ALNEW-YORKER 
EVENTS OF THE WEEK 
SPRAYERS and GARDEN TOOLS 
A CCURATE SEEDING, thorough cultivation and efficient 
■ spraying will make your garden yield better returns and 
larger profits. The SUREST WAY to CASH IN on your 
garden or orchard is to use Hudson Sprayers and Garden Tools. 
Hudson Slayers 
Whether your requireme.- fc s are large or small, 
there is a Hudson Sprayer to meet your needs. 
No. 202—Pint size . 
No. 4512—Quart size 
The most complete line of Sprayers manu¬ 
factured. Write for Hudson Catalog No. 14H 
and our booklet— 
“When, What and How to Spray” 
They are both free and will help you make money. 
No. 201—Complete as shown .... 
No. 205—Same as above, less Cultivator Attachments, 
If yoar dealer does not carry Hudson Sprayers and Carden Tools , 
No. HOG—Galvan¬ 
ized Tank . . §7.50 
No. 110B—B r a s s 
Tank .... 10.50 
Hudson Garden Tools 
Hudson Garden Tools are furnished in any 
combination desired, either as Single-Wheel 
Seeders and Drills, 
or Double - Wheel 
Hoes, PlowsorCulti- 
vators. All attach¬ 
ments are inter¬ 
changeable and 
may be attached or 
detached as your 
needs require. For 
accuracy,simplicity, 
easy operation, long 
service and profit¬ 
able results, buy 
Hudson Garden 
Tools. Send for Cat¬ 
alog No. 14C show¬ 
ing complete line- 
order direct from 
§18.00 
14.00 
HUDSON MFG. CO., 330 Third Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn., U. S. A. 
AROOSTOOK COUNTY MAINE 
SEED POTATOES 
IMPROVED PEDIGREED STOCK 
Of All the Best Standard Varieties 
CAR LOTS OR LESS CAR LOTS 
Send For Seed Circular 
WM. S. SWEET & SON, INC. 
PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND 
SALTER'S Farm Seeds 
Potatoes 
Corn 
Oats 
Send for PRICES 
TRUE -TO-NAME, TESTED, FROM HARDY STOCK 
^ Early Ohio, Irish Cobbler, Early Rose, Early Hebron, Rural 
New Yorker, Carman No. 3, Sir Walter Raleigh, Golden 
Russet. 
Mammoth Eight Rowed Yellow Flint, Golden Nugget 
Yellow Flint, Improved Learning, 
New Yellow Dent. 
Heavyweight Oats, Twentieth Century Oats. 
All orders shipped in strong hags, plainly marked, 
tion guaranteed or money hack* Terms: Cash v 
JAY SALTER, 11 railroad st., honeoye falls, h. y. 
Mammoth White Dent, 
Satiafao 
Cash with order. 
Li" Stowell’s Evergreen Sweet Corn Seed 
orders at reduced price. It. A. LANDIS, Falrrlew, ErleCo^Pa. 
UVEET CLOVER. Best white Scarified. »18Bu. Exp 
► paid. Bags free. A. BLOOMNUDALB, Seheoaetadj, N. I 
The Greatest Labor Saving Tool 
Ever Invented for Garden Work 
Hu us easier and does better work 
than any other garden Cultivator up- 
. on the market. Carries its own weight. 
1 Set it to stir the soil any depth you 
wish. Works the soil at an even 
depth all down the row. Easier 
to push than a lawn mower. Use 
it 2 weeks, if not satisfied re¬ 
turn it to us and 
we will refund you 
your money. 
Write today for 
catalog and price. 
Dept. SS. 
The Shaible Mannfaeturing Co. 
ELYRIA, OHIO 
ASPINWALL 
Man Potato Planter 
Mtwv _ _ 
fast‘and accurate. Opens furrow, plants, covers 
and marks next row. Needs no watching. Just drive. 
Plants More Acres Per Day 
Does all the work—all the time. _ Attach¬ 
ments for peas, beans and fertilizer fur 
nished when desired. Write for FREE 
BOOK of valuable information. Also 
folder illustrating the complete 
Aspinwall line: Cutters, Planters 
Sprayers, Diggers and Sorters, 
World’s oldest and largest 
makers of Potato Machinery 
ASPINWALL MFG. CO 
6tv SabinSt.Jackson,Mich. 
