A Discussion of the Milk Plan 
(Continued from page 917) 
(5. The one thing that has disturbed a 
go'od many of u.s during the last two 
years, and that looms up strong in this 
plan, is the dominance of the milk trust 
interest. We have always regarded the 
distribution end as the seat of our trou¬ 
ble. Some of us think so yet. but the 
trust has always blamed the surplus, and 
now the League has adopted that view, 
and even Mr. Nichols, whom I assume is 
a producer, adopts its theory that the 
distribution end will take care of itself. 
I)o the milk trust methods of 40 years 
justify such optimism? In 1 the policy of 
this plan, it seems to some of us, that we 
are preparing to accept the culls and 
allowing the choicest fruit of the organi¬ 
zation to drop into the milk trust basket. 
EDWARD \y. MCNAMARA, 
i. -:- • — - 
Buffalo Markets 
Produce market prices have not come 
down much, which shows that Spring is 
not yet much more pronounced in the 
^outh than it is here. Strawberries still 
retail at 35c per qt„ and potatoes are at 
full prices, wholesaling at .$1.25 to $1.00 
Iter bu., with new Florida* $4.50 to $5 25 
per bbl. and Bermudas $0.25 to $10.75. 
Apples are practically out so far as home¬ 
grown are concerned, unless from cold 
storage stocks, and are weak at $1 to $4 
j>er bu.. culls to fancy . Beans are dull 
at $4.50 to $6.30 per bu.. and onions 
quiet at $1.25 to $2 for home-grown, per 
bu.. and $4.50 to $0 for Southern, per 
crate. 
Vegetables are in good supply. Aspara¬ 
gus is $2.75 to $5; tomatoes, $3.50 to 
$4.75, all per crate; snap beans. $2 to 
$3.50 per hamper; new beets. 65c to $1 ; 
carrot*, 25 to 50c; celery. $1.50 to $2 25 : 
parsley. 20 to 35c; radishes 15 to 25c; 
shallots, 10 to 15c. all per doz bunches; 
cabbage, $5 to $S.50; yellow turnips. $2. 
all per 100 lbs.; cucumbers, 75c to $1 
per doz. for Southern ; lettuce. 00c to $1 ; 
pieplant, $3 to $3.75. all per box; par¬ 
snips, about out of market. 65 to 00c; 
spinach. 30c to $1. all per bu.; mush¬ 
rooms. 75c to $1 per lb. Southern and 
fancy fruits are in light demand at $6.50 
to $8 for oranges: $4 to $4.75 for lemons; 
$5 to $£.50 for grapefruit, per box : $1 
to $1.25 for limes, per 100: $5.50 to $5.75 
for pineapples, per crate: $4 to $6 for 
strawberries, per 24-qt. case. 
Butter is firm at 56 to 62c for cream¬ 
ery,: 46 to 55c for dairy; 35 to 50c for 
crocks; 35 to 37c for common and 2£ to 
37c for oleomargarine. Cheese is steady 
at 34 to 36c for longhorns and daisies; 
33c for fiats and brick; 45c for Swiss, 
per lb. Eggs are firm at 4S to 50c for 
hennery and 45 to 4Sc for State and 
Western candled. Dressed poultry is 
active, but live is in light demand at 42 to 
47c for dressed turkey; 34 to 30c for 
dressed fowl: 27 to 20c for old roosters; 
37 to 48c for capons; 34 to 30c for 
chickens: 45 to 48e for broilers; 40 to 
42c for ducks, and 27 to 30c for geese, 
with live poultry about 2c per lb. less. 
Maple products are dull at $1 50 to $2 
per gal. for syrup and 17 to 22c per lb. 
for sugar : honey is 33 to 36c per lb. for 
common to fancy extract. Baled hay is 
steady at $24 to $20 per ton for tin* three 
grades of Timothy on track. Straw is 
$12 to $14 per ton for all sorts, j. w. C. 
Crops and Farm News 
Here in Red River Valley. Minn., and 
North Dakota, wages are from $55 to $65 
for seven months, from 17 years up. Seed¬ 
ing behind on account of rains; farm unit. 
240 to 640 acres. No corn to mention, 
no tree fruit, no dairying, no good tame 
sod. Wheat, $2.60 locally at one time, 
but slumped : barley. 00c. Section hands. 
