290 
February 16, 1924 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
EVENTS OF THE WEEK 
DOMESTIC—Mr. and Mrs. Theodore 
Bauer, managers of the Petroushka, a 
Russian restaurant at 50 East Fiftieth 
Street, New York, were suffocated in a 
fire that swept the upper floors of the 
restaurant building shortly before 8 
P. M. January 31. Twenty-eight em¬ 
ployees and 15 dinner guests on the lower 
floors of the five-story building escaped. 
The fate of Mr. and Mrs. Bauer was not 
known until firemen found their bodies 
on the fifth floor. Firemen believe a 
panic would have caused heavy loss of 
life if the fire had occurred two hours 
later. 
Louis L. Radt, a diamond salesman 
for a New York firm, reported to the 
Chicago police, January 31, that he had 
been kidnapped in Hyde Park by three 
bandits, who robbed him of diamonds 
valued at $250,000. Radt. who repre¬ 
sents Albert Lorch & Co. of New York, 
arrived from a business trip to St. Louis 
and was walking to his hotel, when, 
he says, the bandits accosted him, pushed 
him into an automobile, threw in his 
two grips and drove away. 
Walter Evans, 246 Emerson Place, 
Brooklyn, and John A. Curtis, 234 W. 
Seventy-fourth Street, appeared before 
Judge Smith in Nassau County Court at 
Mineola, N. Y., Feb. 1, and pleaded not 
guilty to indictments accusing them of 
swindling Wilbur F. Johnson, of East 
Norwich, a former president of the North 
Shore Bank of Oyster Bay, out of more 
than $75,000 in fake stock transactions. 
William Lanubuth, 00 Hancock Street, 
Brooklyn, was also named in the indict¬ 
ment. County Detective Nathaniel G. 
Schlamm said the men swindled Johnson 
by selling him stock, taking his promis¬ 
sory note and then failing to deliver the 
stock, or else delivering stock that was 
worthless. Most of these notes have 
been recovered, including one for $100.- 
000 which Johnson gave for stock in a 
Long Beach development, which lie was 
told was being backed by Mayor William 
H. Reynolds. The authorities say no 
such eonvpany existed. 
Twelve persons were killed and 25 in¬ 
jured February 2 when two interurban 
trains on the Anderson Division of the 
Indiana Union Traction Company, met 
in a head-on collision near the village 
of Ingalls, Ind. Both . trains consisted 
of a motor car and trailer. The motor 
cars were telescoped and caught fire, 
some of the victims being burned to 
death. 
The home of the Rev. Wallace Car¬ 
penter, Presbyterian minister, was demol¬ 
ished near Birmingham, Ala., February 4, 
by a cyclone and his wife and oldest son 
instantly killed. Six other members of 
the family, including Mr. Carpenter, were 
badly hurt. 
Burglars forced the front door of the 
warehouse of Finsilver, Still & Moss at 
42 West Thirty-third Street, New York, 
February 4 and stole imported coatings 
and camel’s hair cloth valued at $25,000. 
It is believed two trucks Avere used in 
carting the loot away. It was the second 
burglary at the warehouse since January 
17, when burglars entered through a rear 
Avindow and stole $4,200 Avorth of goods. 
They first attempted to enter through a 
rear window February 4, but were frus¬ 
trated after breaking through seven half- 
inch German steel bars with hydraulic 
nippers and opening the window with a 
jimmy. Since the first burglary one-inch 
steel bars were placed across the windows 
on the inside, and the burglars, unable to 
cut through these, went to the front door. 
Forty-two miners perished Avhen the 
bottom fell out of a small pond and 
flooded the workings of the Milford iron 
mine near Crosby, Minn., February o. 
Caught in the lower levels of the small 
mine only seven of the crew of 49 at 
work Avere able to gain the safety of a 
skip and ascend to the surface. Their 
comrades were suffocated by the slimy 
mud and water that gushed through the 
workings, rising to within a^ few feet 
of the top of the shaft in 15 minutes. 
There was no extended warning; just 
a “nimble like a thousand automobiles 
roaring down a distant road,” one sur¬ 
vivor said. Then the wave of death 
engulfed them, battering its victims 
aginst the walls. 
