333 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Other Advertisments of Subscribers’ 
Exhange will be found on page 339. 
FOR .SALE—Sixty-acre fruit and poultry farm, 
on State road, 9 miles from Albany, N. Y.; 
modern incubator, brooder, colony and laying 
houses, southern exposure; old and young or¬ 
chards of nearly 2,000 apple, pear and other 
fruit trees; furnished residence, with hot and 
cold running water and modern conveniences; 
gravity water supply to barns and other build¬ 
ings, including poultry plant; telephone and 
electric light and power service; farm imple¬ 
ments and machinery, including new tractor; 
live stock, etc.; local markets in Albany, 
Schenectady, Troy, Cohoes, Watervliet and 
Rensselaer and nearby villages; total population 
over 400,000 within radius of 10 to 15 miles; 
shipping facilities from New York Central ex¬ 
press station one-half mile distant and by Dela¬ 
ware & Hiidson Railroad, about two miles dis¬ 
tant; also by boat, Albany to New York, every 
night, and motor bus line on State road to 
Albany and other cities. For particulars inquire 
ADVERTISER 6465, care Rural New-Yorker. 
-- 
FOR SAT.E—97-aere rolling fertile farm, well 
watered, on stone road; 4-room house, prac¬ 
tically new barn, 40x54; 70 acres tillable land; 
$5,500. T. C. BAKER, Cochranville, Pa. 
FOR SALE—6-room house, 1 acre ground; ex¬ 
press and trucking business. MIKKELSEN, 
Pleasantville, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—600-acre farm in Quebec, just over 
the Vermont line, 1% miles from railroad; fine 
stone residence worth $20,000 and 2 good farm 
houses; 3,000 sugar maples and other valuable 
timber; good barn and 2 large silos; 80 good 
grade cows and all farm implements and equip¬ 
ment, including maple sugar outfit, go W'itli the 
place; soil mostly well drained and in good state 
of cultivation and fertility; for hill and valley 
scenery this place is unsurpassed; ideal place 
for small institution, for gentleman’s Summer 
home or for a business farmer with plenty of: 
help; owner has no heirs and is retiring; price! 
$45,000. Apply BOX 21, East Stanbridge, Que¬ 
bec, Canada. 
FOR SALE—Cheap, fifty-two acre truck farm, 
in Kent Co., Delaware. For particulars apply 
to HAZEL PECKHAM, 401 West 10th Street, 
Wilmington, Del. 
FOR SALE—Farm, 194 acres. Eastern Columbia 
• County; three miles from R. R.-station and I 
-State road; eleven-room house, four barns, two 
wagon houses, poultry houses, capacity 600; | 
horse stables, cow stables for 10; fruit and ber¬ 
ries; rural delivery and telephone. Price, par¬ 
ticulars, write S. W. JONES, Craryville, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—To settle an estate, a fine country 
homestead of seventy acres is offered for sale 
at a bargain; on State road; five minutes to 
station; fourteen-room house, in splendid con¬ 
dition; hardwood floors, city water, electric 
lights, bath; large shaded lawn, garage and all 
necessary farm buildings; land very productive, 
and large apple orchard; no agents. GEO. M. 
HALLOCK, Executor, Washingtonville, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—112-acre Alfalfa farm, $6,000; high 
state cultivation; good buildings. GEO. R. 
CROSS, R. 2, Oneida. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—162-acre farm, three miles to Lack¬ 
awanna Valley, Scranton, and vicinity; within 
a radius of 18 miles, 500,000 population; this 
farm is adapted for dairy or truck; abundance 
of good water and fruit: best lying farm this 
locality for miles; one barn 82x30. basement; 
one barn 40x00. basement; one house, 10 rooms; 
? ossession can be had April 1; remember, this 
arm is under high cultivation. Address SHEN- 
NEN RROS., Olyphant, Lackawanna Co., Pa. 
OOZY FARM HOME; 80 acres: good buildings: 
$2,400; one-third down; 12 miles from Sara¬ 
toga Springs. ERNEST BOARDMAN, Ganse- 
voort, N. Y. 
FARM FOR RENT—140 acres: one mile north 
Somerville, N. J.; 10-room house, buildings, 
machinery, windmill, meadow: corn, hay, straw 
and Winter grain on premises. A. L. CAN- 
FIELD, Somerville, N. J. 
26-ACRE farm at Mt. Laurel, Burlington Co., 
N. J.: 13 miles from Camden; on stone road; 
8 miles to Moorestown and trolley line; 1,000 
peach trees in bearing: several hundred young 
apple trees in bearing: nearly new outbuildings; 
fairly good farmhouse on place; will pay for 
* Itself in three years off orchard; price $5,000. 