DOMESTIC.— Seven Spaniards who 
were arrested there as anarchists sus¬ 
pected of being iu a plot to harm Presi¬ 
dent Wilson ou his a rival in Boston 
were ordered released from police custody 
by Federal Judge John C. Knox Feb. 27. 
The men were immediately rearrested on 
warrants charging them with being in this 
country in violation of the immigration 
law. They were taken to Ellis Island 
for examination by a board of inquiry. 
An alleged conspiracy which, it is 
charged, resulted in the use of inferior 
steel in the manufacture of eastings for 
wor vessels, endangering the lives of crews 
after the ships were put into commission, 
was disclosed Feb. 28 in the Federal 
Court, Boston, when five men were ar¬ 
raigned on a secret indictment returned 
by the Grand Jury. The defendants are 
Alexander F. Blackwood of Brookline, 
general manager and vice-president of the 
Union Steel Casting Company of Boston; 
Arthur II. Horsford. of Natick; Julian 
E. Wickwire and Guy H. Ramsdell, of 
Boston, employed by the same company, 
and Howard Northrop, of Somerville, an 
employee of the R. and S. Machine Com¬ 
pany. All pleaded not guilty and were 
released under bail. The Government 
maintains that the Union Steel Casting 
Company presented high grade esteel for 
Government inspection and tests, but used 
inferior stock in the manufacture of the 
castings which were employed in gun 
mounts and other important parts of 
destroyers. 
Efforts will be made to deport three 
men who were arrested at Franklin, 
|m ass., March 2, after an investigation 
which followed an explosion near the Bay 
Mill of the American Woolen Company 
Feb. 28 in which four persous were killed. 
The captives lived in the same house with 
the four men who were killed. Much 
I. W. W. and anarchistic literature was 
found in their rooms by the police, who; 
believe the explosion was caused by the ; 
dropping of dynamite intended for use, 
iu an attempt to blow up the Kay Mill. 1 
All remaining indictments against Ed-i 
ward D. Nolan, co-defendant of Thomas 
.T. Mooney in the preparedness day bomb 
murder trials, were dismissed by the 
Superior Court, San Francisco, March 3. 
Nolan was the first, of the bomb defend¬ 
ants indicted to be cleared entirely of all 
‘charges. The police announced they did 
not have sufficient evidence to try Nolan. 
The bail of Mrs. Rena Mooney was re¬ 
duced from $15,000 to $2,000 for two 
charges pending against her. Five other 
charges are pending, but she was released 
on her own recognizance on these. 
FARM AND GARDEN. — General 
snowfalls covering all Alberta have im¬ 
proved the agricultural outlook immense¬ 
ly. The ground was so dry when Winter 
set in that it could not freeze. Coupled 
with this was continued mild weather 
until late February, when the first zero 
temperatures of the year were recorded, 
and with the low temperatures came 
heavy snowfalls. When this snow melts 
the moisture will sink deep into the soil 
and will furnish excellent seed bed and 
assure germination. 
The conditions under which the Soldier 
Settlement Board of Canada will assist 
in the settlement, of soldiers upon lauds 
held by the provincial Governments have 
been announced. When a provincial Gov¬ 
ernment by legislative enactment defines 
an area of provincial crown lands for 
soldier settlement by way of homestead 
the board will cause an examination of 
the land to he made as to climate, soil 
fertility, cost of clearing, drainage, rain¬ 
fall. water content ami available water 
supply. If the laud is found to be suit¬ 
able the board will assist settlement un¬ 
der the following conditions: Home¬ 
steads must be situated in timber coun¬ 
try, within 12 miles, and in other country 
| within 15 miles of a shipping point on a 
i railway or navigable stream, on which 
! there is adequate transportation service. 
The provincial Government shall, when 
| clearing, drainage, irrigation and road- 
j ways are needed to carry out such work as 
may be necessary to insure that the sol¬ 
dier settler will have a reasonable chance 
to succeed. The settler must be enabled 
by provincial legislation to enter for a 
homestead upon such land, subject to set¬ 
tlement conditions, similar to those of the 
Dominion lands act and regulations 
founded thereon. If on inspection the 
Soldier Settlement Board finds that the 
homestead fulfils the conditions as to set¬ 
tlement advantages and productivity, it 
will, upon agreement, pay the provincial 
Government the amount chargeable and 
thereafter administer such entry in the 
same way as soldier entries are admin¬ 
istered on Dominion crown lands. 