WOODROW WILSON.—The death of 
ex-President Wilson occurred at Wash¬ 
ington February 3. A brief resume of 
his career follows: Born at Staunton, 
Va„ December 28. 1856; graduated from 
Princeton University, 1879; selected as 
president of Princeton August 1, 199-. 
after seventeen years a college professor; 
elected Governor of New Jersey, Novem- 
ber 10, 1910; nominated for President in 
Democratic National Convention at Bal¬ 
timore. July 2. 1912; elected President 
November 4, 1912; inaugurated March 4, 
1913; re-elected President November 7, 
1916; asked Congress to declare war 
on Germany April 2, 1917; sailed for 
France December 4. 1918, as head of 
American Peace Commission; signed 
treaty of Versailles June 28, 1919; car¬ 
ried 'fight with Senate over the League 
of Nations to country September 3.1919; 
suffered nervous breakdoAvn near Wichita. 
Kan., September 26. 1919; stricken with 
paralysis at White House, October 5, 
1919; retired from Presidency March .4, 
1921. The following were the chief 
events of his administration : 
The World War; refusal of the Senate 
to ratify the Treaty of Versailles and the 
League'of Nations Covenant; negotiation 
of arbitration treaties with Great Britain, 
Japan and many other countries; mili¬ 
tary occupation of Haiti, Santo Domingo 
and Vera Cruz; purchase of the Danish 
West Indies; refusal to recognize any 
leader in Latin-America Avho acquired 
office by force; refusal to recognize the 
Russian Soviet government. 
The following commissions Avere estab¬ 
lished during his term of office: Fed¬ 
eral Reserve banking system, Rural 
Credits banking system, Federal Trade 
Commission ; Shipping Board and Emer¬ 
gency Fleet Corporation, War Risk Bu¬ 
reau, Railroad Labor Board, Federal 
Water Power Commission, Employees’ 
Compensation Commission, Alien Prop¬ 
erty Custodian, Tariff Commission, Great 
government-owned merchant marine, Go\’- 
ernment railroad in Alaska, Government 
operation of railroads and telegraph and 
telephone lines as war measure, together 
with food and fuel control; Pacific battle 
fleet with transfer to Pacific of bulk of 
naval forces. . . 
The following important legislatwe 
acts occurred under Mr. Wilson: Con¬ 
stitutional amendments providing for di¬ 
rect election of Senators, national pro¬ 
hibition and equal suffrage; selective 
service draft act, a war measure ; Clayton 
anti-trust laAV, eight-hour day for railroad 
employees. Avorkmen’s compensation law, 
law for Federal aid in state highway 
construction, La Follette seamen s act, 
immigration law with literacy test, rev¬ 
enue law Avith huge increases in income 
and other taxes, repeal of the clause in 
Panama Canal law exempting American 
ships from tolls, Esch-Cummins transpor¬ 
tation act, sale of seized, enemy dye and 
chemical patents to Chemical I oundation. 
Congressman Blather was a passen¬ 
ger on the steamship Sieve, which was 
slowlv sinking. The passengers were 
elimbirfg into the lifeboats. “Congress- 
man,” suggested a reporter aboard the ill - 
fated craft, “here’s a chance for some 
publicity. If you cared-“You may 
quote me as saying,” replied the states¬ 
man, “that I am heartily in favor of a 
back-to-tlie-land movement.”—The Amer¬ 
ican Legion Weekly._ 
1/1(7 \ nrco 20 woodland, balance tillable, at Mount 
14!) ACrBS pleasant, (near Milford) Hunterdon 
County, N. J. Very productive; good brooks. Colo¬ 
nial style 10-room house. AYlll be repainted and de¬ 
corated inside and out, and (mtbnild'ngs will be re- 
paired. Price, $60 acre. Will accept $1,000 cash; 
balance $50 month, including interest. Ideal place 
for summer boarding house, 4 m° P wni 
watermelon and muskmelon raised on this lai m. Will 
consider Exchange for 1 or 2-famlly house or vacant pro 
perty. Marshall, Owner, 945 Myrtle Ave.. Plainfield, N. J. 
DO YOU NEED FARM HELP? 
AVe have able-bodied Jewish young men, most¬ 
ly Avithout experience, Avho want farm work. 
If you need a good, steady man, AA’rite for an 
order blank. Ours is not a commercial agency, 
AVe make no charge. 
THE JEWISH AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY,me. 
301 E. 14th Street New York City 
Subscribers’ Exchange 
Other Advertisements of Subscribers 
Exchange will be found on page 299. 
IMPROVED, 60-acre farm; 7-room house, newly 
painted; good outbuildings; on public roads, at 
station; no agents. Apply, HAYDEN, Robbins, 
Del. 