JOHN H. CONVERY, Box 144, Moorestown, N. 
J., or W. J. CONVERY, Mt. Laurel, N. J. 
Phone 240-14. (No agents.) 
FOR SALE—Productive 39-acre farm, in Salem 
Co., N. J., witli full equipment. J. M. DICK¬ 
SON, R. 2, Newfleld, N. J. 
FOR RENT or FOR SALE—Farm, 40 neres, near 
Gloversville, N. Y.: eight-room house, barn 
and some tools; good condition: occupancy March 
1. ADVERTISER 6482, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—103-acre farm in famous Alfalfa 
belt, Central New Yo-k: 30 Holsteins: milk 
route nearby town; January sales, $(’00: every¬ 
thing. $20,000; half down. ADVERTISER 6483, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Farm; fifty acres tillable, suited po¬ 
tatoes; Southern New Jersey preferred: cheap 
for cash. GEORGE C. PHILLIPS, 84 Geddes 
Terrace, Waterbury, Conn. 
WANTED—Rent or purchase house, about six 
rooms and large plot of ground, handy to rail¬ 
road station to New Yo-k City; Westchester 
County or Long Island; full particulars first let¬ 
ter. ADVERTISER 6481, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—102 acres, highly located farm, 
adapted for fruit, potatoes, grass and grain; 
80 acres under cultivation: 22 acres pasture, 
with never-failing stream: about 65 acres seeded 
in grass and grain: located in the center of New 
Jersey, 3 miles from Burlington, 10 miles from 
Trenton; modern 9-ronm farmhouse with Caloric 
heater; fair outbuildings. REBECCA KRA¬ 
MER, Burlington, N. J.; Bell ’phone 45-R2; 
R. F. D. No. 2. 
FDR SALE—150-acre fruit farm, lu Hudson 
River Valley, producing gross annual income 
•f from $3,500 to $5,000. For complete descrip¬ 
tion address ADVERTISER 6485, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—All or part of 233^ acres; near 
R. R. station, school, church and P. O.; a 
fine stock farm; plenty buildings, fruit, etc. 
For full particulars address I. L. WILBTTR, 
Jefferson, Powhatan Co., Va. 
FDR SALE—85 acres, good level farm, with 
good buildings: 20 acres bearing npple or¬ 
chard: price $6,000: reasonable terms. MRS. J. 
W. SPAULDING, R. D. 1, Peru. N. Y. 
25-AORE truck, fruit and poultry farm: U. m'l“ 
from trolley; excellent market. South and 
Perth Amboy; six-room house, necessary out¬ 
buildings: three acres raspherries, one acre 
strawberries, apples, plums and peaches. F. P. 
Lambertson, Cliffwood, N. J. 
HAVE SOLD a portion of my farm; will keep 
a small portion; the cream of it I will sell; 
about 34 acres most all kinds of fruit; 2 acres 
in wood; about 4 meadow; balance tillable; 15- 
room house, 2 baths, steam heat, gas machine, 
laundry in cellar; first story of bubble stone 
shingles above storm sash; large porch; situated 
on high elevation; 2 miles from village of Spring 
Valley, 30 miles New York, on west side main 
State road; water, climate and views unsur¬ 
passed; less than cost of buildings; out house, 
barn, 2 chicken houses; price $15,000; terms; 
owner. ADVERTISER 6494, care Rural New- 
Yorker,_ 
FOR SALE—27-acre fruit farm; 3,200 peach, 
pear and apple trees; all kinds of small fruit 
for family use; good nine-room house, fruit 
house, barn, etc.; spring and well water; % 
mile to shipping station; 8jA miles to Ithaca 
and Cornell University. Write GLENSIDE OR¬ 
CHARD, 318 West State St., Ithaca, N. Y. 
Miscellaneous 
FOR SALE—New Junior Victor 50-gal. churn, 
complete, with power pulley and butter work¬ 
er; never been uncrated; $60. H. L. ORR, Rock 
Stream, N. Y. 
WANTED—Second-hand Buckeye power ditcher; 
state price and condition. H. L. ORR, Rock 
Stream. N. Y._ 
NEW Gillette sheep shearing machine, with 
horse clipping attachment; price $17.50. ELM 
RIDGE FARM, Scarsdale, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—X-ray incubator; 400-egg; two sec¬ 
tions; $20. PORTER MAY, Savannah, N. Y. 
WANTED—Buckwheat: any quantity; hay, car 
lots; what have you to offer? V. R. ALLEN 
Seaford, Del. 
