710 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
April 26, 1924 
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EARLY 
BROILERS 
November Layers 
Make it ten weeks from peeps to 
broilers—two-pounders. 
Do it this way: 
Keep them healthy. 
Keep them hungry. 
Feed the old reliable 
■H&,' 
Dr. Hess Poultry 
PAN-A-CE-A 
Never mind about indigestion, diarrhea, leg 
weakness and gapes. Pan-a-ce-a takes care of 
all that. There will be wellness, cheer and 
good growth. 
PAN-A-CE-A your chicks—then put them 
on the scales at ten weeks, set her at two 
pounds, and watch that beam come up! 
You will see a mighty difference in the 
feather growth, too, between your flock and 
a non-Pan-a-ce-a flock. 
Pan-a-ce-a will develop your pullets into 
early henhood—fall and winter layers. 
Tell your dealer how many hens you have. 
There’s a right-size package for every flock. 
100 hens, the 12-lb. pkg. 200 hens, the 25-lb. pail 
60 hens, the 5-lb. pkg. 500 hens, the 100-lb. drum 
For fewer hens, there is a smaller package. 
GUARANTEED 
DR. HESS & CLARK Ashland, O. 
I spent 30 
pears in perfect¬ 
ing Pan-a-ce-a, 
Gilbert Hess 
M.D.. D.V.S. 
Dr.Hess Instant Louse Killer Kills Lice 
The- Feed That 
Makes Chicks Grow 
Less Mortality 
Chicatine lowers mortality. Here’s another loss that Chicatine saves 
Chicatine is a pure, clean food for chicks without medication or stimulant. Start your 
chicks with Chicatine and continue until five months old. The elements required tor growth 
are correctly proportioned. Your chicks will mature quicker and grow larger, be stronger, 
healthier, better layers. And you’ll raise more ofthem 
This is a claim you can prove for yourself. Try Chicatine with your chick9. 
If your dealer doesn’t have Chicatine ask us for sample, feeding directions and price 
stating number of chicks you are feeding. 
TIOGA MILL & ELEVATOR CO. 
Box D Waverly, N. Y. 
ti-o-ga feed service 
BOYS AND GIRLS 
(Continued from Page 705) 
Cross-word Enigma 
A good many of you discovered last 
month’s enigma to be O-u-r P-a-g-e, which 
was the answer Lucille Freemantle had 
in mind when she made it. Two or three 
said it was “Our Papa,” and you will 
find, if you look again, that this works 
out, too. Surely our papas are for our 
delight no less than Our Page. Anyway, 
here is a new one: 
My first is in cat, but not in mouse, 
My second in barn, but not in house, 
My third is in bean, but not in pea, 
Mv fourth in laughter, but not in glee, 
My fifth is in feather, but _ not in wing, 
My sixth in queen, but not in king. 
My seventh in sweep, but not in broom, 
My whole is a flower, early to bloom. 
Vermont. WARREN BROWN (15 years). 
Notes 
Edna Blackman, a 12-year-old Penn¬ 
sylvania reader, wrote the couplet in the 
Box. If we are to make Our Page “the 
best page in the book” we can only do it 
with the help of every reader. 
You will find the long list of our con¬ 
tributors this month on this and the next 
page. It is a fact that for some reason 
the girls still outnumber the boys four to 
one. 
Send all work for the May page to 
reach your editor not later than May 10. 
This gives you plenty of time to make 
contributions for a fine page. 
And now, goodby again. Finish up 
your school year in good shape and get 
your Spring tasks at home well started. 
Find time also to write to your friend, 
Edward M. Tuttle, in care The Rural 
New-Yorker, 333 West 30th Street, New 
l r ork City. 
IOOOOOO 
OUR 
I5tb. 
YEAR 
s. c. w. 
Leghorn Pullets 
8-10-12 weeks old 
June and July delivery. 
FAIR ACRES FARM 
Skaneateles, N. Y. 
Member N. Y. S. C. P. C. Jl, 
FEBRUARY 
Pullets-3000 
8 to 10 weeks old Pullets for delivery 
in April. All Pullets sired by Pedi¬ 
greed Cockerels, mated to 2 and 3 
year old Hens. Everyone guaranteed. 
100 and over $ 1.00 each; under 100 
$ 1.10 each. 