BEAUTIFUL country home at foot of Berkshire 
mountains consisting of fine 12-room house, 
cellar, garage for tAvo cars, poultry houses, ex¬ 
cellent barn with basement, stabling for tAvo 
horses, four acres of land, asparagus and straAv- 
berry beds, fine grape arbors, pear and apple 
trees, shade trees, lawn and vegetable garden; 
house has two newly equipped bathrooms com¬ 
plete with best fixtures, pipeless furnace, electric 
pump from never-failing Avell Avith another con¬ 
nection to a creek running through property, 
electric light in every room, telephone connec¬ 
tion, all buildings newly painted inside and out 
and in very good repair, more than a can load 
of coke and four tons of coal go with property, 
iioav in cellar; a Avonderful bargain and suitable 
for poultrv and A’egetable growing; one and one- 
lialf miles from R. R. station; near tOAvn of 
1,500. For further particulars address W. 
JEFFERSON, Sharon, Conn. 
FERTILE FARM, 60 acres: neAV buildings, silo. 
L. G. KELLOGG, Stillwater, N. Y. 
ON account of age, 48-acre fruit, truck and 
poultry farm: sandy soil; plenty good soft, 
water; all stock and tools; new 8-room bouse, 
nicely finished; good barn; neAV henhouse and 
outbuildings; near schools, churches and stores; 
good market all around; county seat 12 miles; 
two different roads; one railroad station tAvo 
miles; another less than four miles; $4,500; 
less than cost of bouse. GEO. W. BITTNER, 
Reech Creek, Pa. 
TWO productive farms for sale or rent; one 
farm produces annually 1,000 to 2,000 barrels 
choice Winter apples. Write OAvner, J. F. C. 
BRYANT, R. D. No. 2, Dover, N. J. 
FINE FRUIT FARM—18 acres, buildings; fac¬ 
ing Hudson River. Enquire BOX 102, New 
Baltimore, N. Y. 
FOR RENT—200 acres, near MorristOAA'n, N. J.; 
cash or shares. AA'rite or see DR. DOBIE, 
545 W. 111th Street, New York, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—190-acre A-l grain and dairy farm 
along Hudson River, Saratoga County, N. Y.; 
stock and tools: $2,500 down, balance easy 
terms; price, $8,000. ADVERTISER 4771, care 
Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR EXCHANGE—75 acres for a small place 
near tOAvn. or will sell Avith small payment 
doAvn. ADA'ERTISER 4809, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
I WILL FURNISH all equipment and share the 
profits of a ten-acre fruit, truck garden and 
poultrv farm with an experienced man. G. F. 
SMITH. 906 Union Street, Schenectady. 
FOR RENT—Famous Lakewood Farm; 20 acres; 
15 under cultivation; berries, fruit trees; large 
hen house, capacity 1500; Colonial house, mod¬ 
ern improvements, electricity, running Avater; 
within reach of all Summer New Jersey beaches; 
most progressive Winter resort; to responsible 
party; only $1,000 yearly. Address, IMPORTER, 
Box 320 Madison Square Post Office, New 
York, N. Y. 
LARGE BRICK HOUSE, thick walls, cool in 
Summer, warm in Winter, beautifully located 
on a crest in AA'est Grove, Chester Co., Pa.; 
modern improvements, electric lights, gas, steam 
heat. 22 rooms, well suited for a sanitarium 
or home of some sort; lot 200x170, all or part of 
17 acres adjoining can be purchased; improve¬ 
ments on 17 acres, barn, chicken houses, a 
large very successful and profitable mush¬ 
room plant, thriving young orchard, about 100 
trees mostly apple, in bearing. FOR SALE 
because of death of one of the owners. J., 
BOX 20, West Grove, Pa. 
BARGAIN, 44-acre poultry-dairy farm, near 
Cazenovia, N. Y.; three hundred foot laying 
house, large barn. Alfalfa soil, 12 acres mer¬ 
chantable timber; no dwelling; for quick sale, 
$1,000; terms if desired. LESLIE PETERSON 
R. D. 1, Geneva. N. Y. 
FOR SALE—11% acres village farm, with stock 
and tools, suitable for poultry, truck and 
fruit; close to city; house, 0 rooms, in good 
condition; a barn and other outbuildings; $1,500 
cash; rest easy payments; price, $4,800. BOX 
56A, Keyport, N. J. 
FOR SALE—Productive 152-acre farm, well 
watered, 12 woodland location, Washington 
Co., N. Y., 3 miles from A'alley Fal'.s; build¬ 
ings and house in good condition; silo, coav'- 
barn, stanchions, 35 cattle; tractor used on farm. 