$00 a month, eight hours. Land prices 
doubled in six years, $100 and over at 
present in good localities. Business large¬ 
ly on credit; store bills paid two or three 
times a year. Soil is a black silt, clay 
subsoil, level as a floor and horrible when 
muddy. Farming here is like drawing a 
check on the Bank of Fertility and al¬ 
ways expecting to find a balance on the 
right side. Potatoes are occasionally 
grown when fields are too foul with weeds 
—not as a standard rotation. J. D. 
Polk Co., Minn. 
, General farm work much delayed on ac¬ 
count of so much wet weather; in some 
localities the delay has been two or three 
weeks. Nothing is growing on account of 
the cool nights. We had a heavy frost 
the 26th and 28th of April, damaging 
most all the early fruits. Farming in 
this section is not carried on to any ex¬ 
tent. This has been a lumbering and 
bituminous coal mining district, but both 
are now all worked out and gone. We 
have many small streams of fresh water. 
The land is mostly mountainous and very 
steep and stony. There is good pasture 
in the little valleys. Dairying and stock 
raising could be carried on to some ex¬ 
tent. Thousands of acres of the cut-over 
land has been taken over by the State. 
But there is still a lot of land lying waste 
that could be had very reasonable and 
could with a small outlay of labor and 
money be made into good farms. Farm¬ 
ing generally has been done in the old- 
fashioned way ; just enough to carry the 
farmers along from one year to another. 
A good many of the farms have been 
neglected, and are badly in need of lime. 
There has been more lime used this year 
than any previous year. All feeds are 
very high. Flour, 49-lb. sack, $3 40; 
dairy feed, $3.60 per 100 lbs.; chop. 
$2.90 cornmeal, $3.60; whole corn, $2.10 
per bu.; oats, $1 : buckwheat. $3 35 : bay, 
very poor grade, $35; straw, $15. Milk. 
12c. Butter, farmers’. 70c; cheese, 40c; 
eggs. 40c. No beef cattle for sale. Butch¬ 
ers handle mostly Western stock, ' and 
very high. Smoked bacon. 55c. ; ham. 4S 
and 50c; lard, 38c. Young pigs bring $12 
and $14 per pair ; very scarce. g. l. p. 
Cameron Co., Pa. 
Eggs, 45c; chickens, dressed, 43; broil¬ 
ers, ,48c; squabs. 75c per pair. Potatoes, 
from 80c to $1 per bu. Hay; loose, de¬ 
livered to the press, from $1.50 per 100 
lbs. and up. Milk delivered to creamery 
by test of butterfat. But ter fat, per lb., 
85c. Young pigs six weeks . old, $8 to 
$10 per head; calves, 16c per lb. Butter 
from creamery, 74c. 'Good 'cows are 
bringing from $75 'to $175, with calf. 
Crops here are looking well. Wheat and 
rye are doing fine with all this rain. Oats 
and potatoes are all planted ; most of the 
farmers were only breaking corn ground 
May 12. Staple crops are wheat, pota¬ 
toes and hay. Apples and peaches are 
looking well, especially the peaches, in 
spite of the cold weather we had in April. 
Wheat bran, $2.55 per 100 lbs.; mid¬ 
dlings. $3; cake meal, $3.80; cottonseed 
meal. $3.80; Buffalo gluten, $3.10. 
Bucks Co., Pa. j. A. c. 
Coming Live Stock Sales 
.Tune 5—Jerseys. T. S. Copper & Son, 
Coopersburg, Pa. 
June 5-7—Ilolsteins. Moyer National 
Sale. Philadelphia, Pa. 
June 12 —Jlolsteins. J. B. Sissons’ 
Sou, Poughkeepsie. N. Y. 
June 12—Berkshire*. Berkshire Coun¬ 
ty Berkshire Club. Old Shade Farms. Lee, 
Mass. W. H. McKee, secretary, Pitts¬ 
field, Mass. 
June 13—Ayrshire*. New England 
Ayrshire Club Consignment Sale. A. H. 
Sagendorph, Spencer, Mass., sales mana¬ 
ger. 
June 14— Berkshire*. Hood Farm 
Lowell, Mass. 
.Tune 16—Jerseys. L. J. Coburn, San- 
gerville. Me. 