COLUMBIA POULTRY FARM 
Toms River, N. J. 
Kirkup 
’q S. C. White Leghorn Q 
O American Strain vllIUio 
-QUALITY □ RELIABILIT Y - 
Bred for vigor, size and large white eggs. 
All breeding stock carefully selected by Corn¬ 
ell expert. Chicks hatched in our new Buck¬ 
eye incubators shipped every Wednesday. Safe 
delivery and full count of strong, healthy 
chicks guaranteed. Sold out up to May 14th. 
On May 14th, $20 per 100 in lots of 500 or more. 
After May 14th, $15 per 100 in any quantity. 
Folder and references on request. 
Send for June Prices, 
KIRKUP BROS., Mattituck, N. Y. 
Member N. Y. S. Co-operative Poultry Certification Association. 
pAQmp attv me ct ttve DELIVERY. Give us voitr order for our RELIABLE CHICKS and we 
wm T prfve to v°o^IF B V E E XTER CHICKS COULD BE HATCHED FOR THE HONEY WE WOULD 
BE HATCHING THEM. 
FLOCKS PUKE I1KED :-t CULLED III EX1 ERT8 
FINE ILLUSTRATED CATALOG FREE. Tells how we proch.ee RELIABLE CHICKS that have 
pleased thousands of customers. We hatch 13 \ arieties. COMBINATION OFFERS. VALUABLE 
BOOK GIVEN FREE with each order. „ . . _ . . A .. 
HUBER’S RELIABLE HATCHERY Main Street, Fostoria, Ohio 
VAITD UrXIC Need meat scraps in 
YUUK HfcNo order to grow and lay. 
IDEAL 
MEAT SCRAPS 
Is the cheapest and best form of 
supplying: the protein which is ne¬ 
cessary for profitable egrg production. 
Write for prices—Today. 
IDEAL RENDERING COMPANY 
141 East Main Street North Wales, Pa. 
■ into contents, nenu out, tann ' 
one postpaid. Money back if not satisfied. 
American Poultry Journal, 479-523 Plymouth Ct., Chicago 
Champion 195 
Belle City % h 1 
140 Egg Incubator *3© Egg 
Hot-Water, Copper Tank, Double 
Walls, Fibre Board, Self-Regulated. 
$6.95 buys 140-Chick: fS-ff-SJO-Chick 
Hot-Water Brooder. Save $1.95,Order Both 
140 Sire Incubator and Brooder $18.95 
230 Size Incubator and Brooder $29.95 
*?stItolkUs'and AHowodWwrt. 
Low Prices on Coal and Oil Cano- 
ny Brooders come with catalog:. 
Guaranteed. Order now. Share 
in my $1,000 in Prizes, or write 
— - for Free Book “Hatching Facts.” 
., p It tells everything. Jim Rohan, rres. 
Belle City Incubator Co. box 48 Racine,Wis. 
List of April Contributors 
These are the readers who answered the March 
page before this one went to the printer. The 
name itself indicates that a letter was received 
from that boy or girl. Following each name is 
the age, whenever given, and a series of alpha¬ 
betical symbols referring to various contribu¬ 
tions according to the following key: 
b—Words for the box. 
d—A drawing, 
e—An essay, 
g—A game. 
k—A new book or poem puzzle. 
1 —Correct answer to last book puzzle. 
m—A new nature puzzle. 
n—Correct answer to last nature puzzle. 
o—An original poem. 
p—A photographic picture. 
r—A rhyme for drawing. 
s—A story. 
v—A memory verse. 
x—Correct answer to last puzzle. 
z—A new puzzle or riddle. 
California: Constance Palmer (12, d, I, n). 
