24 
Products, 
Prices 
and 
T rade 
( Continued 
from 
page 
1035 
) 
BEANS, 
V 
Marrow. 100 lbs_ 
@11 75 
Pea. 
.. (i 75 
Cat 7 75 
Medium .. . 
.. ti 75 
C(i 7 75 
Bed Kidney. 
. 
.11 25 
@|:t no 
YV bite Kidney . 
.11 75 
(a J 2 25 
Y’ellow Eye . 
.. 7 25 
@ 7 50 
Miiui, OnlifornfA. 
. . 
....... 
..900 
<«. 9 50 
FRI'ITS. 
Many of (ho strawberries received 
show the effects of drought. Choice 
nearby have wholesaled up to MO to -10c 
per qt. Peaches are in large supply, but 
averaging poor. Watermelons lower. 
Strawberries, qt. 
Oranges, box . 
Lemons, box . 
Grape Fruit. 
Pineapples. 3(>s to 30s. 
Peaches, Southern. 6 -bkt. crate . 
Muskmelons. bu. . 
Watermelons, carload., 
Black nerries, qt. 
Cherries, 81b. bkt. 
Gooseberries, qt . 
Raspberries, pt. 
VEGETABLES. 
20 (a 40 
. 3 50 @7 00 
6 25 m 7 50 
4 oo <a s oo 
. 4 50 @ 5 75 
. 1 00 @ 4 00 
1 00 @ 4 25 
150 00 @ 550 00 
18 <fc 25 
75 ® 90 
8 (at 20 
15 Cat 20 
New potatoes in large supply and 
lower. Trade in old stock dull. Peas 
and string beans high when choice. Cab¬ 
bage market strong. 
Potatoes—old, 180 lbs. 2 00 @ 3 50 
Southern, new. bbl.. best . 4 00 @ 6 00 
Southern, common to good . 1 50 @ 3 50 
Sweet Potatoes, bu. 2 00 @ 6 50 
Beets, new. bul. 2 00 @ 3 oo 
Carrots, bbl. 2 00 @4 00 
Cabbage—bbl. 125 @ 2 25 
Lettuce, half-bbl. basket. 50 @100 
Ooions. new. bu. 2 00 4 00 
String Beans bu. 100 @4 00 
Squash. New. bu. , . 50 @ 150 
Egg Plants, bu. 1 00 @4 00 
Spinach, bbl . 50 @ 1 25 
Turnips, rutabaga, bbl..... . 2 00 (a. 3 00 
Kale, bbl . . 50 @ l oo 
Okra, bu. 2 00 @ 3 50 
Asparagus, doz..... 2 50 @ 4 00 
Cucumbers, bu... 1 50 @ 3 25 
Peas. bu. bkt...100 @1 50 
Tomatoes. 6-bkt. crate. 1 00 ® 4 00 
Radishes. 100 bunches. 1 00 @2 00 
Rhubarb.100 bunches . 2 00 @4 50 
Sweet Corn, bbl. .. 6 00 <§t 8 00 
Cauliflower, bu. bkt.. 1 00 to 3 00 
Horseradish. 100 lbs. 4 00 @ 6 00 
Peppers, bu.1 00 fa 2 50 
Rbmaine, bbl....... 75 @ 1 25 
Mushrooms, lb... 50 <sa 90 
RAY AND 8TBAYV. 
Uay. Timothy, No. 1. ton ..46 00 @47 00 
No. 2.44 00 @45 00. 
No. 3.40 U0 @42 00 
No grade .27 00 @35 00 
Clover mixed. 35 00 @45 00 
Straw. Rye.13 00 @1400 
GRAIN. 
Following arc the Covernmcnt prices 
on No. 2 red wheat at various markets: 
New York. $2.37% ; Chicago. $2 23: Bal¬ 
timore, $2.3514 : Kansas City. $2.13; St. 
Louis, $2.21. Corn. No. 3. yellow. New 
York, $1.98%: Chicago. $1.80%. Rye, 
New York, $1.66. Oats, No. 2, white, 
82c. 
WOOL. 
The twentieth Government auction sale 
o'" wool at Boston opened June IS. About 
3.750.000 lbs. were offered, 41 per cent 
being withdrawn. On the scoured basis 
fine short Texas brought $1,23 to $1.25; 
fine medium California, $1; New Mexico. 