WANTED—One 2-bottom, 12 or 10-lnch tract r 
plow; Oliver preferred. OTTO SCHWIF.N 
Townshend, Md. 
WANTED—Steady, quiet married couple, small 
or no family; man for general farm work: must 
be extra good teamster and dry-hand milker: 
wife to wash milking utensils; house, wood, 
milk, 2;> bu. potatoes and $<>0: references re¬ 
quired; i>osition open April 1. JOHN F. FISHER 
Taeonie, Litchfield Co., Conn. 
W ANTED—One-horse Eureka potato planter, in 
good condition. W. A. CATLIN, Tully, N. Y. 
ONE Cyphers Paradise Sectional Brooder. 200 
capacity: good as new; $25. C. A. SWEET 
R. 2. Little Falls. N. Y. 
WANTED—-Carload bright clover hav. H 
SCHIRE, Rahway, N. J. J 
POPCORN—White rice (shelled): 250 lbs.. 10c 
lb. C. SNYDER, R, 1, M arshall, Mo. 
FOR SALE—Cyphers brooder stoves, Prairie 
State model, and Buffalo incubators. HARRY 
F. PALMER, Middle port, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—3.000-egg Hall Mammoth Incubator. 
1917: sectional construction: used two seasons; 
guaranteed in perfect condition; $450. crated 
l. o. b. car. C. E. MARTIN, Worcester, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—1,200-egg Newtown coal-burning 
hot water incubator, automatic egg-turner and 
electric alarm; one 300 and one 500-chick coal 
burning Newtown brooders: this outfit practically 
ns good as new: first check for $125 takes the 
lot. HENRY JURGENSEN, Rockdale, N. Y. 
WANTED—Used 240 or 390 Prairie State or 
Cyphers incubators, in first-class condition: 
also some portable hovers: state price. WM. 
M. KLING, Sharon Springs, N. Y. 
WANTED—Sugar-making outfit for one to three 
hundred trees: must be in good condition. J. 
W. GOULD, Lakewood, Pa. 
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Important to Advertisers 
Copy and instructions for clas¬ 
sified advertisements or change 
of copy must reach us on Thurs¬ 
day morning in order to insure 
insertion in following week’s paper. 
Notice to discontinue advertise¬ 
ments should reach us on Wed¬ 
nesday morning in order to prevent 
advertisement appearing in follow- 
FOR SALE—Monarch feed mill, large corn shell- 
er, automatic Magnet cider press, apple grind¬ 
er; wanted, sugar bush outfit, especially buckets' 
also Franklin stove. B. G. ABBEY, Holcomb, 
HAVING cleared my land, will sell Fitzpatrick 
one-man stump puller: bargain. B. M. Mc- 
NEIL, Sunnyside Farm, Loekport, N. Y. 
I'DR SALE—Seventy-four-bottle Babcock steam 
tester, practically new; also steam table and 
galvanized wash tubs. LYON F’ARM, Lyons 
Flails, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—12 to 15 h.p. gas and kerosene en¬ 
gine, 50-inch inserted tooth circular saw, 3V> 
h.p. gasoline engine, 12 h.p. portable steam en¬ 
gine; make me your best offer. ADVERTISER 
6479, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED^—Two 400-egg Prairie State or Cy¬ 
phers incubators in good condition. A. L. 
PURDY, Port Chester, N. Y. 
WANTED—144-egg Cyphers incubator, first-class 
jj cMJdition. R. S. HILL, Conewango Valley, : 
-—--- - 
FOR SALE—30 h.p. steam horizontal, return 
flue, bricked-in boiler; 40-ft. smokestack, 1 i 
15-16 shafting, hangers, inch piping: good con- I 
dition; cheap. FRANKLIN HALL, Little Val- 1 
ley, N. Y. 
F OR SALE—5-10 Avery tractor: used one day. 
HALL R. CLO THIER. Silver Creek. N. Y. 
TRACTOR for sale: bargain; La Crosse Happy 
Farmer; used only one week for belt work' 
guaranteed like new; sold farm. WILLIAM 
LOSCH Jersey Shore, Pa. 
F’OR SALE—Hall mammoth, 2.400-egg incu¬ 
bator, in perfect running order; used three 
seasons with great success: also hovers, brooder 
and colony houses and other poultry supplies* 
our plant is being closed and everything will be 
a * bar « ain P ri ces- OSCEOLA FARMS. 
CRANFORD, N. J. 
