hour from New York City. T'. (). p.ox ], 
Prince Bay, Staten Island N(>w York. 
Miscellaneous 
W.XNTED —A two or three-unit milking machim'. 
Empire preferred; must he O K and the riglit 
price. L. F. GOUl.D, Framingliam, Mass. 
FARMS plowed with tractors within .50 miles 
of N('W York. N. Y.; $2.50 per acre; contracts 
taken for Spring, 1910. SPESII.\ FARM SER¬ 
VICE, 200 W. G9th St., New York. N. Y. 
,^FEED MILL P’OR SAT.E—Sprout-Waldron Imll- 
heariiig attrition mill, with elevators; nearlv 
new. PENN YAN PRESERVING I’KODUCTS. 
I’enn Yan, N. Y. 
CIDER APPLES WANTED—Carload lots or less. 
•TOHN F. WILKENS, Peekskill, N. Y. Tele¬ 
phone, Peekskill 21 F-4. 
WANTED—8 or 10 11. P. Gasoline Engine; 
must ho in good condition. CALVIN D. 
GUMM, Showcll, Md. 
FOR SALE—Good one-liorse tread power ■with 
speed governor and 2 sizes belt pulley. A. L. 
FITCH, Westmoreland, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fifty Ions carrots, $30 per ton. 
sacked; special prices on carlols. hulk, I)arreled 
or sacked; aiiides, windfalls, sound and good for 
cooking or eating: mostly Baldwins, $1 i)cr 
hiislicl; also few hiislicls cooking turnips, .$1 j)er 
bnsliol. MARl'IN T. FORSTER, Hall. N. Y. 
HONEY—Extracted buckwheat and clover, 
mixed; also pure bnckwlieat honey, <!0-lb. 
(’ans f. . 0 . b. shipping station, $14; 10-lb. pails, 
.$2.50; 5-lh. pails, $l..'i0: 12-11). cans, .$3, or .$3.40 
delivered in 2d zom'; $3.50 in 3d zone; 105-lh. 
keg, .$.34. RAY C. WILCOX, R. 4, Ithaca, N. Y. 
WAN'I’ED—Tractor plow. A. B. ACKERSON, 
Airdison, N. Y. 
FOR S.VLF,—Four-horsepower Mogul, Interna¬ 
tional Harvester Co., portable kerosene engine, 
on skids or wagon. MR.\DOWEDGR FARM, 
Cedarliurst, N. Y. 
1914 M.VXIVELL TOURING C.\R, good running 
condition; excliange for registered Sliropshiro 
sliocp. Write for details. ADVERTISER 4518, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Van (ilockland lighting system for 
country lionics; none hotter; 12 lights, never 
used, one-half prhi'. BOX (!2, Chatham, N. Y. 
WANfi'ED — Pori aide liiinher sawmill. H. 
SCHUOEDEK, .Mountain Lake Farm, Kings¬ 
ton, N. Y., R. 1. 
FOR S.Vf.E—One car of potatoes, mix('d varie-' 
ties, $1.40 jK'r hii.; also car of hand-picked 
“red and greenings” apples at $1.25 per hun¬ 
dred. ROUSE BROS., New -Ylbany, Pa. 
FOR S.VLE—Pure maple syrup, .$2 per gal. 
f. 0 . I). F. V. KEN'r, Sandy Creek, N. Y. 
MUST SELL THE FOLLOWING—Enlisted and 
awaiting cull; 1 Newtown brooder stove. No. 
11, 500-chick size, 1917, used 2 years, $20; 1 
MaeKa.v brooder stove. 250-chlok size, used .3 
years, $10; 1 Banner 45()-egg special incubator, 
used 2 years, .$.50; I 2-Iiorse Iiand portable gas 
engine, magestic, magneto, used 3 weeks, .$.50; 
1 cornooh ernsher and grinder, 8-ineli burrs, 2 
sets, all steel. Ip. to 30 bu. per hour, nsol .3 
days, .$20; 1 Martin ditcher, little G, used 3 
years, .$35. Every article is guaranteed to he 
ill perfect working order e.xuctly as represented 
and sold for the above reason. First clieck tak(‘s 
them, separately, one or all for $175. L. C. HEL- 
FEU FAR.MS, .Minoa, N. Y. 
FOR S.VLE—International t!-inctl hiirr, feed 
grinders, ivnv; .also 100 hnsliels hnckwlieat. 
ED. GRANGER, Worcester, Y. 
TWO C.VREO.VDS B('n Davis Winter apples, 
hand i)lck('d, sprayed, .$2.35 per 100 Ihs. f. o. b. 
cars here, bulk. II.VRUY V.VIL, New Milford, 
Orange Co., N. Y. 
AV'ANTED—Mangel beets; state <inalily and 
price. O.VKD.VLE POULTRY F.VR.M, West- 
wood, N. J. 
FOR S.VLE—O. K. Champion potato sorter, 
nearly new, .$38. HARRY .M. WH.SON, 
Hiram, Ohio. 
W.VNTED—Full farm eciuipment as follows: 
Robins’ potato planter, sprayer, tootli and 
disk harrows, .Moline Sulky Cultivator, single 
cultivators, 2-bottom jilow, single i>Iow8, etc.; 
advise age, condition and bottom cash price. 
CHARLES YOUNG, Orient, N. Y. 