$1.33. 
Coming Live Stock Sales * 
June 30—Registered Holsteins. E. E. 
Risley, Walton, N. Y. 
July 1—Milking Shorthorns. Brad¬ 
ford Co.. Pa., Breeders’ Association. 
Troy. Pa.. Fair Grounds. 
July 4—Holsteins. Otsego County 
Holstein Club, Richfield Springs. N. Y. 
Oct. 6-8—Holsteins. Quality Holstein, 
Chicago. Ill. 
Oct. 8-9—Holsteins. Annual Dairy¬ 
men’s Sale. E. M. Hastings Co., Lacona, 
N. Y., manager. 
Oct. 9—Central Illinois Shorthorn 
Breeders’ Association, Paris, Ill. 
itHKv a norxvuAN noon, sell mendets 
rlXGlIlo apnlent patch for instantly mending leaks 
O ill nil u t e u 8 i 1 s-. Sample p a c k ag c I i ce. 
COLLETTE tl F(». CO., Iicpt. 108 . Ametcrdiiiii. N.Y. 
K. E. 
We can sell any farm that is 
priced right. Submit full details. 
S L O <1 U M , 141 Broadway, N. Y. C. 
We have (many able-bodied 
young men. with and without 
experience, who wish to work on 
farms. If you need a good, steady, 
sober man. write for an order 
blank. Ours is a philanthrope 
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. 
Inis Kate 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 general manufacturers' announcements 
not admitted here. Poultry, Egtcs and other live stock adver¬ 
tisements will ko under proper heading on other passes, 
beetl 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 as cook in smell 
Summer hotel located in mountains about 100 
miles from New York City; must be good, all 
around plain cook; state experience and salary 
expected. ADVERTISER 5627, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
POl’LTRYMAN WANTED—Experienced and 
capable to take charge of plant about four 
to five thousand hens. Leghorns and Reds. 
D ili Mi mmoth Incubator, on private estate, 
near New York. Plant run on strictly commer¬ 
cial basis. Good cottage and salary, with bonus 
to honest, capable man, with chance to advance 
his interests if work is conducted to mutual 
advantage. ADVERTISER 5634, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Men and women attendants in a Stat 
institution for the feeble-minded; salary $45 i 
month for men and $30 for women, with main 
tenaiice. State age when applying. Apply t. 
SCPERINTKNDENT, Letchworth Village 
Thiells, N. Y. 
FEMALE attendants for an insane hospital; pay 
$30 a month, board and laundry. Address S. 
LORD. -Stamford?, Conn. 
M ANTED—A married man for farm work; must 
be willing to help milk and care for small 
herd of cows: wages sixty dollars per month 
all tile year round, with good house, fuel, milk 
ami vegetables. L. B. WIHTTEM.ORE, Burt 
Rond. Taunton, Mass. 
W ANTED Foultryman to work with owner on 
up-to-date poultry farm; married or single; 
give reference and wages expected; advance¬ 
ment to right man. F. E. UPSON, Dundee, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—On a Jersey farm in Vermont, a 
competent, butter-maker: married; preferably 
no family: wife to keep house and cook for two 
men: everything furnished: modern conven¬ 
iences: give age. experience, references and 
salary expected in first letter. ADVERTISER 
5t>09, care Rural New-Yorker. 
"ANTED—Poultry man, working manager, mar¬ 
ried preferred, capable of eontinning a paying 
commercial poultry plant in Southeastern Mass.; 
half equipment; a good position is open for a 
willing worker, strictly sober and able to fur¬ 
nish references: bouse furnished; state refer¬ 
ences, date at liberty, experience, age. family 
and wages expected in first letter. WINSOR 
FARM. Acushnet Station, New Bedford. Mass. 
MILKER for certified dairy: 
teamster for handling farm 
fifty and board: half fare 
' ALLEY FARMS, Somerville, 
fifteen cows: also 
machinery; wages, 
paid. RARITAN 
N. J. 
WANTED—Four first-class milkers for certified 
dairy: extra pay if satisfactory; we also need 
a married man as foreman, and a herdsman for 
125 cows. CARWYTI1AM FARM. Rridgehamp- 
ton. N. Y. 
