American Agriculturist, March 24,1923 
277 
c=--- 
REAL ESTATE 
114 ACRES; 6 head stock, team, tools, 
sugar grove, 3 acres muck, lots of wood, level 
boom ice pond ; 50,0000 feet timber; 20 cow- 
spring and brook-watered pasture; 14-room 
house; $3,700, terms. T. P. DAWLEY, Jewell, 
Oneida County, N. Y. 
LAND TO RENT OR ON SHARES with 
bouse and buildings ; deep-light loam, no stones ; 
convenient to railroad and markets. Good 
for stock, cows or pigs, situated Farming- 
dale, New Jersey. Apply care of AMERI¬ 
CAN AGRICULTURIST. 
FOR SALE—Extra good 90-acre farm on 
macadam, road in Central New York. Good 
buildings and equipment. Horses, cows, chick¬ 
ens, tools, crops, etc. Box 113, AMERICAN 
AGRICULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., New 
York City. 
WILL EXCHANGE $3,000 equity in mod¬ 
ern six-room single home, Cleveland, Ohio, as 
down payment on farm in Eastern New York 
or Pennsylvania. Box 128, AMERICAN AGRI¬ 
CULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., New York City. 
FOR SALE—Poultry farm and hatchery. 
700 hens; 11,000 incubator capacity; 54 
acres ; fine location ; $8,000. Terms arranged. 
Box 134, AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 461 
Fourth Ave., New York City. 
FARM FOR SALE—103% acres, fine Mid¬ 
dle Georgia land; 14 miles from large city, 
on railway. Write fpr particulars. Box 133, 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 461 Fourth 
Ave., New York City. 
FOR SALE—Fruit farm and summer resort. 
Excellent house and water supply. Orchard, 
sugar bush and complete equipment. Box 119, 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 461 P’ourth 
Ave., New York City. 
FOR SALE—160 acres on macadam, good 
buildings, stock and tools included, near rail¬ 
road station and Cornell. Box 125, AMERI¬ 
CAN AGRICULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., 
New York City. 
■■ -- » ■ ... .»■. ■ - 
FOR SALE—No 1 New York Farm; 63 
acres, good buildings, fences, furnace, two 
wells. Near State Road. Box 130, AMERI¬ 
CAN AGRICULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., 
New York City, 
FARM FOR SALE—Cheap; 110 acres in 
Southern Cayuga County, New York. One 
mile from railroad. Box 131, AMERICAN 
AGRICULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., New 
York City. 
WANTED—Well located “village” home, 10 
to 20 acres; poultry and truck. North half 
of New Jersey. Box 124, AMERICAN AGRI¬ 
CULTURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., New York 
City, 
FARM FOR SALE—145 acres, river bot¬ 
tom, State Road, with high school, stores, 
churches. Box 126, AMERICAN AGRICUL¬ 
TURIST, 461 Fourth Ave., New York City. 
WANTED — 1 to 3 acres in Monmouth 
County, New Jersey. With or without build¬ 
ings. Must be reasonable. McCULLOCH, 
Farmingdale, N. J. 
FARM FOR SALE—170 acres on State 
Road; mile from railroad station—milk 
station. Write for information. FRANK 
COLLIER, Preble, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—Lancaster County Farm; 32 
acres. Stock and equipment. On good road. 
Price $3,200, terms. SAMUEL MANNING, 
Elizabethtown, Pa. 
FARM FOR SALE—51 acres. Fine build¬ 
ings; State Road, South Jersey, near sea¬ 
shore markets. Equipped. MRS. REARDON, 
Ocean View, N. J. 
DAIRY AND POULTRY FARM FOR SALE. 
Excellent condition. Located on State Road 
and trolley. E. E. ELDRIDGE & SON, 
Portville, N. Y. 
FARM FOR SALE—In Mohawk Valley near 
Amsterdam. Excellent location on State 
Road. Easy terms. ARTHUR LIPPER, Port 
Johnson, N. Y. 
WANT TO TRADE 72-ACRE FARM for 
smaller one; 17 stock. Box 129, AMERICAN 
agriculturist, 461 P'ourth Ave., New 
York City. 