The cotton futures rider to the guar¬ 
antee wheat price bill, which was signed 
March 4 by President Wilson, becomes 
effective at once. Under it only 13 grades 
of cotton—from low middling up—can he 
delivered on future contracts and.all cot¬ 
ton so delivered must be classified by 
Government graders. 
March 15, 1919 
Tor Many Ills 
and Complaints 
—Musterole 
In grandma’s day many 
an illness was nipped in the 
bud by the prompt applica¬ 
tion of a stinging, burning 
mustard plaster. 
But mother uses Musterole. It 
has all the virtues of the old-time 
mustard plaster without the fuss, 
muss or blister. 
For little Bobbie’s croup, for 
Betty’s sore throat, for grandma’s 
rheumatism or father’s lumbago— 
for the family’s colds and for 
many other ills and complaints 
mother resorts to ever-helpful 
Musterole. 
When there is the sign of a 
cough, down comes the Musterole 
jar from the medicine shelf. 
A little of this clean, white 
ointment is rubbed on the chest 
or throat. It penetrates way down 
deep under the skin, and gener¬ 
ates a peculiar heat which routs 
out that disturbing congestion. 
Strangely enough Musterole 
feels warm only a moment or 
two after you apply it. The first 
tingle and glow is followed al¬ 
most immediately by a soothing, 
delightful coolness. 
Musterole is made with oil of 
mustard and a few home simples. 
Try it for coughs and colds (it 
often prevents pneumonia), bron¬ 
chitis, sore throat, stiff neck, 
neuralgia, headache, rheumatism, 
lumbago, pains and aches of the 
back, and sore or strained muscles. 
Many doctors and nurses recommend 
Musterole. 
JOc and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. 
The Musterole Co., Cleveland, Ohio 
BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER 
Runn i n q Water 
and Electric Light 
The Milwaukee System requires no water 
storage tank therefore never freezes or 
fouls. Fresh water direct from the well, 
spring or cistern—to any part of the house, 
barn or yard and electric lights, too, are 
now within the reach of every country 
home owner. The installation is greatly 
S'uplifted by using the 
" WATER SYSTEM 
1.111 1 . 0 - 
In connection with the Milwaukee Electric 
Lighting Plant as one engine turmshes 
power for both. Our illustrated book tells 
all about it. Mailed free. 
MILWAUKEE AIR POWER PUMP CO. 
863 Third Sir**!, MILW AUKEE, WIS. 
l/lflTTS SWEET 
t U * CLOVER 
Hulled and scarified white sweet clover is about 
ten dollars per bushel cheaper than red. (Un¬ 
hulled cheaper yet.) As iti9 a biennial, taking 
the place of red in the rotation and any 
amount better as a landlniilder, it is an eco¬ 
nomical substitute. Winter sowing is the 
best. Ask for samples and prices as well as 
> our catalogue telling “How to Know Good 
Seed”. All other kinds of field seeds too. 
O. M. SCOTT & SONS CO. 
160 Main St. Mnrysvillo, Ohio 
For Sale-Plum Farmer Black Raspberry Bushes 
60c. per Dozen. II. K. Spalillng, K« ut » Trenton, N. J. 
r r n TESTED SHEFFIELD YELLOW 
OlEU FLINT. Farm Bureau reports germlna 
nnolU tion S)9 per cent. *4 for *0 lbs. or ears. 
L (/ #1 fw r. J. I’Oi’E, Ureat Uurringtoii, M us*. 
Special prices on 5 ami 10 bushel lots. Send for price 
list on Ensilage Corn, Pedigree Barley, Spring Rye, 
Field Peas, etc. U« H«lme»-Ulh«rnun Seri C«.. Soi K.C»nten. 0. 
For Sale—Siowell’s Evergreen Seed Corn 
raised from selected stock by experienced seed grow 
er , S« 25 bu.: 52.50 half Ini.51.50 peck ; 25c. Quart. 
Postage prepaid. 
Land’s Sake, use Bowker’a 
they enrieh the earth and 
those who till it.”— Adv. 
“For the 
Fertilizers; 
F.E. Blakenmii, Oronoque, Conn. 
Large Asparagus and Rhubarb Roots 
for this year’s crop. Asparagus, 6-yr ,S4 per 100; 
S20 per 1,000. Rhubarb, 51.75 per 12; 57 per 100. 
Harry L. Squires, Good Ground, N. Y. 
