Subscribers’Exchange 
Ratfl of advertising in this department 5e. per 
word each insertion, payable in advance. 
Copy roost reach us Thursday morning to 
appear in issue of following week. 
This department is for the accommodation of 
subscribers, but no display advertising or ad¬ 
vertising of a commercial nature is admitted. 
Farm Help Wanted 
"WANTED—Single women as attendants in State 
institution for feeble-minded; salary $44 per 
month and maintenance, with opportunity for 
advancement. Apply, stating ago and enclos¬ 
ing letter of reference (from previous employers, 
if possible) to SUPERINTENDENT, Letch worth 
Village, Tbiells, Rockland Co., N. Y. 
WANTED—January 1. 1022. man to work in 
dairy; must be a good milker, steady and re¬ 
liable: house, garden and firewood furnished. 
BOX 30, Rockville, Md. 
WANTED—Able, reliable seamstress for boys’ 
school; 30 tu 40; understands making and 
mending boys’ clothes; to manage a daps of 
boys at sewing: salary $00 per mouth to begin 
and maintenance: experience and references first 
letter. W. DR A NT FANCHER, Lawrence, Mass. 
WANTED—Estate mechanic, to look after gas 
engine, able to do painting, slight repairs on 
plumbing and carpenter work; also have license 
to run car; wife to board one or two men; to a 
capable couple this is a permanent position; 
rooms, light, fuel and garden supplied; location, 
Westchester County. N. Y.: must have A1 refer¬ 
ence: apply by letter, giving full particulars, 
copies of reference and wages expected: Protes- 
tant preferred. ADVERTISER 0703, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—March 1. 1022, carpenter (house and 
estate) on large private place near New York; 
wife to run boarding-house and find assistant 
for same. Apply, with references, ADVER¬ 
TISER 8802, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Man for work on poultry and general 
farm: must be thoroughly experienced farmer 
and handy with chickens; state all particulars 
on application. IIOHMANN BROS., Princeton, 
N. J. 
WANTED—Middle-aged man. single, one who 
has had experience in handling poultry and 
understands Hall incubator; must be good pro¬ 
ducer and handle about 2.000 laying liens: give 
references from last employer. LIME RIDGE 
FARM. Poughqttag, N. Y. 
WANT all-round poultryman who knows how to 
raise ducks and chickens and can operate Hall 
mammoth incubators and hot water brooders 
successfully; don’t answer unless you understand 
the business and willing to work at moderate 
salary. FRANCO-AMERICAN POULTRY CO., 
Goshen, N. Y. 
GIRL wanted to do housework and mind baby; 
good home. A. KIRSCHNER, 358 Jackson 
A ve., Jersey City, N. J. 
WANTED—Woman for light chamber work and 
to help with care of children. Apply CLIF- 
PORD L. MILLER, Claverack, N. Y. 
WANTED- Young man of good habits to help 
on poultry and general farm in Allegany 
County. CHESTER L. MILLS, Fillmore, N. Y. 
WANTED—Two single, experienced, hard-work¬ 
ing, reliable, faithful farm hands; must he 
good milkers and teamsters; one to work in as 
working foreman; also two experienced carpen¬ 
ters: must have own tools; good wages and good 
board. PROBASCO FARM, Flemington, N. J. 
HOPSEKEEPER—Working, refined, competent 
woman, capable of taking full charge for busi¬ 
ness couple: good home to right party. Address 
ADVERTISER 9821, care Rural New-Yorker. 
SINGLE man on gentleman’s estate, poultry, 
fruit or 20-head dairy; no user tobacco or 
Funor: do general farming; state wages first 
letter: state railroad fare from to Hunter, N. 
Y. ADVERTISER 9827, care Rural New-Yorker. 
PARTNER—Spring. 1922: poultry and truck gar¬ 
dening: permanent; 50-50: educated, single, 
American, under 40; knowledge farming: excel¬ 
lent opportunity: references. ADVERTISER 
9838. care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM HAND—Single; experienced; must under¬ 
stand milking, driving Ford and tractor. 