£ stcoi^^ 
THElUREOf, 
pipek^un. 
ARTHUR' 
TAG OF^ 
HBh^^DotWl 
MSsi^^'^’TUTTLEl 
THE 
ICHALLENGE 
or THE 
NORTH 
IJAMCS'B* 
HENORYX 
See All You Get: 12 Bully Books, Sizzling 
with Excitement! 
DON aUlCKSHOT OF THE RIO GRANDE STEPHEN CHALMERS 
■’LooUlng f’r Trouble is my middle name,” said Impulsive Rep. adven¬ 
turing oowpuncher. And there on the border, among raiding Mexican 
baiuiit.'i, train robber.s, Texas rangers, a prairie fire—not to mention a 
pair of blue eyes—he did not have far to look. 
SPAWN OF THE DESERT W. C. TUTTLE 
A tale of Calico Town: Where men lived raw In the desert’s maw, and 
Hell was nothing to shun; where they burled ’em neat, without preacher 
or sheet and writ on their tombstone, crude but sweet, “'This jasper was 
slow with his gun.” 
THE LURE OF PIPER’S GLEN THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS 
It was the lure of all the great timber country of the North, of plentiful 
game, of the clear wind from the great plains. The call came South: 
young Jim TotUiunter heard it, and a great tide of life in tho North 
caught him up—to bring adventure a-plenty. 
APACHE VALLEY ARTHUR CHAPMAN 
A story of a cattle war in the southwest, with all It means—terror and 
blood feud; alarms by night and day; rustling and stealthy murder. And 
through it all are woven the lives of true men as well as thieves, men 
whose lives reflected the glories of the land they protected. 
THE CHALLENGE OF THE NORTH JAMES B. HENORYX 
This is a story of the call of the great Northland: of purposes and cross 
purposes, of true men and of “bad” men; and of big deals and pioneer¬ 
ing triumphs. A tale of the North which holds for the young, the strong 
and the brave adventures that are countless. 
THE SECOND MATE H. BEDFORD-JONES 
Peril and mutiny on the China Seas. When every scupper was running 
red, and with two white women at the mercy of a villainous crew composed 
of the sweepings of the outermost islands. Jim Bai’nes realized the gage 
of desperate battle he had accepted when he signed on as second mate of 
the Sulu Queen. 
THE DEVIL’S PAYDAY W. C. TUTTLE 
A sky of brass, the sun a flame, A hunk of earth so doggone hot 
And the land no place to dwell; 'That it still belongs to Hell. 
THE CANYON OF THE GREEN DEATH F. R. BUCKLEY 
Who were the devils in human form whose haunt was the lost barranca? 
Invisible, terrible; they brought the redoubtable young officer of the law 
to a strange dilemma. The law of the land commanded him not to desert 
his prisoners; the law of the desert ordained that he stand by Ills com¬ 
panions. Which did the Fates decree he should obey? 
SKY-HIGH CORRAL RALPH CUMMINS 
-V yarn of unending feud between cattlemen and forest rangers: of forest 
tires, grazing herds and bitter fights at timberline. Yet in the end our 
gallant young ranger, through ordeal of battles, fire and blood, brought 
the old timers to see that the new ways of forest conservation are best. 
LOADED DICE EDWARD L. SABIN 
A romance of 'Texas of the early days, when lives depended on the quick¬ 
ness of draw, and all the courage of the pioneers was needed to brave 
the perils they so fearlessly faced. A thrilling tale of men who were 
jugglers with death. 
SONTAG OF SUNDOWN W. C. TUTTLE 
The story of the (luestion of ownership of the T J ranch—a question which 
promoted bloodshed and a wav of no mean caliber. The cowpunchers of 
this story will live long in .vour memory for their originality and enter¬ 
prise. They are men whose best friends were their nerve and their gun. 
ARIZONA ARGONAUTS H. BEDFORD-JONES 
Three adventurers whose fortunes In the Arizona desert lead through 
drought and danger to the goal they sought, gold, free gold, the gold of 
which they had always dreamed. Tliey were men quick on the trigger, 
who loved to face odds. 
Eveiy Qiapler Cbnmied loll 
ofWHIIE-BOI THRIllS.' 