June 17-18 —Ilolsteins. Purebred Live 
Stock Sales Company. Brattleboro, Vt. 
June 19—Dispersal sale. 85 purebred 
and 40 grade Ilolsteins. W. E. Gorman, 
Llanerch, Pa. 
July 4—Ilolsteins. Otsego County Hol¬ 
stein Club. Richfield Springs, N. Y. 
Oct. 6-8—Ilolsteins. Quality Holstein 
Chicago. Ill. 
Oct. 8-9—Ilolsteins. Annual Dairy¬ 
men’s Sale. E. M. Hastings Co., Lacona, 
N. Y., Manager. 
Oct. 9—Central Illinois Shorthorn 
Breeders’ Association, Paris, Ill. 
“How do you and your wife manage to 
adjust your little differences so pleas¬ 
antly?” “Easily enough. I just admit 
I am wrong.”—Detroit Free Press. 
DO YOU 
NEED 
FARM 
HELP? 
We have many able-bodied 
young men, with and without 
experience, who wish to work on 
farms. If you need a good, steady. 
<?ober man, write for an order 
blank. Ours is a philanthropic 
organization and we make no 
charge to employer or employee. 
THE JEWISH AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY 
176 Second Avenue N. Y. City 
Subscribers’Exchange 
If you want to buy or sell or exchange, make it known here. 
Thia Hate will be 5 Cent* a word, payable iri advance. The 
name and addre»9 must be counted a* part of the advertise¬ 
ment. No displuy type used, and only Farm Products, Help 
and Positions Wanted admitted. For subscribers only. 
Dealers, jobber* and scene ral manufacturers* announcements 
not admitted here. Poultry, Esc>?» and other live stock adver¬ 
tisements will iro under proper headings on other pages. 
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—Capable woman rs cook in small 
Summer hotel located in mountain* abort 100 
miles from New York City: must be good, all 
around plain cook: state experience and sa’ary 
expected. ADVERTISER 5557, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
WANTED — Strong, tnid’“lc-aged Protestant 
woman, accustomed to the country, for gen¬ 
eral housework on farm, with all mod rn con¬ 
veniences; two in family. ADVERTISER 55(17, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Working farm foreman, willing to 
follow instructions and discharge duties faith¬ 
fully and intelligently during owner’s absence; 
300-acre dairy and general stock and crop farm; 
grade Holstein cattle; married man, 28-34 years 
old; life experience on farm and two <r more years 
Cornell training preferred: farm must le run on 
paying basis and only sober reliable man consid¬ 
ered; state age, weight, nationality, experience, 
salary expected and when read'y for work in 
iirst letter. ADVERTISER 5523, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—A middle-aged woman. o-c thor¬ 
oughly used to country life, to help care for 
an elderly person and assist in work in the h use; 
two in family; no laundry work: liotse. modern 
conveniences; permanent employment an 1 good 
wages; answers with dependents not considered. 
ADVERTISER 5500, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Men and women attendants in a State 
institution for the feeble-minded: salary $45 a 
month for men and $30 for women, with ma'n- 
tenanee. State age when applying. Apply to 
SITE It INTEND ENT, Letehworth Village, 
Thtells, N. Y. 
GOOD sturdy boy. about 17, on small general 
farm; give weight, ex;>erienee, and wages ex¬ 
pected. OHAS. MANLEY, Braintree, Vt. 
WANTED—A reliable woman for general house¬ 
work: two In family: Long Island. MR. MEL¬ 
VIN, 1 Broad St., New York City. 
WANTED Married teamster; must be good, bard 
worker and able to do general farm work: 
splendid house; all modern conveniences; large 
garden, milk and wood; good wages. Apply BOX 
152, Gladstone, N. J. 
WANTED—An assistant single herdsman to 
work in Grade A dairy; Sharpies milker used; 
state experience and references. FISHKILL 
FARMS, Hopewell Junction, N. Y. 
WANTED—Trustworthy, middle-aged, American 
Protestant woman who is fond of children, to 
aid in housework on farm on Long Island, ninety 
miles from New York; family, two adults and 
four children, between ages two and eleven; no 
washing required, but must help with mending, 
plain sewing and care of children; will be treat¬ 
ed as one of the family; only persons desiring 
permanent employment need apply; wages, $30 
per month. ADVERTISER 5458, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
HERDSMAN for Guernsey herd wanted July 1st: 
competent and reliable, who can get results 
in A. R. work: write fully, stating experience, 
references and' compensation. HILLSWOLD 
FARM, Shrewsbury, Mass. 