Address owner, ANDREW J. RYAN, R. 1, 
A'alley Falls, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Colonial house, 14 rooms, tourists’ 
accommodation tea room. State road, excep¬ 
tional location, $6,500. WM. H. SEBKING, 
Dover Plains, N. Y. 
AVANTED—To rent, ftarm suitable for market 
gardening, AA’ithin 75 miles of NeAA' York. 
HUTCHINSON, 117 Jamaica Ave., Flushing, 
N. Y. 
MUST SELL HOME FARM, 155 acres, in Ken¬ 
nebec Co., Me., as work takes me aA\’ay; good 
crop land; one-third mile to church, school, can¬ 
ning factory and electric railroad; only $22 per 
acre, half cash and easy term. A. W. BEN¬ 
NER, Jamesburg, N. J. 
AVTLL LEASE OR SELL for one or more years, 
15 acres of black muck land; easy terms. 
H. E. PRICE, Birdland Farm, Central A'alley, 
Orange Co., N. Y. 
AA r ANTED—General store; liaA’e $1,200 to in¬ 
vest in store located Avithin 200 miles of 
NeAA* A'ork City. ADA'ERTISER 4791, care Rural 
NeAV-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Nice 4-room bungaloAV, tvA'o years 
old, Summer kitchen and garage; five acres 
land, three miles outside A'ine’.and, near schools, 
churches and railroads; fine roads; price, $2,100, 
$1,000 cash required; act quick. E. L. 
LAUBSCH, oAvner, A’ineland, N. J. 
CALIFON, N. J., near High Bridge; several 
daily trains and fast freight; A’ery produc¬ 
tive farm, 161 acres. 5 springs, comfortable 
house, 10 rooms, furnace and bath room; large 
outbuildings, farm implements and tractor; 
peach orchard; apples, etc.; Alfalfa field; im¬ 
mediate possession if desired; price, $15,000; 
Avould consider offer; obliged to sell. Address, 
T. J. KUMMBR, R.F.D. 1, Califon, N. J. 
FOR SALE—Five-acre poultry farm in the pines, 
4-room dwelling, two large poultry houses 
and barn; four miles from A'ineland; price, 
$800, $400 cash required. ALFRED LAUBSCH, 
owner, A’ineland, N. J. 
ON ACCOUNT OF HEALTH, I AA’ill sell farm 
and boarding house; all in good condition. 
ADA'ERTISER 4792, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FARM—113 acres, new house, 8 rooms, 2 barns, 
10 ooavs, 5 horses, tools; bargain. AD¬ 
VERTISER 4793, care Rural Ne\A ’-Yorker. 
FERTILE HILL FARM, 47 acres, good build¬ 
ings; $2,000; 2 miles station; pleasant Sum¬ 
mer home. CHARLES BEE. Lebanon Springs, 
N. Y. 
WANTED—Poultry farm within 100 miles NeAV 
York. ADA'ERTISER 4807, care Rural New- 
Yorker. 
FRUIT FARM FOR SALE at Nassau, Rens¬ 
selaer Co., N. Y.; about 1200 apple trees, 44 
acres of good land; ideal for small fruits and 
poultry. LOCK BOX 273, Kinderhook, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—4 acres of dry level land or 26 
acres Amityville, L. I. W. ROSTRON, 161 
Lambert.on Street, Trenton, N. J. 
FOR SALE—4%-aere poultry farm, 35 miles 
from New York City, near trolley, 6-room 
bungalow, garage, chicken coops, fruit trees, 
Avater in house, pipeless heater; reasonable; 
write for particulars. A. LINNECKE, It. 4, 
Box 56, NeAV Brunswick, N. J. 
POULTRY FARM, 20 acres. 900 layers. neAV 
buildings, electricity, one mile from railroad 
on concrete road; particulars. Avrite ADA'ER¬ 
TISER 4806, care Rural New 1 -Yorker. 
FOR SALE—10-room house, bath, heat, elec¬ 
tricity, tAA’O acres, barn, garage, henhouses, 
fruit; on State road, betAveen tAA’O villages. 
BOX 42, Highland Mills, N. Y. . 
FOR SALE—-72 acres, Albany 11 miles, railroad 
1% miles. 10-room house, two barns, large 
henhouse, other buildings: electric lights, tele¬ 
phone, stock, tools. S. D. BENEDICT, A’oor- 
: heesville, N. Y. 