W ANTED—Calf man on an up-to-date Jersey 
breeding establishment: must lie capable of 
raising good calves: compensation to su<-!i a 
man will be good: married man preferred, with 
no family. Write at once to WHITE 110RSE 
FARMS. Pnoli. I*a. 
The Maine Apple Box 
Regarding the Maine apple box. our 
law makes a box 18xll%xl0% a - legal 
measure on apples, and that is the size 
of box which is ordinarily used. There 
is. however, an alternative, providing that 
if that siz<^ box is not used, a box con¬ 
taining 2,350 cu. in. is a legal measure, 
and stub a box may be made in any 
shape. As this is about 176 cu. in. larger 
than the regular box, I am not aware 
that it is made use of. 
JOHN A. ROBERTS, 
Commissioner. 
The Berkshire County (Mass.) Berk¬ 
shire Club has come to be a very lively 
ami useful institution. It recently held 
its fourth sale at Lee, Mass. The main 
object of this sale was to distribute into 
the hands of the new' breeders in the 
county suitable young animals with which 
to build up line herds of Berkshire's. This 
effort was successful, with the result mat 
many excellent hogs were distributed. 
This organization is able to be of great 
service to the county, and to Northern 
Massachusetts in general. Its history 
shows what can be done for any breed 
by a thorough organization and 'a good 
amount of hustle. The highest nrice at 
this sale was obtained by High wood 
Dutchess 142. She weighed 245 lbs. at 
233 days old, and brought $195. being 
sold to Flintstone Farm. A number of 
other excellent gilts were also well placed 
The sale was followed by a banquet, and 
a general get-together of Berkshire breed¬ 
ers. 
WANTED—-Two single men in up-to-date dairy; 
one to milk, with machine, anti care for herd 
of twenty purebred Holsteins: the other to make 
cottage cheese, lint ter and care for milk in 
dairy house: give wages and ability in first let¬ 
ter. JAVA FARM, Annapolis, Md. 
M AN I ED a* once; middle-aged poultryinau on 
commercial poultry farm, and one that lias 
produced results and well recommended MRS 
ISAHELL LIGHT. Thiells. N. Y. 
WANTED—Married man. expert on tractors 
engines and repairing general farm machinery! 
t\ DRYSDAI.E BLACK. Somerville, N. J. 
" ANTED—Strictly first-class herdsman for 
registered Jersey herd in New Jersev: one 
capable of producing clean milk, making semi¬ 
official records, handling milking machine and 
a good calf man: married man wanted, whose 
wife is a good cook and’ eatt board four or five 
men; men’s rooms are furnished; other rooms 
must be furnished by you: herdsman’s salary 
$75 per month: in return for wife’s services, 
food, light, fuel, house, garden, milk, etc., fur¬ 
nished free, making husband’s salary practically 
clear: exceptional opportunity to right couple: 
write fully particulars as to experience, t-ain- 
ing. habits, wages, age, number of children, 
nationality, condition of health, etc. ADVER¬ 
TISER 51133, cure Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Capable woman: widow with grown 
children, or one similarly situated, to keep 
our farm hoarding house, making a home for 
three or four single men: good home for right 
party: forty miles from New York, in Northern 
New Jersey. AI)\ ERTISER 5032. cart* Rural 
New-Yorker. 
YOUNG woman, experienced, to run dairy or 
garden; $75 month and house: A-l references. 
ADVERTISER 5031. care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARMER wanted in Southwestern Pennsylvania: 
share or salary: give age. family and‘church! 
Address ADY ERTISER 5030, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
\\ AN I KD—Single young man for farm work on 
Western N. Y. farm. ADVERTISER 5021, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—At once, two good teamsters, of 
which one must be able to milk a few cows 
if necessary: good wages and board in private 
family. WALNUT GROVE FARM. YVasliing- 
tonville, N. Y. 
WANTED—Young man. 15 to 18. for general 
farm work and chore boy on 200 -acre farm; 
modern dairy bum; all kinds machinery; milk¬ 
ing required; state age. nationalitv. experience 
wages, first letter. P. B. WHITEHEAD, R. 1 , 
Quakertown, Pa. 
