•The RURAL. NEW-YORKER 
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5 1 <2 Lflfe 'Tempers 
the Heat of Summer 
Moist heat in your home means the comfort 
of the summer sun tempered by lake or pond. 
It means comfortable warmth indoors with¬ 
out dry throats and nostrils. 
This is the kind of heat a New Idea Pipeless 
Furnace will supply to your home. The big 
water pan in the New Idea tempers the heat 
as a lake tempers the heat of summer. 
New Idea heating means clean heat free from 
dust, coal gas and cellar air. The New Idea 
Register—the only one needed to heat the 
whole house—is dust and gas-proof. There 
are many reasons for selecting the 
NEW-IDEA 
Pipeless Furnace 
“The one you’ve heard so much about ” 
Those are hut two of the many advantages of the New 
Idea that make it the furnace you will select when 
you make comparisons. Look into this matter thor¬ 
oughly before you buy. Consider the frameless hot- 1 
blast feed door of the New Idea which no other fur¬ 
nace has. There are no cracks to leak gas or dust. 
It supplies the lire with a steady stream of hot air 
that burns the heat-giving gases and smoke which 
otherwise would be lost up tne chimney. 
Consider, too, the cup-joint construction that prevents 
leaky joints; the two-piece firepot that lasts a life¬ 
time; the patented non-clinker grate, and many other 
New Idea features. 
Installed in a Day—Burns any Fuel 
Yon can install a New Idea in a day and burn any 
fuel in it. It. will keep the whole house warm when 
it is zero weather outdoors. 
Every New Idea is hacked by a binding written guar¬ 
antee of satisfactory heating. 
If you are not satisfied that the New Idea does all 
we claim for it. your money will be refunded promptly. 
You take no risk, depend on no one's word—it’s all 
down in black and white. Be sure to 
read this guarantee before you order. 
Write for Catalog, and name of New 
Idea dealer in your neighborhood. 
Expert advice on all heating problems 
sent free. 
UTICA HEATER COMPANY 
Box No. 50 Utica, N. Y. 
Also manufacturers of Superior 
Warm AirFurnaces and Imperial 
Steam and Hot Water Boilers 
How much do you earn? 
Make more money in your spare time set- 
ling the New IdeJPipelessFurnace in your 
neighborhood. You can easily turn idle 
hours into dollars white helping your neigh¬ 
bors to have more comfortable homes. We 
\ offer exclusive territory to the right men. 
Write us for full details of our ptoposi- 
k tion to agents. 
. yl/il 
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m 
Excellent proposition for the 
right kind of hardware , 
dealers, implement men, 
etc., etc. New Idea deal - 1 
era everywhere are 
“making good. ,r 
20-2 
Pastoral Parson 
(Continued from page 192) 
comfortable. How the children scam¬ 
pered in Christinas morning, and how 
Clnirlsie’s eyes stuck out when lie saw 
the tree in the. corner with the presents 
hanging on it. I’oppo gave Mommo a 
pair of large shears for cutting out in 
her sewing work, and Mommo gave Poppo 
a pair of her famous warm wool slippers 
on leather soles. He would far rather 
leave his vestments behind than those 
slippers when he heads down country. 
They are real life-savers when it comes to 
warming up spare beds on zero nights. 
Her Own Room.— Little “Sit” now has 
her own room and she is pleased with it. 
We had it papered before she moved in, 
deserting her crib once for all. The Par¬ 
son did his very best on the job at paint¬ 
ing it up for her. and went over the fur¬ 
niture with a snow-white enamel. She 
has moved her things into the bureau and 
the closet, and there is a pile of them 
down in the corner of the floor, her little 
grip and her little handbag and her little 
trunk that someone gave her. How she 
loves these little things of hers. The 
boys must not touch them without asking, 
for they are hers, nott theirs. What a 
great thing this is—to have them keep 
their own things separate and take care 
of them. It is the property sense which 
is so very valuable and must not be vio¬ 
lated. If more men and women only 
knew what was theirs and what was not 
theirs and acted accordingly ! Every lit¬ 
tle while some one of the hoys come and 
say, “Can I have this box to put my 
things in?” They get the box all right. 
The other night Georgie came in and no¬ 
ticed Clossie had his slippers on. He 
pitched into him at once with orders to 
take them off. Clossie had been told to 
put them on, and there you were ; But he 
should ‘not have been told to put them on, 
or allowed to, till George had been con¬ 
sulted. He has had those slippers for a 
long time—over a year—and they look 
like new now. They are always placed 
just so at the head of his bed right by 
an empty cracker box, which holds in 
perfect order all his worldly goods. A 
father has no more moral right to give 
one child’s thing to another without talk¬ 
ing it over with the child than he has lo 
give a neighbor’s things away. Whether 
the father's money paid for it or not lias 
nothing to do with it. If it is the boy’s 
coat, when it gets torn or left out on the 
porch, it is also his when it hangs behind 
the kitchen door. Never give children 
things to own in common. It makes end¬ 
less trouble and, which is far worse, 
breaks down this property sense. 
