662 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Other Advertisments of Subscribers’ 
Exhange will be found on page 667. 
WANTED—Position, or farm on shares: am 
American; liave family of growing children; 
have been general farme”, herdsman, dairyman, 
butter-maker, manager, orchardist. ADVER¬ 
TISER 0712, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—To rent, from April, a small house, 
preferably furnished, with a little ground, in 
New Jersey or Southern New York. ADVER¬ 
TISER 6748, care Rural New-Yorker. 
200-ACRE flat dairy, grain farm, near good 
markets, schools, churches, stations; owners. 
G., BOX 18, Great Bend, Pa. 
TENANT farmers to grow large acreage of corn 
and buckwheat and gather hay on shares: I 
have tlie land and some machinery. C. D. 
BLACK, Somerville, N. J. 
FOR SALE—217 acres, dairy and potato farm; 
located Broome County. N. Y.; 60 rods 
from main State highway, between New York 
City and Buffalo; good state cultivation: new 
house; 2 barns: gravity spring water: plenty 
wood, some timber; 27 head Holstein cattle, 
mostly purebreds: 3 horses: good line farm¬ 
ing tools: is paying good interest for a $10,000 
investment: $13,000 takes everything, or the 
hare farm at $30 per acre: buy direct. Address 
DWIGHT MANOR STOCK FARM. Windsor. 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE—One of Vermont’s High grade stock 
and dairy farms: 2.74 acres: located in Corn 
wall. Addison Co.. 3 miles from Middlebury. 
For full particulars address T. J. MACMFRTRY, 
Mddlebury, Yt. 
720-ACRE dairy farm in Steuben Co., N. Y.. for 
sale; new buildings, worth $15,000 : 400.000 ft. 
choice heavy timber; water piped to buildings: 
price $22,000 if sold at once. THOMAS HAS- 
LETT, Seneca, Ontario Co., N. Y. 
FARM FOR SALE—Bare farm. 78 acres: 18 
acres standing timber: good buildings: good 
level ground: $7,000: with stock and tools $6,770. 
FRED ZIMMERMANN, Cassville. Oneida Co., 
N. Y. 
The RURAL N 
WANTED—A farm of small acreage. 10 to 20. 
near good market, good roads; small orchard 
of apples and other fruits: good soil, goixl house 
and other buildings, adapted to poultry: full de¬ 
scription and price first letter: Southern New 
Jersey preferred. H. T. STROUT, Fruitland 
Park. Fla. 
FOR SALE—To Let—Country store: good stand: 
butcher, grocer, garage; 30 miles out on State 
road: fine store; 12 living rooms, barn, garage. 
WESLEY HAT,LOCK, Lake Grove. I.. I.. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fruit farm of 10 acres along Hud¬ 
son River: gross sales about $3,000 last year; 
price, $7,700 for quick sale, including horse, 
cow. wagon, buggy, tools, spray pump. elc.; 
half cash. ADVERTISER 6770. care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Two good farms in Orange Co., N. 
Y.; one of 181 acres, and one of 70U acres; 
finely located. Inquire of G. N. LANDS, Mont¬ 
gomery, N. Y. 
SPLENDIDLY located farm in the Berkshire 
Hills, Mass.: 350 acres in meadows, pastures 
and timber; land excellent clay loam; good farm¬ 
ing equipment and stocked if desired: views un¬ 
surpassed: gravity fed spring water to house 
and barns, and water in pastures: through ex¬ 
press train service from New York: close to 
trolley; excellent farm, as well as splendid loca¬ 
tion for Summer or year around home; if inter¬ 
ested, communicate with ADVERTISER 6753, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM FOR SALE—West Creek. Ocean Co., N. 
J., on Tuckerton railroad station, stores, P. 
O. 200 yards distant: house 8 rooms, fronts on 
State road. Long Branch to Atlantic City: 327 
acres: 40 fine farming land: 200 salt packing 
hay: last cutting sold over $1,500 : 87 meadow 
and wood: Weir Creek on farm: one Vj mile 
long; produces finest oysters; capable of 300 to 
700 bit. annually; clams, crabs and fish also: 
ducks and geese plentiful. Spring and Fall: just 
the farm for gun and oyster club: creek empties 
in bay opposite Beach House; good buildings: 
owner 84, hence sale: cheap to quick buyer. Ad¬ 
dress FRANKLIN DYE. Trenton, N. ,T. 