THEO. MULLER, Chester, N. J. 
WANTED—Experienced, energetic, single Amer¬ 
ican to work on farm: must be honest, capable 
and industrious; state age. experience and wages 
wanted. JOHN RONNER, care Buena Vista 
Farm. Valhalla, N. Y. 
WOULD board a lady any period of time; ac¬ 
tive. interested in poultry, or aged or conva 
lescent. BOX 43, Danbury, Conn. 
WANTED—A young, competent, ambitious poul- 
tr.vman who is able to start at file bottom 
and build up a flock of fowls to a paving level. 
ADVERTISER 9842. care Rural New-Yorker. 
Situations Wanted 
EXPERIENCED poultryman and gamekeeper, 35 
years of age. single, with best references, de¬ 
sires a steady position as a manager of gentle¬ 
man’s private country place: also would he will¬ 
ing to go to Florida. ADVERTISER 9757, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Position, bead gardener or charge 
gentleman's small estate: married; experi¬ 
enced horticulture, stock, poultry, gas onir>nes; 
good references. Address SUPERINTENDENT, 
50 Barker Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 
WANTED—Position on modern country estate, 
gardening or orchard work; seven years in last 
place. S. V. ANDERSON, 194 Southmayd Road, 
Waterbnry, Conn. 
DO yon want a well-trained herdsman, dairy¬ 
man. farm foreman or assistant, poultryman, 
greenhouse or orchard man? We have a few 
graduates available who are sure to give satis¬ 
faction. BERNARD OST ROLEN K, National 
Farm School, Farm School, Pa. 
POSITION wanted by an experienced man to 
superintend a farm or estate: I am 45 years 
of age, married, and have no children; my ex¬ 
perience lias been wide in ail kinds of farming, 
including the management of fine estates and 
the breeding of purebred Holstein cattle: r feel 
confident that I can show results: 1 would he 
glad to detail my experience in a personal in¬ 
terview: can furnish first-class references as to 
my ability and character. BOX 35, I'nionville, 
font). 'Phone 13-14 Farmington Exchange. 
POULTRYMAN open for position; best o*" refer¬ 
ence. ADVERTISER 9786, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
POULTRYMAN. single. Cornell graduate, past 
two years manager of a plant of 2,000 layers 
and 25.000-egg incubator capacity; due to owner 
going into other business, wishes position as 
working manager; best references. F. H. 
HEUER, Nutmeg Farm, Cresbire, Conn. 
FIRST-CLASS herdsman-dairyman, with best of 
reference proving character and gbility. BOX 
558, Chatham, N. Y. 
WANTED—Position as chauffeur and estate 
manager, or will travel: wife as housekeeper 
or companion; educated, refined Americans; mid¬ 
dle age; references. Address J. W., P. O. Box 
42, Shelter Island, N. Y, _ 
POULTRYMAN, thorough, practical experience, 
also college training and ability to make plant 
pay, is open for position* ADVERTISER 9800, 
care Rural New-Yorker. 
YOUNG MAN, expert tractor operator and re¬ 
pair man, experienced in orcharding, desires, 
work on large fruit farm. ADVERTISER 9803, 
care Rural New-Yorker, 
EXPERIENCED horticulture, fruit growing, or¬ 
chard and under glass for the past 16 years: 
married; one child; best of references; prefers 
position on small private estate as head gar¬ 
dener. ADVERTISER 9810, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
POSITION wanted on general farm as working 
manager in Central or Western New York; 15 
years in one place; best references given. AD¬ 
VERTISER 9823, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POSITION wanted by a highly educated farmer; 
good milker and butter-maker, breeding and 
rearing of stock, poultry forcing for Winter 
eggs, A1 gardener and florist; no position want¬ 
ed only wliere full charge is given; must be with 
good, responsible parties, where a man will get 
paid for his labor; tritiers need not answer. 