FARM WANTED for $1,000 cash; full particu¬ 
lars in first letter. A. KOSTER, 341 Lincoln 
Road. Brooklyn, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—77-acre farm near Watkins. Schuy¬ 
ler Co.. N. Y., on stone road half mile from 
railroad SAvitch, 7 acres Avoods containing con¬ 
siderable lumber, balance nearly all tillable; 
soil Dunkirk clay loam, gentle slope to the east, 
thoroughly tile drained; natural clover and grain 
land, very . productive; house recently refinished 
inside, electricity, hard and soft Avater in house; 
new gambrel roof barn: price, $1,500 cash and 
$4,000 mortgage. Write E. C. BARKMAN, 
Watkins, N. Y. 
Miscellaneous 
FOR SALE—Hayes triplex power sprayer, 200 
gallon tank, used two seasons and like neAV. 
ADA'ERTISER 4812, care Rural New-Yorker. 
HONEY—Pure extracted, postpaid first 3 zones; 
clover, 5 lbs., $1.25; 10 lbs., $2.15; buckAvheat, 
5 lbs.. $1; 10 lbs., $1.80; satisfaction guaranteed. 
WALNUT ORCHARD FARM, Ithaca, N. Y. 
MILK chocolate made at our dairy; the best you 
ever tasted; box of 120 pieces, 2 lbs. net, post¬ 
paid, for $1; stores sell this at $1.75; thousands 
of Rural New-Yorker readers among my AA’ell-sat- 
isfied customers. Are you one of them? Please 
send remittance with order. R. W. WIND, 
Babylon, N. Y. 
HONEY that will prove satisfactory; clover, 5 
lbs., $1.10; 10 lbs., $2; buckAAlieat. $1 and 
$1.80, postpaid and insured. RANSOM FARM, 
1310 Spring St., Syracuse, N. Y. 
AVANTED—Cyphers 390 incubators. G. W 
HERRON, Nicholson, Pa. 
EXTRACTED HONEY—Delivered by mail, 5 to 
40 lbs. in third zone, 60 lbs. in second; cir¬ 
cular free; ten lbs. clover $2.15, buckwheat 
$1.90. RAY C. AVILCOX, Odessa, N. Y. 
CHOICE large Oregon prunes direct; 25 lbs., ex¬ 
press paid, $3.85; 100 lbs., freight paid, $12.35. 
KINGWOOD ORCHARDS, Salem, Ore. 
HONEY—Clover-raspberry, 10 lbs., $1.90; buck¬ 
Avheat, $1.75, delivered third zone. S. S. 
STRATTON, Newark A'alley, N. Y. 
HONEY—1924 price list free. ROSCOE F. 
WIXSON, Dept. G, Dundee, N. Y. 
HONEY—Six pounds, $1.10, prepaid third zone. 
AA'ILLIAM H. PARSIL, Monmouth Junction, 
N. J. 
CLOVER HONEY, 10 lbs., $2.10; 5 lbs., $1.15, 
delivered. FAULKNER APIARIES, Basking 
Ridge, N. J. 
IF you cannot afford to visit the Adirondacks 
you can at least have a fresh picked 3-lb. 
balsam pillow', only $1.25; prepaid cash Avith 
order; cretonne cover. HANNAH PAYNE, No. 2 
Raquette, Lake, N. Y. 
HONEY—5 lbs. clOA-er, $1.10; 10 lbs., $2; buck¬ 
Avheat, $1 and $1.75 postpaid first three zones; 
60 lbs. here, clover, $7.50; buckAvheat, $6. 
HENRY WILLIAMS, Romulus, N. Y. 
APRONS—Pretty percale bungaloAV aprons, well 
made in attractive styles, $1.35 (postpaid). 
E. STILSON, R. 8, Shelton, Conn. 
PURE, delicious Vermont Maple Syrup; orders 
taken now for neAV crop, ready in March and 
April; $3 per gal.; sugar in 5 and 10-lb. pails, 
40c per lb. W. IT. AVARREN, No. Pomfret, A r t. 
HONEY—Quart, 85c; gallon, $2.75; delivered. 
RICHARD D. BARCLAY, Riverton, N. J. 
ELECTRIC GENERATOR, one K.W., 3 coal¬ 
burning 500-chick brooders; Newton and AA'isli- 
bone; 12 Poorman brooders; 2 Buckeye oil 500- 
chick brooder. H. L. HAMILTON,, R. D. 1, 
Huntington, N. Y. 