FARM FOR SALE—Situated in York Co.. Pa.; 
96 acres: good cultivation: all necessary build¬ 
ings, fences, fruit, never-failing water; con¬ 
venient to school, churches, s.tores, etc. For 
particulars write M. L. SPAHR, R. 1. Dover. Pa. 
Miscellaneous 
HONEY—Finest clover, thick, rich and delicious; 
by parcel post 2nd and 3rd zones, 12 lbs.. 
$4.50 6 lbs.. $2.37: by express, not prepaid. 00 
lbs., $18.00: 24 one-pound jars. $8.70. LONG¬ 
FELLOW BROS., Hallowell, Me. 
INCUBATORS FOR SALE—New in 1919; six 
440-egg Reliable, $27; one older, 440-egg, $22. 
W. ALLEN. Mansfield. Mass. 
CHOCOLATES—Pure honey centers; healthful 
and delicious; 1-lb. box. 67c; 2-lb., $1.27, up 
to fourth zone: money with order. “ENOION,” 
Naples. N. Y. 
FOR SAI.E—J. I. Case Eniear, two-bottom 14- 
in. power lift engine plow; used little; price, 
$100; Forkner light draft 7-section 16-fool har¬ 
row. cheap. BENJAMIN WILLIAMS. Bushford, 
N. Y. 
PURE Vermont maple syrup, $3 gal.: pure Ver¬ 
mont maple sugar in 10-lb. pails. 40c lb.; this 
year’s crop: cash with order: satisfaction guar¬ 
anteed. BERT PRESCOTT, Essex Junction, Vt. 
PURE HONEY—Buckwheat (dark) extracted: 
12 lbs. delivered in 2d zone, $3.27; third zone, 
$3.40; f. o. b. my station as follows: 10-lb. 
pails, $2.37: 00-lb. can. $12. Write for price 
on clover honey. RAY C. WILCOX, West Dau¬ 
by, N. Y. 
ONE Hinmau milking machine. 2 units, with 
extra pail, complete; used only two weeks: 
one New Way 2 h.p. gas engine, never been 
used; one 3-burner oil cook stove. LAWRENCE 
HOWARD. Kinderhook, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Moline tractor. Model C, with 14- 
inch gang plows, in good condition, $470; also 
Wright milk bottling machine, good as new, 
$40. C. WEBER. Plainfield, N. J. 
PURE Vermont maple syrup. $3 per gallon: also 
sugar, $3.70 per 10-lb. pail: orders booked 
now: sample sent. ROBERT OLIVER, Craiglea 
Farm. South Ryegate, Vt. 
WANTED—Five cars hay. any grade: one of 
Alfalfa, if 2d cut: state quality and price 
f. o. b. H. MOORE, R. F. D. No. 2. Nauga¬ 
tuck, Conn. 
FOR SALE— 7 10 Avery tractor, in A-l condi¬ 
tion: $250 f. o. b. H. W. LAMBERT, Chit- 
tenango, N. Y. 
WANTED—13-in. ensilage cutter, with blower 
and pipe: Paper or International preferred; 
must be in good condition. A. D. OSTRANDER, 
Knowlesville, N. Y. 
WANTED—Board for refined woman with sou 
3 years old: private family; modern- farm pre¬ 
ferred: will remaiu during Winter if suited. 
ADVERTISER 6755, care Rural New-Yorker. 
TRACTOR—Bates Steel Mule, Model D; plowed 
forty acres; practically new: fourteen hun¬ 
dred: two 3-bottom Oliver tractor plows. 12 and 
14-inch, nearly new. three Hundred: “Eyrie" 
auto trailer, used twenty miles, ten hundred ca¬ 
pacity. fifty dollars: six liundred-egg Buckeye 
incubator, new, seventy dollars. E. W. HAR¬ 
RIS, Niverville, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Harrysbourg blue-flame kerosene 
brooder: 52-inch canopy; perfect condition; 
$10. FRED WALKER, Pavilion, N. Y. 
WANTED—Two-horse corn planter: also seed 
drill; give make, condition and price. 0. B. 
MUNSON, Arlington, Va. 
240-EGG Prairie State incubator, perfect condi¬ 
tion; $35. R. J. BENNETT. Burlington, Vt. 
FOR SALE—Galloway 2-gang horse plow, 14-in. 
bottoms; good condition. OSWEGO RIVER 
STOCK FARMS, Phoenix. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Five horse Pulaski boiler and No. 