Address C. A. BOYCE, Massena Springs, N. Y. 
POULTRYMAN—American, single, 10 years’ 
practical experience, besides agricultural col¬ 
lege training, wishes position; best of refer¬ 
ences. ADVERTISER 9820, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
IF in need of a working foreman or superin¬ 
tendent on your farm, answer ADVERTISER 
9817, rare Rural New-Yorker. 
YOUNG man, American, 30, wants steady posi¬ 
tion; life experience on farms; chauffeur, gar¬ 
dener, handy man, engines, tractors, milking 
machines, poultry; nil farm wdrk; excellent 
character: please state wages. MR. ROWE, 
Archer Road, Rockland, Mass. 
ELDERLY, refined lady, not afraid to work, 
wants position as companion or housekeeper. 
ADVERTISER 9819, care Rural New-Yorker. 
SITUATION wanted by single man in small 
dairy as caretaker of gentleman's estate near 
New York: honest anil reliable and experienced. 
ADVERTISER 9822, care Rural New-Yorker. 
A NATIVE of Jersey Island, now American 
citizen, desires position as superintendent or 
manager of farm wliere herd of Jersey cattle 
are kept: life experience; taken course in ani¬ 
mal breeding; write full particulars in first let¬ 
ter. ADVERTISER 9813, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
SINGLE young man, 24 years old. five years’ 
general and dairy farm experience, wants 
work; can handle horses, cattle, machinery, etc.; 
honest, capable and industrious; state full par¬ 
ticulars and salary. ADVERTISER 9812, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FARMER wishes to take charge of farm; would 
consider large proposition on shares, or rent 
large, fully stocked farm; good house; thor¬ 
oughly honest, competent man. with best of 
references. J. F. Old Jones Farm, Route 58, 
Greenwich, Conn. ’Phone 355W. 
POULTRY FARM MANAGER—Have you pro¬ 
perty or a farm you wish developed into a 
profitable poultry farm? If sincerely interested, 
please read advertisement No. 9833. ADVER¬ 
TISER 9834, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRYMAN—Japanese, single, 28; position 
wanted as chicken man: practically experi¬ 
enced in all branches of poultry, especially 
canonizing and producing finest poultry for the 
table: best reference. SHINOMIYA, 9 West 
9Sth Street, New York City. 
WANTED—Position as caretaker or watchman; 
write particulars. Address “INVESTIGATOR,” 
Box 83, It. R. No. 1, Pomona, N. Y. 
POULTRYMAN, single, open for position: thor¬ 
oughly experienced in conditioning stock, im¬ 
proving and Winter production. ADVERTISER 
9841, care Rural New-Yorker. 
EXPERIENCED manager wants position as man¬ 
ager of modern dairy farm, or would consider 
share proposition: life experience: present posi¬ 
tion manager of large stock, dairy and tractor 
farm now running 30 head reg'stered and grade 
Holsteins. A. N. MARTIN, Glemnont, N. Y. 
GARDENER, farm manager, 42, four years’ 
agricultural college training at Vienna (Aus¬ 
tria), 24 years’ experience farming, landscaping, 
greenhouse, best references, seeks position man¬ 
ager private estate; lowest wages $100.00. 
ADVERTISER 9829, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POULTRY MANAGER, 15 years’ experience, 
practical, thorough, is open for engagement 
on modern plant; best references. ADVER¬ 
TISER 9830, care Rural New-Yorker. 