MALE HELP WANTED—-Farm in Massachu¬ 
setts; single man; general farm work; good 
milker; also man general farm work and drive 
ox team when needed; permanent positions; 
wages $50. ADVERTISER 5025, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Sober and industrious married men. 
Carpenter; must be good mechanic, familiar 
with farm machinery, willing to help on farm. 
Teamsters; must tie all around farm bands; 
house and ground for garden free: write, giving 
age. nationality, family, references and wages 
expected. DARLINGTON FARMS, Ramsey 
WANTED—Shepherd; thoroughly experienced 
and capable shepherd to take full charge of 
300 registered sheep; excellent place for right 
man; write details as to experience, reference, 
salary, etc. G. G. BURLINGAME. 150 Nassau 
Street, New York City. 
WANTED—Herdsman-dairyman to develop small 
herd of registered’ Guernseys, on Long Island: 
must be good milker, calf raiser, understand 
balanced rations, testing, etc.: good home for 
strictly sober, willing and interested single 
man; if married and no family have small cot¬ 
tage on place; state wages, nationalitv. age and 
experience. ADVERTISER 5020, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Young man fer general farm work, 
at once; one used to sulkey cultivator pre¬ 
ferred and to assist owner with cows and 
chickens: good home and permanent job right 
I arty: give age, nationality, wages required 
ard enclose reference first letter if possible. 
WM. H. HEARSFIELD. Babylon. L. I.. N. Y. 
Situations Wanted 
CAPABLE dairy fa-mer. thoroughly familiar 
with Guernsey cattle, open for position where 
executive ability, crops, breeding and A. R. 
work is required: ail branches a specialty: 10 
years’ practical experience: two short courses at 
Mass. Agricultural College: single: age 34- no 
had habits. Address ADVERTISER 5604. care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WORKING foreman wants position: experienced 
all kinds live stock, poultry, crops, factors 
and machinery: willing to board man; wife grod 
buttermaker; best reference. J. W. POTCIITAR. 
Box 563, Huntington Station, L. I.. N. Y. 
POl’LTRYMAN 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 brood’er man: 
managed one plant 12 years: American; married. 
ADVERTISER 5615, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARMER open for position on non-resident 
owner’s place: full charge: agricultural and 
business college graduate: over 20 years’ experi¬ 
ence as manager, North and South: at present 
in Michigan: four years in present place; skilled 
In all branches of farming, gardening, orchard¬ 
ing. forestry, dairying, poultry and all kinds of 
live stock: used to ail sorts of modern farm 
machinery, engines, tractors, autos, etc.; high¬ 
est references regarding ability and character: 
married: one daughter: will board help: can 
furnish three extra skilled farm hand’s; salary 
$100 a month and perquisites, or share proposi¬ 
tion. Address ADVERTISER 5614. care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
EXPERIENCED apple and peach man. agricul¬ 
tural college graduate, overseas service, de¬ 
sires marketing or harvesting position for season 
or longer with large grower or association. AD¬ 
VERTISER 5606, care Rural New-Yorker. 
YOT’XG man of good habits wants position as 
farm superintendent: agricultural school grad¬ 
uate: experienced in dairy work, farm machin- 
• rv, etc. ADY ERTISER 5617. care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
POl'LTRYMAN desires position: assistant on 
large commercial chicken farm: can handle 
carpenter tools. ADVERTISER 5616. care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
1 YY'O high school boys witli some experience de¬ 
sire work on farm during Summer: both 
strong, sturdy boys of 17 years B. AND R.. 222 
Third Street, Passaic, N. J. 
YOUNG Holland people, with one boy. aged lrt, 
want position on gentleman’s estate as herds¬ 
man: wife willing to keep boarders: best of ref¬ 
erence. Address BARTH VLIETSTRA. 60 Ack¬ 
erman Ave.. Clifton. N. J. 
FARM MANAGER, extraordinary, open for posi¬ 
tion: skilled purebred stock breeder: thorough 
knowledge of large farm and dairy establish¬ 
ments. A. R. and show work, blood lines ami 
type; thoroughly capable selecting foundation 
herd: exceptional knowledge general farming: 
lifetime experience all branches: practical and 
scientific: successful executive and organizer: 
31 years old. American: married; total abstainer. 