27 steam Do Laval separator, in first-class 
condition. OSWEGO RIVER STOCK FARMS, 
Phoenix, N. Y. 
WANTED—Balky. stubborn tractors: state 
make, age and price f. o. b. cars. Address 
WM. MATTER. Box 13, Coxsackie, N. Y. 
WANTED—Rooms and board on farm by three 
Indies and three men: men will belt) with 
farm work. Address ROX 04, East Nortlifieid, 
Mass. 
FOR SALE or trade for Ford ear, Avery 5-10 
tractor: used one season: 1917 model. AD- 
VETISER 6751, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Latest model, 28 disk leverless In¬ 
ternational tractor disk, used on 20 acres 
only: first $95 gets it. STEWART L. PURDIE, 
Skaneateles. N. Y. 
FOR SAI.E—Pure maple syrup: $2.70 per gallon. 
A. E. WEAVER. Fillmore, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fordson tractor. 1919: plow accom- 
panies; used to plow and (it sixteen acres 
only: perfect condition. ALBERT HAYWOOD, 
Flushing, N. Y. 
I-'OR SALE—Twenty-four-bottle Babcock steam 
tester, practically new: also steam table and 
galvanized wash tubs; cream cans and jackets. 
20 and 30-quart capacity: practically new; bar¬ 
gain. LYON FARM, Lyons Falls, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fordson tractor: good as new: used 
one season: has pulley for belt work; price 
$700. P. A. POST. Putnam. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—3.000-egg Uamlee incubator, com¬ 
plete. $377: perfect working order. WOOD- 
WARD FARM, Wnyland, Mass, __ 
THREE 390 Prairie State incubators. $30 each: 
two 150 Prairie. $20 each; two Blue Hen 
300-egg. $27 each: almost new. FOREST FARM, 
Roeknway, N. J. ' 
EW-YORKER 
March 27. 1920 
BARGAIN for quick sale—To settle estate— 
Splendid dairy farm in the Catskills; 160 
acres: fertile soil, well watered: 30 acres woods; 
18-room house, in fine condition: large basement 
barn, 30x70. will carry 30 head cattle: about 
100 miles from New York City: V> mile from 
small town: telephone, rural delivery: great sec¬ 
tion for Summer boarders: $3,500. MINNIE' 
VAY DYKE, Cornwallville. Greene Co., N. Y. 
FOR SALE—The farm of the late Augustus 
Angell, containing 170 acres, with woodlot; 
mile from Ghent village: l 1 *. miles from 
Chatham village. Inquire of MARGARET B. 
ANGELL. Box 174, Valatie, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—185-acre stock farm: on State road: 
137 tillable: 37 acres hardwood: good build¬ 
ings: tools and 25 head stock, including 8 reg¬ 
istered Holsteins. Address H. G. STRAIT. 
West Oneonta. N. Y. 
137-ACRE river farm; all equipped, stock, tools: 
wood and lumber will more than pay for 
farm. CIIAS. MANLEY, Braintree. Vt. 
IN GREENE COUNTY, three miles from rail¬ 
road. Vi mile from State road, 85-acre farm: 
40 acres fruit. 30 acres tillable, 17 acres wood | 
and pasture: 3.000 apple, pear and peach trees, 
ranging from 15 to IS years of age: good ten- 
room house with acetyline gas system; good 
facilities for installing water in house: new 1 
power and milk bouse combined: garage: new 
fruit house with packing room and fruit cellar, 
each of 800 bbls. capacity: cooper shop: barn: 
46x70 ft., with sheds attached: running water 1 
at barn: two smaller barns; new wagon house 
and other outbuildings: all in first-class condi¬ 
tion: no agents. Owner. EDWIN COLLIER. 
R. F. P.. West Coxsackie, N. Y. 
WANTED—Small farm. 17-25 acres, for cash 
rent: suitable for noultry. ADVERTISER 
6738, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Fruit farm of 10 acres, along Hud¬ 
son River: gross sales about $3,000 last year; 
price -u for quick sale, including stock, 
wagons, tools, etc.: half cash. ADVERTISER 
6739. care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—167-acre farm, with 16-acre apple 
orchard just, getting in prime: 200 pear trees. 