COUPLE wishes position; man experienced 
farmer and poultryman; wife help in house 
or act as governess. H. J. LAW, 273 Sumpter 
Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
SINGLE young man, three years’ experience on 
dairy farms, desires position on fruit or poul¬ 
try farm; hard and conscientious worker; best 
reference. ADVERTISER 9837, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
CREAMERYMaN, experienced in all branches, 
best of references, desires position, either 
country or city. ADVERTISER 9830, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
A SINGLE man of 2(t years, all around farm 
hand, also handy with tools. ADVERTISER 
9835, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM MANAGER—Unusual practical experi¬ 
ence; well educated; executive ability; handle 
men: show results at dairying, poultry or hog¬ 
raising; experienced In field crops and all possi¬ 
ble dairy and farm machinery: married; would 
hoard some help; able, willing, and above all, 
honest: not the usual farm manager procurable, 
but conscientious and above graft: will only 
consider a good connection wliere co-operation 
and considerate treatment is accorded and where 
farm is run oil a business basis: can. if neces¬ 
sary, furnish highest possible reference; cast of 
Hudson or near N. Y. C. on the west side pre¬ 
ferred: experienced in establishing and main¬ 
taining high-class egg. butter and milk route. 
ADVERTISER 9833, care Rural New-Yorker. 
POSITION wanted on farm bv man. 37: quick 
milker, steady worker, careful teamster: open 
for engagement December 20. Address ADVER¬ 
TISER 9831, care Rural New-Yorker. 
Farms For Sale, to Rent, etc. 
IN WATERTOWN, CONN., IV* miles from Taft 
School; dairy farm of 120 acres, mostly till¬ 
able; very productive soil: large buildings, in 
good repair; fine location; near State road; good 
market:' must see tills farm to appreciate its 
value. E. H. PLATT. Telephone 7-2. 
CRANBERRY BOG—For sale, 30-acre cranberry 
bog. .litii all a.. equipment; New Jer¬ 
sey. ADVERTISER 9704, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—76-acre farm, near Binghamton; or 
will exchange for Florida land. Write RANO 
PEARSON, Route 1, Binghamton, N. Y. 
VIRGINIA FARM for sale; 250 acres: one-half 
cleared: one mile from village of 800 inhabi¬ 
tants. E. ROWELL, M. D., Greenwich, Conn. 
I'or SALE—244 acres in Columbia County, N. 
Y.; one mile to school. 1 1 miles to Columbia- 
villo, six miles to city of Hudson; 210 acres in 
cultivation, 25 in pasture: orchard of 1.400 fruit 
trees; soil is sandy, shale and clay loam: ample 
water supply; good house, with hot and cold 
running water: tenant house: ample barns: ap¬ 
proximately one-half mile river frontage, with 
private dock and 150 acres in river: will sell 
with or without stock and tools; price reason¬ 
able for quick sale. BOX 51, Colnmbiaville, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—At once, farm of 10 to 50 acres, with 
buildings, within 50 miles of New York (Har¬ 
lem Railroad section preferred): give rental 
value or price and terms, with full particulars. 
Address BOX 33, White Plains, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Within commuting distance of New 
York. 35-acre farm: splendid state of cultiva¬ 
tion: near State road: excellent markets; auto¬ 
mobile transportation to high school. For par¬ 
ticulars write HENRY KLINE, R. F. D. 3, 
Plainfield, N. J. 
CENTRAL NEW JERSEY—Owner will supply 
58 acres, four-room house, buildings, some 
equipment, to tenant to raise poultry, etc.: sup¬ 
ply labor, business and balance needed: fine 
location; numerous conveniences; American 
Protestant preferred, without children; refer¬ 
ences. ADVERTISER 97t!9, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Farm anil country home; farm con¬ 
tains about 115 acres, and most of it excel¬ 
lent. apple land: would sell country homo sepa¬ 
rate with about eight acres. Owner, JOSEPH 
W. MON ELL, it. D., Walkill, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—One of (lie finest 128-acre farms in 
Orange County, with stock and tools; house, 12 
looms. ADVERTISER 9828, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FRUIT and vegetable farm: 22 acres; 10-room 
dwelling, nearly new: all Improvements; large 
barn, garage, old dwelling, storage house, poul¬ 
try house 10x08, tool shod; buildings worth my 
asking price; 1 acre apples and peaches; 2 of 
grapes, 5 of asparagus: farm earning 12 to 15 
per cent,: 10 minutes to station: price, $10,000; 
40 per cent cash. OWNER, R. D. 2, Box 47. 