HONEY—Finest clover, thick, rich and delicious, 
delivered parcel post, third zone, 12 lbs., $4.50; 
.,i bs 'k $ 2 ' 3r,; b Y express, not prepaid, 60 lbs..’ 
f,V?Ao 24 J\\ h - K ,l asa iars ' ?9 ' LONGFELLOW 
BROS., Hallowell, Me. 
Louden 
Senior 
Hay 
Carrier 
Store Bigger Crops 
In Less Time With Less Help 
With Louden Hay Tools at hand you can 
feel much easier about the safety of your 
hay ciop, in spite a shortage of help which 
invariably occurs during haying time. They 
speed up the work enormously and have 
saved many a big crop which would have been 
lost without them. The labor they save pays 
for them several times over every serson. 
Simple, strong construction makes them trouble 
proof in unskilled hands —you can always rely on 
a full day’s work every day throughout the season* 
for many seasons to come. 
Wm. Louds» 
Whose labor 
saving: barn 
equipment la 
used in over a 
million barns. 
the Bam.' 
We want to help 
you also in your 
bam building im¬ 
provements. Write us 
about your needs and 
about when you expect 
to build, and we will tend you 
‘'Louden Barn Plant "—a I 12-page 
encyclopedia devoted entirely to bam 
building. Our bam building experts are also at your service 
without charge for preliminary blue prints and suggestions to 
meet your particular reauirements, if you will give us the in¬ 
formation called for in the coupon. 
THE LOUDEN MACHINERY COMPANY 
2638 Court Street (Established 18671 Fairfield. Iowa 
Handle Any Kind of Hay or Fodder 
Louden Balance Grapple Fork is the only fork that handles 
short clover, alfalfa or cow peas as perfectly as long timothy. Picks 
up half a ton at a time, grips it tight and drops it exactly where 
wanted well spread out—saves half the labor of mowing back. 
Louden Senior Hay Carrier carries its load up close to the track 
and over beams. Stores tons more hay in the loft. Never fails to 
register from whatever angle load is drawn. No rope troubles; no 
binding on track. Strong enough to handle 1500 pounds continuously 
without straining. Roller bearing rope wheels mean easy operation. 
Louden Power Hoist saves a man and team in storing your hay. It 
elevates load, draws it into mow or over stack, brings back empty 
carrier. Takes up all slack rope, no dragging on the ground. Available 
for every kind of heavy lifting on the farm. A boy can operate it. 
In addition to the above we make other types of forks and carriers’as 
well as the famous line of Louden slings—the simplest and best sling 
ever put together. All Louden Hay Tools are quality built—guaranteed 
to do all we claim for them and more, their cost is trifling compared to 
the work they do and the labor they save. 
Write for 224-Page Equipment Catalog 
It gives full information about the complete line of Louden 
Hay Unloading Equipment, also about Stalls and Stanchions, 
Litter and Feed Carriers, Animal Pens, Detachable Water 
Bowls, Bam and Garage Door Hangers, Cupolas, Ventilators— 
"Everything for 
THE LOUDEN MACHINERY CO., 
2838 Court St., Fairfield, Iowa. 
Please send, postpaid, without charge 
or obligation, the books checked below. 
.Louden Bara Plans 
.London illnstrated Catalog 
I expect to build (remodel) a bam about 
(date)..Jor.cows.horses. 
Am interested in:.Stalls.Stanch¬ 
ions.Carriers.-Water Bowls. 
.Animal Pens.Hay Tools. 
NaRie....,....*...,..«.,..„ a ,MiH*MM......*" —— 
Poat Office.State 
Blasting stumps is easy 
—grubbing is drudgery 
To remove a stump by grubbing and horse 
pulling is a back-breaking, killing job. When 
at last the stump is out, the job is but half 
done. The big, heavy chunks must be dis¬ 
posed of. 
Compare this kind of stumping with that de¬ 
scribed by Mrs. J. R. Cronister, of Jeanette, 
Penna., who writes: 
"We read the bock. ‘Better Farming.’ The pictures and 
directions made everything so plain. You surely are 
right in saying Atlas Farm Powder is the easy way to 
get rid of stumps. It is so much easier than any other 
way we ever tried.” 
Let us send you the book, “Better Farming 
with Atlas Farm Powder,’’ mentioned by Mrs. 
Cronister. Its 128 pages and 140 illustrations 
show how to use Atlas Farm Powder to re¬ 
move stumps, break boulders, blast beds for 
trees, make ditches and drain swamps. 
ATLAS POWDER COMPANY 
Division UXSi, Philadelphia, Penna. 
Dealers everywhere Magazines near you 
| ing week’s paper. 
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The Safest Explosive 
The Original Farm Powder 