" -- 1 
WANTED—Poultryman, single, to take charge 
of plant on private estate; must understand 
incubation and the proper care of stock; good 
chance for man to show his ability. Add'ress, 
giving references and wages expected, ADVER¬ 
TISER 5575, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Middle-aged woman to assist with 
housework in country; no washing and every¬ 
thing modern: a pleasant home with a congenial 
family: $25 per month. A. E. BUYERS, Wil- 
liamsville, N. Y. 
WANTED—An experienced apple orchardist who 
also is familiar with modern beekeeping; state 
experience and references. FISHKILL FARMS, 
Hopewell Junction, N. Y. 
WANTED—A reliable man to drive an ice 
wagon: work on the farm off days. M. J. 
HAWKINS, Center Moriches, N. Y. 
WANTED—Men in dairy plant and on farms— 
Farm bands, $2 per day with board and room; 
barn men, $55 per month with board and room; 
milkers. $(10 per month with board and room. 
COLUMBIA MILK FARMS, Juliustown, N. J. 
TWO WOMEN, friends or relatives, cooking and 
housework, on gentleman’s modern farm; no 
laundry: own bath; electric lights. BOX 121, 
Litchfield. Conn. 
WANTED—Competent dairyman, experienced in 
A.R.O. work, for herd of registered Holsteins; 
good wages, fine home; along State road, and 
other privileges furnished: permanent position 
for right man. RIVERSIDE DIARY FARM. 
Central Bridge, N. Y. 
HELP WANTED—Farmer, who can work; mar¬ 
ried: sober: understands horses and cows; a 
fair job for fair man. WILFOIiD WOOD, 146 
Court St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
WANTED—Single young man for general farm 
work; good milker preferred: wages $40 and 
board: references required. WILLIAM CAM¬ 
ERON, Morristown. N. J. 
WANTED—.Single man as herdsman to have 
charge of ninety lead of purebred Holsteins: 
must have had experience in A. R. O. work and 
must furnish best references; an attractive prop¬ 
osition for the man who can deliver the goods. 
HAYLAND FARM, Milford, Conn. 
Situations Wanted 
POULTRYMAN with the experience, ability and 
brains to make plant pay, seeks position as 
working manager on living salary and profit- 
sharing basis; expert incubator and brooder man; 
managed one plant 12 years: American: married. 
ADVERTISER 5568, care Rural New-Yorker. 
•- J 
FARM MANAGER or foreman, can work with 
his head as well as his hands: single; 29: 
practical man. some eollege training: experi¬ 
enced; go anywhere: references. ADVERTISER 
5570, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRYMAN, thoroughly experienced, to take 
charge of large commercial or private estate, 
poultry farm: Cornell graduate: best of refer¬ 
ences as to ability and character. ADVER¬ 
TISER 5572. care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Position as assistant to fa-in su'cr- 
intendent: single; 24: go»d experie- e. educa¬ 
tion. references. ADVERTISER 5571, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
POSITION wanted by Hollander, sing'e (4‘). as 
herdsman-dairyman on country estate: A No. 
1 reference. Address ADVERTISER 5578. c. re 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WORKING farm manager wants position at 
once: take full charge or work under superin¬ 
tendent: experienced in general farm crops 
live stock, building up run-down land: a goo 1 
mechanic on machinery and buildings; good ref¬ 
erences: give full particulars in first Utter. 
VERNON BELL. Rhinebeek. N. Y. 
FARM bookkeeper and accountant on large farm 
or estate: American, single, age 35i; thoroughly 
competent and reliable; books opened, inven¬ 
tories, appraisals, income tax statements; 
knowledge of agriculture, dairying, poultry; 
highest references from present emrdoye-. Ad¬ 
dress ADVERTISER 5577, care Rural New- 
Yorker . 
FARM manager, experienced, eollege bred man. 
wants position on large farm or es‘ate: can 
make your farm business pay. BOX 4(12. East 
Lansing. Mich. 