Matawan, N. J. 
WANTED—Good dairy farm to lease. ADVER¬ 
TISER 9824, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM for sale; 250 acres: stock and farm uten¬ 
sils. MRS. GRACE PECKHAM, Prattville, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—Farm, 5-15 acres; Connecticut, York 
State, back; good fox hunting country; rent 
or buy cheap. LOU RICHARDS, Burton. O. 
WANTED — To rent, poultry plant: capacity 
1.000 layers; option of buying. ADVERTISER 
9840, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—A creek bottom farm, on country 
road, of about 130 acres in high state of culti¬ 
vation; located V* mile from postoffice, church, 
graded school, depot, feed store, three other 
stores and creamery; another creamery on farm: 
10 room house; large barn, with concrete floor, 
swing stanchions and water buckets; wagon 
house, tool house, lien house, sap house and 
large hog house; 40 cows, eight calves, two 
horses, tractor, truck, milking machine, two 
gasoline engines and all farming tools; electric 
lights and running water to Iiottsp anil barn; 70 
tons silage, 80 tons hay. 100 bushels car corn, 
200 bushels oats, quantity pine and hemlock, 
sap hush and 300 buckets. For further particu¬ 
lars inquire of M. N. TOBEY, East Meredith, 
N. Y. 
Miscellaneous 
HOMES WANTED—The PLACING OUT BU¬ 
REAU, 415 Broome St.. New York, desires to 
communicate with responsible Catholic families, 
who will lake as members of their household, 
suitable boys between 7 and 12 years. There is 
no greater charity titan this. 
SURE POP (old) white rice corn, 25 ills., par¬ 
cel post 4th zone, $2.50; big lots less. W. 
HALBERT, Oxford, N. Y. 
ALFALFA HAY—-For sale, two cars first cutting 
Alfalfa-Timothy mixed; two cars second cut¬ 
ting, pure Alfalfa; one car line green third cut¬ 
ting for test cows; one car straight Timothy. 
\V. A. WITHROW, R. F. D. 4. Syracuse, N. Y. 
WE CAN furnish grapefruit in our standard 
Golden Russet grade, delivered by boat to the 
ports of Baltimore, Md.: Philadelphia, Pa.; New 
York, N. Y., and Boston, Mass., two or more 
boxes at the same shipment to the same 'person 
at $3.00 per box; terms, cheek witli order: we 
prepay ail charges to the ports stated above, and 
shipments can be marked to lie forwarded by 
express to any point in the interior in the At¬ 
lantic Coast States. GEORGE B. OELLON, N. 
W. 7th Ave and 34tli St., Miami, Fla. 
STORY’S pure maple cream; ttie super-quality 
maple product. Write for free sample and 
price list. L. L. STORY, Box 103. East Fair- 
field, Vt. 
WANTED—A few more customers for honey; 
3-lb. cans, 70c each. WILLIAM II. PARS1L, 
Monmouth Junction, N. J. 
PURE HONEY—1921 extracted; 60-lb. cans at 
our station, clover, $8.80; buckwheat. $7: 10 
llis. delivered within 3d postal zone, clover, 
$2.15: buckwheat. $1.90: write for special prices 
on large lots. RAY C. WILCOX, Odessa. N. Y. 
HONEY—Light extracted. Autumn flowei honey: 
none finer; 5-lb. pail. $1.25: 10 ibs.. $2.15: de¬ 
livered third postal zone. II. It. LYON, Cran¬ 
ford, N. J. 
CASH country store, auto garage, $4,000 stock. 
70-acre farm. 7-roont bouse; near schools and 
church; postoffice and express office In store; 
oily $8,000 cash needed; balance in 1, 2 and 3 
years. E. T. HAYDEN, Robbins, Del. 