Connecticut: Elva Burrill (12, d), Mildred 
Vosburgh (14, e, 1, n, s), Helen Upson (11, d), 
Ida Voelkel (10, g, n), Emily Hubac (13, d, k, 
1, n), Rose Hubac (10, d), Gertrude Gavette (10, 
d, n, o), Ruth Dudley (16, d, e, 1), Wilhelmina 
Pearl (12, n, x, z), Florence Kilby (9, n, x, Z), 
Lucia Willson (10, x, z), Mike Goldberg (10, d, 
u, x), Alice Lewis (10, g, v), Dorothy Richard¬ 
son (13, e, 1, m, n), Alice Young (12, n), Eliz¬ 
abeth Dennis (9, n, s), Norman Hallock (16, d, 
n), Elizabeth Steed (13, d, e, 1, n, v, x), Rena 
Williams (12, d, n, x), Julia Fraut (10, d, o), 
Rowena Taylor (14, e, g, 1, n), Helen Chiszew- 
sky (9, d), Bertha King (13, n), Mildred Pierce 
(12, e, 1, n), Ethel Wraight (12, e, 1), Lilliau 
Kved (e, 1), Sarah Cooper (14, d), Edwin Nie- 
m'inen (9, d), Harry Byglin (11, d), Irene Mat¬ 
thews (12, d, n). Prank Matthews (7, d), Sylvia 
Story (13, d, 1, m, n, x), Bella Zarahr (n, v), 
Margaret Kimberly (13, b, d, 1, n), Ida Koehler 
(12, d, 1, n,), Gabriel D’Agostino (10, d), Edwin 
D’Agostino (8, d), Walter Phillpis (12, 1, n, x), 
Gussie Bakes (17, 1, m). 
Georgia: Barbara Hoyt (11, d, 1, n, x). 
Illinois: • Alice Hobart (11, d, e, 1), Marion 
Allen (11, d, s), Anna Graham (14, e, 1), Hilda 
Johnson (1, n). 
Indiana: Herman Kretschmar (15, d), Mil¬ 
dred Pariseau (11, d), Beulah Mclntire til, 1), 
Margaret Mclntire (13, d). 
Iowa: Catherine Mueller (10, n). 
Kentucky: Eleanor Hillenmeyer (10, n). 
Maine: Louise Campbell (12, n), Rebecca 
Spencer (13, d), Irene Williams (14, 1), James 
Davidson (11, d), Marion Stafford (10, d), Faith 
Davison (15, d, 1, n), Eugenia Swanton (7, d, 
1, n), Lucia Hinckley (9, 1), Marion Gray (d, 1, 
n), George Markham (10, d), Muriel Cook (11, 
d, n, x). 
Maryland: Charles Gottwals (11, d), Esther 
Wright (10, d, n, x), Irma Wright (6, <11. 
Massachusetts: Elizabeth Martin (9, d), Elea¬ 
nor Hart (13, d. n, o), Dorothy Rogers (12, d), 
Robert Watson (9, d, m, n), Miriam Tilden (13, 
1, n), Elsie Bigelow (14, d), Beth Haskell (9, 
d), Evelyh Haskell (n), Frank Buzzell (10, d), 
J D. Buzzell (13, d), Dorothy Dalilroth (13, 
d), Cecilia Aqua (12, e, 1, n, p, x, z), Samuel 
Gadd (v), Emily Chapin (n). 
Michigan: Doris Miller (11, d), Dorothy Mar- 
kle (12, 1). Carl Keas (13, d. e, 1), Lilly Iveas 
(14. d, n), Agnes Berglund (15, d, 1. n). 
New Hampshire: Marie Manske (14, d, n, p)» 
Earl Andreson (17, n, o, x, z), Gladys Guu- 
narson (13, d, 1, u, z), Edith Kelley (8, n), 
Alice Still (10, n). 
New Jersey: Lillian Dietrich (d, n), Laura 
Gould (10, d), Elizabeth Nicolaysen (8, v). 
Katherine Eckert (14, b, d, n), May Leonhard 
(v), Madeline Fischer (12, d), John Fischer (11, 
d), Margaret Lvtle (15, e, 1, n, x), Doris Hook¬ 
er (11, d), George Walter (13. d), Olga Kugler 
(11, d), Mabel Allatt (b, d, n, p), Minnie Zirk 
(14, d), Agnes Fisher (12, 1, n, x), Robert 
Klinge (11, d), Mae Walder (12, d), Olga 
Frederick (12, d), Sara Carlough (12, d), 
Rudolph de Packte (14, e, 1), Edith Dean (11, 
e, 1), Marie Rouselle (13, n, z), Nicholas Hudak 
(14, d), Elfriede Rosenbohm (10, d, 1, n), 
Blanche Creley (d), Louise Gross (10, d, n, v), 
Lillie Reidenbaker (11, d). Pearl Fisher (16, m, 
n z), Mildred Croshaw (d), Vesta Walters (12, 
n), Virginia Reed (15, 1, n), Grace Burlew (11, 
d, 1, n), Dorothy Fr.vlinck (14, k, 1. m. n, v), 
‘For (he Poultry man who demands something better” 
Wene-Ells Chicks 
S. C. While Leghorns. Send for Catalog and Price List 
WENE-ELLS FARMS 
Desk B. Vineland, N. J. 