PURE HORSERADISH, ground and shipped 
the same day the order is received, by parcel 
post paid, at $1.25 per doz. bottles; less than 
one doz., 15c a bottle. S. J. McMICHAEL, 
142 N. Cory St., Findlay, Ohio. 
WANTED—Old coins. P. M. LANGE, 817 
Flower City Park, Rochester, N. Y. 
AA r ANTED—Hickorynuts by the bushel. Address 
DR. L. D. POWERS, Red Squirrel Farm, 
White Plains, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—-Motor Maeultivator garden tractor; 
4 cycle engine; bought last Fall; never been 
used, haA’e no use noAV for same; price Avhen 
bought, $155; first money order for $100 takes 
it: tool holder, cultivator, teeth and Aveeders 
included. ALBERT F. KALBER, Newington 
Junction, Conn. 
IN good order, volumes Rural New-Yorker, some 
in eighties; also proceedings NeAV York Hor¬ 
ticultural Society for 45 years; correspondence 
solicited. J. F. ROSE, South Byron, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Steel barrel cart, $5; Planet Junior 
celery liiller, $10; Richland feed grinder and 
extra burr, $15; Henderson horse marker, $8; 
King of Corn field planter, $20; potato digger, 
$5; folding drag-satv, $5; Hocking A'alley corn 
sheller, $10: all as good as new; f.o.b. JAS. 
AV. SEWALL, Old Toavu, Me. 
CEDAR bean poles, $10 per 100; cedar for 
rustic work, any size or length Avanted; 
order now- for Spring. ADA'ERTISER 4775, 
care Rural NeAV-Yorker. 
ORANGES—GRAPEFRUIT—Tree-ripened; bush¬ 
el-boxes, picked, jtacked in grove; oranges, 
$1.65; mixed, $1.40; grapefruit, $1.15; F.O.B., 
Wauchula, Fla.; send money Avith order. E. K. 
WALKER, Jr., Wauchula, Fla. P. O. Box 482. 
CLOA'ER HONEY—Guaranteed pure, 5-lb. pail, 
$1.15; tAA’O 5-lb. pails, $2.25; four 5-lb. pails, 
$4.25, postpaid into third zone; 60-lb. can, here, 
delivered at station, $8; two CO-lb. cans, $15. 
HUGH G. GREGG, Elbridge, N. Y. 
WANTED—Cyphers incubator, 390 capacity; 
good condition. R. W. RGBERTS, Bartlett, 
N. Y. 
GASOLINE LANTERNS, good as neAV, $3.50 
each. S. FRANKMA.N, Lakewood, N. J. 
R. D. 1 
CLOA'ER HONEY—Six 5-lb. pails, $5, pre¬ 
paid third zone; 60-lb. can, $7.50, two $14 
here; club orders, write for quantity prices. 
DR. R. S. DAVEY, Parish, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Two Buckeye coal-burning canopy 
brooders; largest size; practically neAV, $20 
each; crated, F.O.B. station. C. B. DRAKE, 
Bomoseen, A't. 
WANTED—390-size Cyphers Incubators, also 
stoA’e brooders. V. O. PETERSEN, Factory- 
ville, Pa. 
A WISHBONE INCUBATOR in good condi¬ 
tion, 500-egg capacity. ADA'ERTISER 4794, 
care Rural NeAV-Yorker. 
CATTLE Beets and BuckAvheat for sale. AD¬ 
VERTISER 4795, care Rural New-Yorker. 
FOR SALE—Willys-Light Junior 32-volt, electric 
light plant Avith 160 ampere-hour battery; en¬ 
tire outfit neAV, never uncrated; price, $295. 
LOCK BOX 273, Kinderhook, N. Y. 
CLOA'ER HONEY—Pure, delicious, wholesome; 
5 lbs., $1; 10 lbs., $1.90; postpaid third zone. 
CHARLES B. ALLEN, Central Square, N. Y. 
BARGAIN—Five section Candee Incubator and 
Hoovers. BERKELEY MANOR, Central A'al¬ 
ley, N. Y. 
HONEYMADE NUT CRUSH—A healthful candy 
combining the Avholesome nutriment of choice 
nut meats with the appealing deliciousnesw of 
pure honev; pound and half. $1 postpaid. 
SAWYER BROS., R. 3, Portsmouth, A'a. 
WANTED—Small electric light plant to run 
fan for incubator: also Rrahma hens wanted. 
L. HALLENBECK, Greendale, N. Y. 