AMERICAN, 20. wishes position on up-to-date 
New York State fruit farm: eight years’ fruit 
experience: wages $50 month and hoard. BOX 
07, New Brunswick. N. J., Route 3. 
THOROUGHLY trustworthy, neat and consci¬ 
entious young woman, with two growing, well- 
reared school children, a girl of nine and a boy 
of eight years, desUes position as housekeeper: 
highest references: kindlv state full particulars 
•and salarv offered. CLAIRE JARVIS, West 
Park. N. Y. 
FARMERS TAKE NOTICE! Do von want phe¬ 
nomenal A. R. records? My system of feeding 
lias increased milk productio > 50 per cent. You 
do not pay until results have been obtained 1 . 
Would accept permanent place if suited. AD¬ 
VERTISER 5573, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FOR SALE—300 acres, grain, dairy and fruit 
farin’ in Dutchess County; good land, good 
buildings: bumper crop fruit this year; estimat¬ 
ed 2.000 baskets peaches. Address ADVER¬ 
TISER 5509, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Working partner; live wire (small 
Investment); 40-acre orchard; high class; big 
orchard neighbors. CHARLES BECK, Owner, 
1 Waynesbi.ro, Va. 
90 ACRES, 75 tillablep good" soil: pasture, woods, 
timber; 200 apple beginning bear: 5 acres oats, 
10 corn, now iri; preparing for other crops; gar¬ 
den planted: 2 miles good roads, Kinderliook 827, 
good condition 2-story 9-room house, modern 
conveniences; hot-water heated; beautifully lo¬ 
cated; also recently built bungalow; stable 50x12 
ell, 23x12 icehouse, shop, woodshed; conservative 
values, house $4,500; bungalow, $1,400; stable, 
$400; icehouse, $150: shop, $50; will sell : 11 
above mentioned, $0,000 if quick; $2,000 easli re¬ 
quired; owner occupying; whole farm price bn l i- 
ings. R. SHELDON, Ivinderhook, Columbia Co.. 
N, Y. 
WANTED—-Within hour’s commutation New 
York City, small farm; good condition; brook: 
barn; comfortable modernized residence; year’s 
lease, purchasing option; all year commuter's 
home, object; send full particulars. ADVER¬ 
TISER 5570, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—A good farmer with good help to 
take my farm in Eastern Pennsylvania on half 
shares; 150 aeres tillable; fully stocked; all ma¬ 
chinery and implements; crops in to date, and 
good; start at once. ADVERTISER 5574, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm; about 15 acres; 
equipped for capacity of 4,000 hens; 6,000-egg 
Candee incubator, brooder houses, laying houses, 
etc.; large, splendidly built residence; Vt mile 
from town of 3,500; located on site of Du Pont 
Boulevard; six miles from Delaware Bay and 2(5 
miles from Delaware Breakwater on Atlantic 
Ocean; set. in aptile trees; a big bargain. THE 
DELAWARE EGG FARM, Milford. Del. 
$3,000 INCOME, commuting poultry farm: seven 
minutes station; 14 acres; modern buildings 
for 1,200 head; concrete floors; non-freeze water 
system: electric artificial daylight; brooders; 
over 100 15-year fruit trees; good barn; brook; 
spring: artesian well; honse eight rooms; steam 
heat, electric light, all improvements; sale, ex¬ 
change; $9,000. BOX 99, Woodeliff Lake, N. J. 
BEAUTIFUL Florida home: 37)4 aeres: 100 fruit 
trees in great variety; cow. horse, all tools, 
two pigs, dozen hens, apiary. 70 colonies; roomy, 
comfortable house with furniture; everything 
included, only $4,000. DR. E. W. POMEROY, 
Richland, Fla. , 
WOULD you like a 5-acre tract of land on either 
proposed Sunset Trail or Grand View Terrace? 
Every plot lias a view all its own and some 
nearly 40 miles; it’s in beautiful Overlook, a 
suburb of Millington; all conveniences in one 
section and easy commuting; see them any week 
day. JOHN V. HAAS, Owner, Millington, N. J. 
96-ACRE dairy farm, stocked and equipped, 
ready for business; ideal Summer home for 
city man; two miles to hustling railroad town: 
plenty wood, fruit and berries; buildings in geo 1 
repair; piped with never-failing spring water. 