The Ice Crop. —There has been a fine 
crop of ice harvested about here this Win¬ 
ter. It came in vacation time, which was 
a tremendous help—having the boys at 
home. Hitherto it has cost from $12 to 
$18 for help to get the house filled, and 
this year we did not pay out a cent for 
help. Four of us neighbors went in to¬ 
gether and bought a new ice plow. It 
worked fine, and saved such a lot of saw¬ 
ing. We rigged up a sort of an old-fash¬ 
ioned well-sweep affair to help load the 
ice. and it worked to perfection. You 
stick one pole down through the ice into 
the mud and chain a “sweep” pole onto 
this with a chain and ice tougs on the 
6mall or tip end of the sweep. With this 
simple arrangement, which one of the men 
saw in some farm paper, the ice couhr 
be lifted right out of the water and swung 
onto the wagon with astonishing ease as 
compared to the old way of a dead lift 
with the tougs. Ice is terribly heavy cold 
stuff to handle. In doing no other work 
does a little headwork count so much. It 
will slide uphill or down on planks with 
little effort. And every year we have 
done a little here and a little there to 
make it easier to handle. Two neighbors 
use the Parson’s house with him. and we 
put in 225 cakes, 2 ft. square and 10 in. 
thick. This will make some ice cream for 
the down-county socials if we can get any 
sugar. Many more put lip ice around 
here this year than ever before, and it is 
a move in the right* direction. People 
who have city boarders ought to have it 
especially. Ice cream counts so much 
with them, and will help out many a time 
when you don’t know what in the world 
to have for dessert. The boys will turn 
(lie freezer if you give them plenty of toll. 
A Boaruer Story.— Speaking of Sum¬ 
mer boarders makes the Parson think of 
a boarder story lie heard somewhere the 
other day. A certain Summer hoarder 
liked the place where he found himself for 
his vacation very much, Imt there were 
two terrible drawbacks. One was poor 
half-witted Mary Ann, who waited on t he 
table and spilled about half the soup down 
his neck, and always held the dishes on 
the wrong side of him. The other was the 
pig’s dinner. For there was the big ket¬ 
tle of swill forever steeping and boiling 
right under his window. The odor was 
awful, and there was seldom any let up. 
So when the next Spring came around lie 
wrote the place that he would like to come 
again, but he wished something could be 
done about the pig’ dinner, and that 
Mary Aun’s services could be dispensed 
with. In due time he got the following 
reply: 
“We got your letter. As for Mary Ann, 
she’s been gone from this place now nigh 
onto three mouths, and as for the pig’s 
dinner, we ain’t had no hog on this place 
since you left.” 
Did the boarder go back or not? 
January 31, 1920 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Other Advertisments of Subscribers’ 
Exhange will be found on page 219. 
134-ACRE farm, 20 head stock, farm tools; large 
boarding house, fnrm dwelling; nenr Catskill, 
X Y.; $11,000. Write ADVERTISER 0378, care 
Rural Now-Xorker. 
FOR SALE—With Rome cash, will help you to 
soon own one of the lies! large general farms 
in Sou 11 i Jersey. ADVERTISER 0397, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Rent, buy, farm; barns with cellars 
or basement; New Jersey. BERG MANN, 151 
Grant Ave., Roselle Park, N. .T. 
WANTED—To rent dairy farm, with stock and 
tools, or partly stocked. P. WALSH, Rural 1, 
Box 15, Mt. Klseo, N. Y. 
FARM—250 acres; 125 acres river flat; balance. 
pasture and woodland; largo house, modern 
Improvements; lmrn ties 55 head; two silos, 
wagon house, henhouse, garage; llnest spring 
water at house and lmrn; 40 cows, 4 horses, 
milking machine, together with all modern 
machinery; thirty-six cows produced $7,580 in 
1919; l'i miles from station, churches, school: 
$5.f*00 down balance ensv terms if sold by March 
1st, 1920. ADVERTISER 0409, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—05-aoro farm; stock, crops, imple¬ 
ments: good buildings. ELWOOD DANLEY, 
R. D. 1. Box 4, Browns Mills. N. J. 
WANTED—A farm of 00 to 80 acres with fair 
set of buildings; X Y. State, on main road; 
suitable for small dairy and grain farm; must 
have some fruit; price reasonable; give full 
particulars in first letter. ADVERTISER 0410, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—“Wexford Farm.” one hundred and 
forty-five acres; one of the host in Central 
New York; first-class buildings: twenty thou¬ 
sand dollars; write for particulars. JOSEPH 
NUNN. Owner, Utica, X Y. 
WANTED—To buy or rent, farm of 00 to 12 1 
acres, adapted to general farming, with cor 
siderahle amount of fruit; must grow and hold 
clover; Western New York or Southeastern 
Pennsylvania preferred; if a large farm. lots of 
pasture; cheap. Address ADVERTISER 0407. 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
RELIABLE FARMER wants to rent farm. 50 
100 acres, suitable for trucking; vicinity New 
York or Philadelphia. ADVERTISER 0400, can- 
Rural New-Yorker. 