5 years old: had over 2.000 barrels of apples 
last year: farm produced over 1.000 bushels of 
grain and 43.000 lbs. of milk: seven-room house, 
woodhonse. separator house and wagon house, 
all comparatively new: hog house and large 
barn: telephone in house: mail delivered; price 
$18,000. A. H. SMITH. Cairo. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—79-acre farm: 10 acres timber: or¬ 
chard: 4 cows: near creamery, school, church 
and lake: six miles from railroad: $2,700 if sold 
soon. NED LOOPE, Cineinnatus, Cortland Co., 
N. Y. 
FOR SALE OR RENT—Fruit and general farm; 
good buildings and water supply; near ship¬ 
ping point and towns: ideal location: beautiful 
scenery. ADVERTISER 6741, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—121 acres in peach section of West 
Virginia: 700 peach, 200 apple trees: all neces¬ 
sary buildings: good water: 3 miles to station: 
price $2,000 cash if sold at once. ADVERTISER 
6746, care Rural New-Yorker. 
-‘JSS-AORE productive general farm, all tillable; 
' on State road, near Albany: excellent build- 
complete equipment, including ten cows, 
two horses, hundred fowls, feed and fodder: 
must be sacrificed: only $8,000: part cash. Ad¬ 
dress owner, N. B. GROSS. Nassau. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—180-acre farm in the Hudson Valley 
fruit belt: 1.700 bearing trees; apple, pear: 
good water and fair buildings: Tl. F. D.: partly 
stocked and equipped: reasonable price: liberal 
terms: this is a money-making farm and repre¬ 
sents a real bargain if purchased soon. Ad¬ 
dress ADVERTISER 6744. care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
TO LEASE—25 acres choice Winter apples;- 
plow land also: wish poultry added: new 7- 
room house: barn: capable tenant, having 70 
per cent of fruit and 60 of poultry profits. 
JAMES STURDEVANT, Centerville, Pa. 
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY—For lease, or 
operating on shares (with privilege of purchase 
if desired), to thoroughly experienced and re¬ 
sponsible parties only, a fine dairy or cattle 
farm eight hundred acres, four hundred acres 
cleared and four hundred in woodland pasture: 
situated directly on main line railroad in Mary¬ 
land. halfway between Baltimore and Washing¬ 
ton (20 miles from either city), insuring a con 
venient and unlimited market for dairy and all 
other farm products; land fertile and beautifullv 
situated, with a large stream running through 
if with ample water at all seasons for irriga¬ 
tion purposes; fine residence, barn, repair shop 
and other improvements: immediate possession: 
this is a big opportunity for the_ right parties 
with necessary capital and experience to prop¬ 
erly operate a large proposition, but not for any¬ 
one with small means; references required. For 
particulars apply at once to VICTOR G. 
FT OEDE. President, First National Bank, 
Catonsville, Md. 
MUST BE SOI.D before April 1st 227 acres best 
kind of rich tractor land: close to It. IL: 
$20,000 worth of good buildings: 60 cow ties; 
price $12,000. E. V. R. GARDNER, Newton, 
Sussex Co.. N. J. 
FOR BALE—Farm, in the Summer resort of 
Sullivan Co.. N. Y.: suitable for boarders: 
good water: new ten-room house: space for five 
large rooms in attic: with barns and other 
buildings: another house, nine rooms and bath, 
hot and cold water: barn thirty-six by sixty: 
poultry plant: near school, high school, churches, 
slores and creameries: mail delivered: telephone; 
seventy acres tillage: further description on re¬ 
quest: with or without stock: part rash; as one 
Or two farms. ADVERTISER 677S. care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
FOR SAI.E—Five-acre poultry -and fruit farm; 
Vineland. New Jersey; one hour from Philadel¬ 
phia. ADVERTISER 6757, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Reautiful home: all conveniences: 
tenant house: two barns: fruit: twenty acres 
garden soil: near depot: 17 miles from Buffalo. 
S. E. ABBOTT. East Aurora, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Fruit farm: 109 acres: •?', under 
cultivation: balance woodland: large part of 
cleared land in fruit trees, producing good crops; 
remainder in excellent condition for truck or 
general farming: large house: modern conven¬ 
iences: large barns and necessary outbuildings; 
location Monmouth Co., N. .T.: price $18,000. 
Phone Englishtown, N. J.. 138F32. Address C. 