JOHN W. BASS, Randolph, Vt. 
FOR SALE—Best paying established implement 
and seed business in village of 7,000 in Central 
New York; stock inventories $15,000 or more: 
special inducements to right parties for quick 
action. Address ADVERTISER 5563, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
120-ACRE Genesee Valley fruit farm, near 
Rochester: best of soil, water, drainage and 
fences: good buildings, location and surround¬ 
ings; 14 acres apple orchard; price, $21,000. Ad¬ 
dress ADVERTISER 5552, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
7Vt-ACRE farm for sale; 1 mile village. Snlli- 
van County: dwelling (all modern) and tenant 
honse; poultry plant, capacity 2,600 chicks. 900 
laying liens: garage; stable: running water in 
all buildings: first-class condition; price $9,000. 
ADVERTISER 5556,, care Rural New-Yorker. 
22-ACRE FARM, level, in A-l condition: good 
barn; five excellent cows, one horse and fann¬ 
ing tools: large house, electric lights, city 
water and bath: $6,500: part cash: balance on 
easy terms. CIIAS. KARST, Allegany, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—One of the best milk farms in New 
England: fully equipped dairy house and barn; 
an old-established* business. Address BOX 16, 
Taunton, Mass. 
Miscellaneous 
FOR SALE—-We off- r for sale, immediate ship¬ 
ment. the following agriculture implements, 
all in first-class condition: One Mogul 816 trac¬ 
tor and three plows, two Planet Junior cultiva¬ 
tors, one 2-horse harrow, one Oliver horse plow, 
one corn planter, one steel oil barrel, one d'isc 
Fa-row, one s f eol gas barrel, one tractor attach¬ 
ment with chain, one tractor beU drive, one 
nii>*>r tractor plow, four Oliver tractor plow- 
->>a-es. T*. S. METALS REFINING COMPANY, 
Chrome, N. J. 
JAPANESE Hull-less Popcorn. 1918 crop, in one- 
to five-pound bags, 30c a pound; in ton-pound 
hag*. 2Sc: in 50-pnnd baps, 26c and postage to 
your zone. S. E. HALL. Cherry Valley. Ill. 
FOR SALE—Fifteen incubators, consisting of 
Rnckeve. Queen, Cyphers. Prairie State. Buf¬ 
falo a-d Models; all guaranteed and can be in- 
soected running in my cellars: prices Uw, a ■- 
cording to condition: also three Newtown brood - 
stoves. SUNNYSIDE POULTRY FARM. Copper 
Hill. N. .T. 
A BA PGA IN for quick sale—Model B 5-10 Avc-v 
tractor: plowed seven ac-es; good reasons for 
selling. ARTHUR STEVENS. Perkasle. Pa. 
FOR SALE—*-row adlnstable spray attachment, 
readv to a’uoch to pump, in good condition 
WIT.FORD WOOD, 146 Court St.. Rro k’.vn, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—Bin man garden tractor. ROBERT 
BLACK. P. O. Sicklervllle, N. J. 
FOR SALE—Hlnm.an milker, three units. > o”<- 
plete for ’double rw stanchions: extra pa'l. 
claw and teat cups; best offer gets it; also )■ - 
draulie cider press. No. five hundred, made ' -• 
Monarch Machine Co. BOX 141, Smithvilln 
Flats, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—To settle an estate, one 18 h. ». 
Bird sail steam tractor, with extra wheels f r 
rolling roads etc.: price $650 f. o. b. Address 
WM. L. CLARK, Norwalk, Conn. 
WANTED—Carload good grade cow hay: sure 
price per tun f. o. h. FRANK .T. MURPHY, 
Prospect Hill Place, Norwalk, Conn. 
1,800-EGG Ccndee incubator, in perfect c-r.ii. 
tion: bargain at $150. H. A. HATHAWAY, 
Toms River, N. J. 
WANTED—Stump puller; two-horse; Smith or 
Hercules caldts: must be in good condition. 
H. A. BENNETT. Ridgewood. N. J. 
PULLFORD tractor attachment: new: 'a — : n, 
$1!XI. B. C. SNYDER, North Germantown, 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE—K*rsto one-man stump pid’er; 
nearly new; pulls ’em. HOLMAN, Hopkins, 
1 Mich. 