HUNDRED ACRES, cultivated: $ 11 , 000 ; terms 
to suit: stock, tools extra; fifty acres truck 
land; house, lmrn; make offer. 1407 SOUTH 
END AVENUE, Plainfield, N. ,T. _ 
WANTED—To buy, on easy terms, small farm. 
well adapted to poultry, within commuting 
distance of some large Connecticut city; refer¬ 
ences regarding character, experience and 
ability. ADVERTISER 0404, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
58-ACRE FARM, with modern improvements; 
would make fine gentleman’s Summer home, 
dairy, fruit or market garden farm; within 5. 
10 and 15 miles of 3 cities of from 50,000 to 
175,000 population; finest markets in New Eng¬ 
land: $15,000: half cash; write for particulars. 
DAVID JOHNSON, Kensington, Conn. 
WANTED—A farm of 00 to 80 acres, with 
lair set of buildings; New York State, on a 
main road: suitable for small dairy and grain 
farm: must have some fruit; price reasonable; 
give full particulars in first letter. ADVER¬ 
TISER 0410, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Miscellaneous 
WANTED—Several carloads of horse or cow 
manure: state price. JOHN F. WIT,KENS 
Pe.-kskill. X Y. _ 
TOWER two-row cultivator, practically new: 
guaranteed; first $50 cheek takes it. JOHN C. 
BREAM, Gettysburg, Pa. _ 
OLD POPCORN—Sure pop (shelled), 20 or more 
lbs., parcel post at Hie lb. to second zone; be¬ 
yond, add extra postage. W. HALBERT, Ox¬ 
ford, N. Y. 
HONEY—Fine finality buckwheat extracted 
honey at my shipping station, 00-lb can, $12; 
10-lb. pails in lots or 2 or more, $2.35; 5-lb. 
pails, 2 or more, $1.25 each; by parcel post pre¬ 
paid, 12-lb. cans in second zone, $3.25; third 
zone, $3.40: also some fine clover honey. Send 
for pries, ray C. WILCOX, West Dan by, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—One Hardie barrel spraying outfit. 
No. 20. X O. HINE, Route 3, Seymour, Conn. 
FOR SALE—15 h.p. boiler, 1 Rippley heater. 
each $25; two 350-egg Buffalo incubators, $15 
each. II. A. SPIES, Preston, Md. 
WANTED—Grimm or Champion evaporator. R 
L. BECKWITH. Ovid, Mich.; R. D. 2. 
WANTED—Feed mill, fanning mill, wood saw, 
power washer; offered, one-horse trend 
power sled corn harvester; King barn ventilating 
pipe. MORNINGSIDE FARM, Sylvania, Fa. 
WANTED—Two-row team cultivator, potato 
planter and sprayer (Iron Age preferred). 1*. 
NELSON, Brookhaven, X Y. 
HONEY—Finest clover, thick, rich and delicious. 
delivered parcel post, third zone, 12 lbs.. $4.50; 
(1 lbs.. $2.35; by express, not prepaid, 00 lbs., 
$18: 24 1-lb. glass jars, $9. LONGFELLOW 
BROS., Hallowell, Me. 
FOB SALE—Carload of feeding mangels. 
GEORGE W. YOUNG, Truxton, N. Y. 
WANTED—Second-hand potato planter and dig¬ 
ger; for sale, Moline Universal tractor, Model 
D. J. W. McLEOD. Rowland, N. C. 
CHOCOLATES—Pure honey centers; healthful 
and delicious; 1-lb. box., 05e; 2-lb., $1.25, up 
to fourth zone; money with order. “ENDION " 
Naples, N. Y. 
INCUBATORS FOR SALE—Two 240-egg. $15; 0 
400-egg. $20; Blue Hen; new in 1919. W. 
ALLEN, Mansfield, Mass. 
FOR SALE—Choice exfaeted honey, 00 lbs., $10 
f. o. b,; sample, 25 cents. J. C. 1IICKS 
Belleville. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—-150-gal. Ilardie power sprayer and 
50-gal. Iron Age barrel sprayer, both in com¬ 
plete working order: write for prices. CHAS. 
TAYLOK, Liberty, X Y. 
FOR SALE—Guernsey dairy butter; 5-lb. fiber 
package, parcel post, 70 cents a pound. WIL¬ 
LARD T. TAYLOR, Solsville, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—1919 Case 10-18 tractor, used 
slightly: No. 78 Oliver tractor plow; 4-section 
harrow; also 1919 Case standard size hay press; 
$1,400 takes the lot; outfit cost $2,100 last Sum¬ 
mer. ADVERTISER 0405, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—One Oliver 12-int'li two-lmttom 
horse gang plow, in good condition; $50.00. 
WALTER S. BITTNER, R. F. D. No. 1, 
Weatherly, l*a. 