WANTED—To Hire, with privilege of 1 buying, 
place suitable for poultry and bees, in or near 
village in fruit section of New York; must be 
near the water, lake or river, pleasant location 
near school, church and railroad. ADVERTISER 
9825, care Rural New-Yorker. 
I'D LIKE to see someone to come and make me 
an offer for a good all-around 25-acre farm 
that lias a location where you can find one in a 
thousand for chickens, basket-maker, club, or¬ 
phan home, sanitarium; long river front for all 
kinds of sports: plenty fruit; good well: 5-room 
house: barn needs repair: 2 miles station; 110 
out, Erie Railroad: wortli $2,000 to anyone. 
LOUIS THIELE. Laekawaxen, Pa. 
AN exnerleneed farmer desires to rent, for cash. 
a fully stocked and equipped dairy farm, near 
good market. ADVERTISER 9814, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
100 ACRES in best truck growing county of 
Iowa; natural clover soil: level; 4]/, miles to 
county seat of Osage (3.000 pop.); oil State 
gravel highway: fine buildings; silo; orchard; 
windbreak; beautiful lawn: fields square, fenced 
hog tight; 155 acres plowed; raise stock, corn, 
grains, potatoes, cabbage, onions, sugar beets; 
(lacking plant and licet factory 35 ni'les; poul¬ 
try feeding plant and creamery in Osage; fine 
schools; must sacrifice for financial reasons; 
S200 per acre; $15,000 down March 1, 1922: bal¬ 
ance mortgage, oi might consider part trade of 
small general-purpose farm in New York or New 
Jersey; good improvements, good markets, dose 
to good schools, both high and graded; Ameri¬ 
can neighbors: on surfaced road- nrioe li 1 . 
$5,000; deal owners only. SUNNYSIDE FARM, 
U. 4, Box 14. Osage, Ja. 
I HAVE two farms, 20 miles from Buffalo. 1 
mile from railroad, and wish to sell one; No. 
1 is a dairy farm, modern equipment and build¬ 
ings, 97 acres land, 8-room house, electric lights, 
all conveniences: No. 2 is a fruit farm. 103 
acres, good buildings and equipment, 10 acres 
grapes, 10 acres orchard, 1 V> acres berries, good 
pasture and wood lot: V-th on State read. Ad¬ 
dress owner, ADVERTISER 9S20, care Rural 
New-Yorker. 
WANTED—To lease, with option of buying, a 
fully equipped poultry fa-tn: give foil" partic¬ 
ulars in first letter. ADVERTISER 9815, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
$500 TO INVEST in going poultry farm, by 
young man. single, excellent, experienced, 
modern ponltryninn: would consider working cn 
shares. ADVERTISER 9810, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FOR SALE—One of the best dairy farms in New 
York State: good markets close by: can show 
earnings at creamery: write for details. 
ADVERTISER 9811 . care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE — Fifty-acre farm. P. CHERRY, 
Clymer, N. Y. 
APPLE ORCHARD — Superb varieties: two 
thousand trees. 6 to 8 years; other fruits; 
buildings; 55 acres: at railroad station: $15,000: 
half cash; half this place $7,500; $5,000 cash. 
BOLLING T ILL, Wayncsvillc. N. C. 
- u ____ 
WANTED—To lease for occupancy May 1, 1922, 
a place of about 5 acres In an AmerVan neigh¬ 
borhood; must lie within reasonable distance of 
high school and railroad station. Address AD¬ 
VERTISER 9818, care Rural New-Yorker. 
WANTED—Farm, 15 to 20 acres: small four or 
five-room house: preferably Sullivan or Dela¬ 
ware counties: near good market: nut over 
$1,000. ADVERTISER 9882, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
EXTRACTED honey delivered 3d zone, clover, 5 
lim., $1.25; 10 llis.. $2.15; buckwheat, 5 lbs., 
$1.10; 10 lbs.. $1.90; finest quality. H. F. WIL¬ 
LIAMS, Romulus, N. Y. 