Member International Baby Chick Ass’n. 
Mattituck White Leghorn Farm 
Member N. Y. S. C. P. C. A. 
Strain* BABY CHICKS 
Grade A and Certified, $20 and $36 per 100. After 
May 12tli, $16 and $28 per 100. June chicks, grade 
A, $12 per 100; $50 per 600. All males certified. 
No eggs bought for hatching. Circular. 
MATTITUCK, L. I.. N. Y. 
Arthur H. Penny Lovell Gordon 
Single Comb White Leghorns S1VELY 
Pure Barron English Strain out of imported birds 
with egg records up to 314 eggs in a year. 3,000 
breeders on free farm range. Vaccinated. Butter¬ 
milk fed. Now Booking orders for eggs and baby 
chicks for February, March, April and May delivery. 
Capacity, 12,000 a week. First hatch, Feb. 11. My 
Book, Profits in Poultru Keeping Solved, $1 or sent 
with all $10 orders. Circulars Free. 
SUNNYBROOK FARM, Pleasant Valley, N.Y. Box 75 
s. c. 
White 
LEGHORN 
Day-old 
Chicks 
Sired by imported Tom Barron Cock¬ 
erels and trap-nested hens—For May 
hatches. 
Price 25c each 
R0LLW00D FARM GUILFORD. CONN. 
THE RICHFIELD HATCHERY CHICKS 
Silver Laced and White Wyandottes, 16c. Reds, 
Barred and Buff Rocks. 15c. White, Brown and 
Buff Leghorns, 13c. Mixed or Broilers, 10c. De¬ 
livery guaranteed, Ref. the Richfield Bank. Order 
from adv. or write for circular. 
H. H. EHRENZELLER Richfield, Pa. 
33 atoy C Hie lx s 
S.C. White Leghorns, Barred Rocks, S.C. Rhode 
Island Reds, Mixed Chicks. We specialize on 
vigorous, day-old chicks bred from free-range 
stock. Prices reasonable. Satisfaction guar¬ 
anteed. Write for free c i rc u 1 a r. VnlleM 
View Hatchery, C .1. BENNER, Richfield,Pa 
BABYCHICKS 0 £'Ee 
510—100. S. C. White Leghorns, $12—100. B. Rocks, 
SI5. R. I. Reds. $15. Live arrival guaranteed. De. 
llvered free. FAIRVIEW P0ULTRT FARM. R. 0. 3. Milleritown. Pa 
CHICKS From Heavy Laying Flocks 
Barred Rocks, 14c; Reds, 15c. and Mixed, 10c, Safe 
delivery guar. Circ. free. B. W. AMEY.Cocolamus, Pa. 
CHICKS FROM PRIZE WINNERS 
Every flock is carefully bred for highest type 
and heavy egg production. Birds from our 
flocks have w on in some of the largest shows. 
All popular breeds with special attention to 
Hollywood and English Leghorns. Pure bred, 
of course. Write for catalog. You will be 
pleased with what you get from us. 
NONE-SUCH POULTRY FARM Box 332 H Ml. Vernon 
Healthy, Vigorous Chicks 
Br. PI. Rocks, S. C. R. I. Reds, S. C. W. 
Leghorns and Mixed. Also pullets 
All free range. 100?S arrival guaranteed 
Postpaid. Valuable circular free. Prices 
low. Write THE COMMERCIAL HATCHERY 
G. D. Shrawder, liox 75. Richfield, Pa, 
f II I T 17 5 O F HEALTHY 
Ulliu nil FREE-RANGE STOCK 
S. C. Buff and W. Leghorns, $12—100. Barred 
Rock and R. I. Reds, $14—100. White Rocks, 
$15—100. Lite Mixt, $9—100. Hevy Mixt, $11 
—100. Sat. guar, or money refunded. Circ. free. 
JACOB NIEM0ND, McAlisterville, Pa. Box i 