Address POSTOFFICE BOX 298. Kingston. N. Y. 
WANTED—Position as farm manager, gardener, 
dairyman or poultrvmnn: I am American 
(widower), 40 vears of age: one girl, 8 years. 
CHAS. II. JOSLYN, R. D. 2. Ossining, N. Y. 
POSITION wanted as herdsman; age 25; mar¬ 
ried: college trained: life experience with 
Guernseys; experienced' in milking machines, 
abortion, feeding, A. U. work, handling of men 
and raising of voting stock. ADY'ERTISER 
5622, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM, garden, camp; man. Christian, compe¬ 
tent. reliable, willing, temperate, wants light 
outdoor work for the Summer: Adirondack or 
t’atsk’l! Mountains; some experience: references. 
J. BECK. 339 W. 44th St.. New York City. 
FARM mechanic, single, wishes position: re- 
t airs machinery, (dumbing, painting, carpen¬ 
tering: years of expedience. CHARLES. 165 E. 
S 8 th St.. New York City. 
SITUATION wan’ed. near town preferred, by 
single mm. past middle age, who understands 
the care of poultry for eggs; good worker and 
caretaker; care rows; dry hand milker and 
fe dor; capable and reliable; only sanitary con¬ 
ditions eomdii'ered. ADY'ERTISER 5620. care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
MAN and wife, with two children, want position 
on a farm: man experienced with all kinds of 
sti < k. good batter-maker: w 1 fe to board help. 
Ft'N 387. New Canaan. Conn. 
FARMER, experienced, single, wants position; 
teaming preferred. ADVERTISER 5018, rare 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FARMER, single, life experience in all branches, 
desires position as head teamster or working 
foreman: understands all machinery. ADY'ER¬ 
TISER 5619, care Rural New-Yorker. 
DISCHARGED soldier desires position; experi¬ 
enced dairyman and butter-maker: prefer but- 
ter-making; references; please give full particu¬ 
lars. ADVERTISER 5028, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
MAN wants to take charge of 40 to 70 acres: 
poultry, eggs, with peaches and Everbearing 
strawberries. YVrite ADVERTISER 5629, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
FARM FOR SALE—500 acres in Southern Y’cr- 
ntont; good soil; fruit trees: sugar orchards; 
well watered; good buildings. BOX 213, Corinth, 
N. Y. 
particulars, M. MISWALD, Georgetown, Del. 
FOR SALE— Poultry farm: about 15 acres: 
equipped for capacity of 4.000 hens; 6,0O0-egg 
Candee incubator, brooder houses, laying houses, 
etc.: large, splendidly built residence;' V. mile 
front town of 3.500; located on site of Du Pont 
Boulevard: six miles from Delaware Bav and 26 
miles from Delaware Breakwater on Atlantic 
Ocean: set in apple trees; a big bargain. THE 
DELAWARE EGG FARM, Milford. Del. 
SHORE farm. 140 acres, on Narragansett Bay 
house and cottage: new barn and silo for it) 
cows: 14 acres wood: land free from stone- 
price $15,000. Address FARM. Box 426 provi¬ 
dence, R. I. 
I-OR SALE—Elmed’ge Stock Farm, one of the 
best farms in Eastern \’»w York, situated in 
the capital district on improved county highway 
one mile from State road; ideal location; 150 
acres; 10 acres timber: milk sold r,t door: tele¬ 
phone. R. F. D. 1.. electric lights and power, two 
houses: plenty of water and outbuildings in best 
condition: with or without stcek and tools 
ARTHUR SMITH. Waterford, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—At Millbrook, New York. farm. 225 
acres: tillage, pasture and woodland: suitable 
for dairying and sheep: apples and small fruit: 
running water at barns and house: latter has 
modern improvements: near good schools \d- 
dress ADVERTISER 5623, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
WANTED—Farm, near city or town, in Orange 
Co.. N. Y.: owners only. E. HART. 685 
Fulton St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. 