DELICIOUS homemade tatties, nut and plain, 
all flavors, also cream chocolates, at $1.00 
for box of 3Vr His. net weight; postage paid 
into third zone. MRS. R. C. MACKLEY, 
Brogueville, Pa. 
-i 
ALFALFA for sale; carload lots. A. A. 
MOORE, Wampsville, N. Y. 
CAN DEE—Two sections, for sale; $00; crated, 
ready to ship. BOX 113. Petersburg, Va. 
ORANGES—Tree ripened, direct from grower, 
packed in grove: bushel boxes. $2.50: grape¬ 
fruit, $2.00; send remittance with order. E. K. 
WALKER, Wauchula, Fla. 
PURE cane syrup illume made), 90c per gallon. 
J. W. McLEOD, Rowland, N. C. 
HONEY. 5-lb. pail, $1.25; 6 for $7.20; 12 for 
$13.85; delivered in 3d postal zone. E. H. 
NIETSCHE & SON, Kinderhook, N. Y. 
HOME KNIT heavy gray virgin wool knee caps, 
75c a pair: send measure around the knee; 
socks. $1 to $1.25; stockings, $1.25 up. MARY 
L. CHURCH, 63 Pringle St., Kingston, Pa. 
FOR SALE—One new 50-lb, carbite lighting 
generator, $160; also pipes and fixtures fur 
12-room house; all for $220. ADVERTISER 
9772, care Rural New-Yorker. 
HEAVY ail wool hand knit socks, pair $1.00. 
,T. DIXON, Route 3. Pittsboro, N. C. 
HOME-MADE candy: asortment sent on receipt 
of $1 to MARGARET RIDLEY'S CANDY 
SHOP, Hawley, Pa. 
FOR SALE—Finest white clover extracted lionev 
5-11). pall, $1.25: 10-11). pail. $2.25: delivered 
to 3d postal zone. NOAH BORDXER, Holgate o 
WANTED—Hall incubator, 5.(100-10.000 capacity 
WINONA POULTRY FARM. Buslikill. Pa. ‘ ' 
INDIAN RIVER oranges and grapefruit; finest 
grown in Florida: a must desirable gift to 
anyone; buy direct from grower; packed in 
standard size box: oranges, $4.25; grapefruit, 
$3.75; assorted, % oranges, V- grapefruit. $4 per 
box, f. o. b. shipping point: cash must accom- 
pany order; satisfaction guaranteed. GEO. S. 
MORI KAMI. Delray. Fla. 
MAINE apples: ltockwoods, fine eating and bak 
ing; Baldwins; satisfaction guaranteed; $2.50 
ami $1.50 per box, f. o. b. Belgrade. Me. 
ROCKWOOD FARM. 
BLACK walnuts, $2 bushel, express, or $2.70 by 
mail prepaid; guaranteed good meats. U. 
SHUMWAY, Hector, N. Y. 
PURE extracted 
zone, 5-lb. pall 
10-lb. pail. $2.10 
$8 each; 160-lb. 
and 10c lb. N. 
N. Y. 
honey, delivered to 3d postal 
clover, $1.15: buckwheat, $1: 
and $1.90; 60-lb. can. $9 and 
keg, delivered by freight, 12c 
L. STEVENS, Venice Center, 
WE can furnish grapefruit in our standard 
Golden Russet grade, delivered bv boat to tile 
ports of Baltimore, Md.: Philadelphia, Pa.; New 
York, N. Y., and Boston. Mass., two or more 
* at sa >ne shipment to the same person 
at $3 per box; terms, check with order; we pre¬ 
pay all charges to the ports stated above, and 
shipments can he marked to be forwarded by 
express to any point in the interior in the At¬ 
lantic Coast States. GEO. B. CELLON N W 
7th Ave. and 34th St., Miami, Fla 
Other Advertisments of Subscribers’ 
Exchange will be found on page 1513 . 