VOGEL, R. F. D.. Englishtown, N. J. 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm, at Hauimonton, New 
Jersey; complete with all modern improve¬ 
ments; located on the main road to Philadelphia 
or Atlantic City: stocked with heavy laying 
record Leghorns. ADVERTISER 6774, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
HAVE YOU children to educate? Buy this 71- 
acre dairy and tobacco farm and it will fur¬ 
nish you with both home and income: located 
on good road, near graded school and academy, 
and only 5 miles from Smith College, 5 miles 
from Amherst College and 8 miles from Mt. 
Holyoke College: good house of 11 rooms, with 
furnace, hot and cold water and electric lights: 
stock barn. 36x70, with good silo; warm stables; 
can tie 16 head in stanchions, and 7 good box 
stalls; cement gutters and mangers: tobacco 
barn, corn house, ice house, hen house for 200 
hens and wagon sheds: smooth productive fields, 
free from stone; cuts 30 tons hay and raises 
an extra quality of tobacco; pastures are well 
fenced and watered: also 3 1 {.-acre woodlot. 
easily accessible: this farm is for sale to settle 
an estate. For price address C. M. PRATT. 
Hadley. Mass., or M. K. PASCO, Administrator, 
New Britain, Conn. 
WANTED—To buy, a small farm within 50 
miles of N. Y.: high and dry; some woodland: 
must be reasonable: no agents. H. JOHNSON, 
264 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
■ - ... ■ - - — . -i 
FOR SALE—Fruit farm: 30 acres: about 2.000 
peach trees in full liearing: apples, pears: 
trees in first-class condition, having had liest 
of care and fertilization; house new 1917: eight 
rooms, bath, gas; large modern packing house, 
wagon shed, henhouse and barn, all nearly new 
and modern: located in heart of South Jersey 
fruit belt: price $16,500. ADVERTISER 0773. 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
-1 
■4 
WANTED—To buy farm; N. Y. State; 60 to 77 
acres: good buildings and water: basement 
barn, must keep 12 head of stock; some wood¬ 
land: 127 miles from N. Y.; 2 to 3 miles of 
l It. K.: good markets; not to exceed $2,500. 
ADVERTISER 6770. care Rural New-Yorker. 
i 
WANT to rent on shares by two Northern men, 
brothers, single, sober, industrious, past mid- 
| die age; 20 to 40 acres: team, tools and stock 
furnished by the owner; understand farming and 
gardening: best of references given: prefer New 
.Tersev. F. W. ALLEN, Boulevard. Ya. 
- 1 
FOR SALE—Estate in Southern New England: 
ideal Summer home, suitable for all year 
occupancy: one mile from station: one and a 
half miles from shore: ’phone: mail delivered; 
main house beautifully located: has sixty-mile 
view of ocean and sound: unusually large rooms, 
high ceilings, five fireplaces: large variety of 
fruit for home use: also small orchard: two 
farmhouses, three barns and other outbuildings; 
306 acres of natural fruit soil: market nearby: 
estimated three thousand cords of wood: three 
brooks: southern slope: shown by appointment 
onlv: no commissions: for quick sale at bargain 
price of $18,000: part cash. ADVERTISER 
6763. care Rural New Yorker. 
The si£i? 
of a 
Profitable 
Dairy"* 
T HE Empire sign on a fence, 
post or building, is almost al¬ 
ways the sign of a profitable dairy. 
Without exception it is proof that 
the owner has realized that the 
world isclamoring for and demand¬ 
ing better and cleaner milk and has 
determined to supply it in the most 
economical and efficient way. 
The Empire carries the milk direct 
from the cow into a covered pail 
without its coming in contact with 
the air. Untouched by hands— 
free from flies, dirt, and stable air— 
it goes to the milk house and thence 
to market just as clean as nature 
made it. 
Perhaps most dairymen adopt the 
Empire because it’s the most eco¬ 
nomical way to milk, hut their 
customers appreciate the cleanli¬ 
ness of Empire milking and are 
learning to look for milk produced 
in this way. 
Our nearest dealer will be glad to 
tell you all the advantages of the 
Empire. Ask him for our catalog 
6-M, or write us for it. 
THE EMPIRE CREAM SEPARATOR CO., 150 Nassau St., N.Y. 
Also manufacturers of Empire Cream Sep • 
orators and Empire Gasoline Engines 
■mu » 
fcl* pr| 
Chicago, Denver, Atlanta, Toledo, Syracnie, Minne¬ 
apolis, San Francisco, Montreal and Toronto 