BARGAIN—Good Long Island farm; 50 acres: 
large house, barn, other buildings; running 
water: near bay. village md station: good 
school: easv terms. ADVERTISER 5624 rare 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—At a bargain: owner must give Irs 
time to other business: twe-hundred-aere Black 
Locust Plantation and Dairy Farm, situated in 
Southern Indiana, within twenty-five miles of 
the center of population cf the United States 
and in best stock-raising section :n the country j 
near B. & O. S. W., Rig Four and Penna. Rail¬ 
roads: Penna. has station at property, where all 
trains stop, with siding adjoining: one hundred 
and twenty-five acres of black locust trees 
approaching maturity: about three hundred 
thousand of them; this is the recognized stand¬ 
ard wood for fence posts: R. R. will take these 
posts at from fifteen to twenty cents each: this 
portion is in. excellent pasture, largely Blue 
grass: fifty acres tillage and twenty-five acres 
timber: thirty head of stock, including founda¬ 
tion herd of finest registered Holsteins in the 
State of Indiana: three good wells, one over 100 
feet deep, with concrete reservoir, filled by gas 
engine and piped to concrete power and milk 
house: wagons, mower, hav-loader. cultivator 
etc.; price, including eve-rthing, if taken at 
once. $15,000; $7,500 cash, balance on easy 
terms: this is an opportunity that seldom comes 
to a man who wishes to establish himself in 
I- . business. LOCUST PARK DAIRY 
(ARM. North Y’erncn, Ind. 
POULTRY FARM—Bargain: $30,000 plant: will 
take $12 v i) cash; all modern equipment and 
ideal conditions for raising poultry; complete 
information on request. C. S. BASSETT 170 
16th Ave.. Paterson, N. J, 
FARM, t,4 acres, for sale, in Hunterdon Co , 
N. J.. to close an estate: land’ is in a high state 
cultivation: smooth to work: nearly $ 1,000 worth 
of crops now growing, will go with farm: good 
buildings: fine neighborhood: one-half mile to 
village: three miles to station: twenty miles to 
Trenton: price reduced from $6,000 to $4,500; 
immediate possession. For particulars and pho¬ 
tos address JOS. D. WILSON, heir-at-law New 
Hope. Pa. 
lOR SALE—Silver Creek Farm; 384 acres- fruit 
and dairy, three d\veilings. nine barn build¬ 
ings. seven orchards: fertile soil: Alfalfa. For 
price and particulars inquire of owner. YY’AT.- 
TEK E. WARD. 78 Chapel Street, Albany X. Y. 
WANTED—To buy, immediately, fruit or poul¬ 
try or general farm; equipped preferred: anv 
section if bargain. C\ MINGAY. 175 Mallory 
Ave., Jersey City. N. J. 
Miscellaneous 
-----.-i 
‘•HACKETT MEDAL” WINNER—AU is for¬ 
given; return home at once. 
" AX 1 ED—Room, light housekeeping, on fa-m, 
(atskill Mountains; give particulars. v”s. 
ENGEL. 1802 Crotona Avenue, New York City. 
FOU SALE—One F’ordson 20 h. p. tractor with 
Oliver plows: used one month: good as new- 
owner died. MRS. A. L. PETERS. Campbell 
Hall, R. F. D. 1. Orange Co.. N. Y. 
INCUBATOR BARGAINS — Prairie State. Cy¬ 
phers: 360 to 400-egg capacity: in good run¬ 
ning condition. E. R. HUMMER, Frenchtown, 
DAVIS tubular milk cooler; capacity 1.000 lbs 
I’er hour: $ 75 ; cest $300. MOHEGAX FARM’ 
Peekskill. N. T. 
YY ANTED—Small size cream separator. Sharpies 
or De Laval, in first-class order. Address, 
giving size, trice and how old, WARREN 
YY’HITE. Holliston. Mass. 
i-OU SALE—12-25 Avery tractor, with three bot¬ 
tom plows: in perfect order: $700. BOX 4 
Belle Mead, N. J. 
FOR SALE—Ten-frame Starftlard Langstroth 
Beehives, complete with telescope and inner 
cover, nailed’ and painted, three coats white, at 
$3.93 each; light brood foundation, 77e per lb. 
II. t;RET’LICK, Scotia, Schenectady Co., N, Y. 
FOR SALE—Autocar l'j-ton truck: fine cm- 
tion; will demonstrate at vour farm: sell for 
want of work; $750. A. SCHIMMEL, Maspetli, 
L. I.. N. Y. 