^ P0 
EvetyBooJ{ a amndingerr 
FuU ^*^98 
Lengdr ■ ^wFor 
Novds A All 
JustThinKof It! 
A dozen books for the price of one—and every yarn an “ace.” 
Exciting? You’ll say so! 12 red-blooded tales. Real thrills on 
every page.' You whirl along breathlessly from climax to climax. 
Smashing, unexpected endings make you gasp. Never a slow even¬ 
ing if you own these books. Just like being a cowboy, a prospector, 
a dare-devil adventurer yourself. Every story a “ripsnorter.” 
Live the life of the big open Western world—among hairy- 
chested, hard-fighting frontiersmen who tramp, ride, camp, scheme, 
love and hate—yes, and sometimes shoot to kill! Live among them 
in Adventure-land! These fascinating, gripping stories will pick 
you up and whirl you bodily into the “gun-toting” life of the West— 
the bad old, glad old West. Every one of these books will make 
you “hold on to your chair.” 
SEND NO MONEY 
You can get this whole library of 12 fascinating, nerve-tightening 
books for about 16c each. The whole set sent to you right now— 
without sending a penny in advance. But listen! The night these 
books come you won’t sleep! You’re just BOUND to finish the one 
you start—if it takes till 3 A. M. You can’t be lonesome or out of 
amusement while you have these smashing stories in your home. 
YET EVERY STORY IS CLEAN AND WHOLESOME—nothing 
that should not be read by any boy or girl. 
Get this whole library right away. Don’t send any money. Just 
your name and address on the handy coupon, and mail it. The 
whole 12 of these splendid books, each printed on good paper, bound in standard 
magazine cover stock, with striking design in full color, will be sent to you 
promptly. Just pay $1.98, plus a few cents postage, to the post- _ 
man who delivers the books, and they are yours. There, are no ^ , .. 
other payments of any kind. Bach book complete. If you x p 
are in any way dissatisfied, send them back to us—and / 
we will send your money in full. . , r4- GardenCih N Y 
Stake yourself to a whole lot of pleasant evenings ! ''J'''’ ”• ’• 
Think of it! Twelve full length novels for only Qv send me the 
$1.98—and you take no risk. Take up this <'■ stales bv^endo'x^fettle 
offer right now, tor it may not be repeated m and other famous authors. I 
this newspaper. Send the coupon today— ^ will pay the postman only S1.98 
v(-)AV ' (plus postage) on delivery. It is 
O' understood that I may return these 
,A books, if I de.sire, within live days and 
GARDEN CITY receive my money back promptly. 
PUBLISHING CO., Inc. 
Dept. WA-263 Address.. 
Garden City, New York city. state... 
FOR SALE—200-acre Dairy Farm, good 
buildings, spring watered; 4 miles from Hones- 
dale. M. F. CRIMMINS, R. D. 1. Honesdale, 
Pa. 
farm for sale— 40 acres, six head of 
cattle and team. Well watered. Three miles 
from Schenevus. ,IOHN KEITH, Schenevus, 
N. Y. 
FORTY-SIX acres for sale. Buildings, sugar 
bush, alfalfa, fruit, good water, drainage. 
Box A, MAPLE HILL FARM, Lafayette, N. Y. 
farm for SALE—120 acies, lime-stone 
soil; 2 miles from Vanhonesville State Road. 
MRS. .TACOB MONK, R. 1. Jordansville, N. Y. 
$4,000 CASH buys 150-acres improved farm, 
good land, fine buildings, live community, 
balance, terms. TOWNSEND, Berkshire, N. Y. 
For sale —121 acres; equipped dairy; 
nuid milk district; tractor worked. 1 mile 
^tate Road. JIM WING, Campbell, N. Y. 
for SALE—40 acres; stock and tools, 
"ood building; 5 miles from city. One mile to 
Village. GRACE SMITH, Westville, N. H. 
30-ACRE farm, excellent location, one 
UHle from improved road.k Write for particu- 
wrs. w. H. DRAYER, Gc^ys Mills, Pa. 
REAL ESTATE 
FOR SALE—13 acres, one mile to town 
on good road, good buildings, ideal truck farm. 
$1,500. C. R. BASHORE, Bethel, Pa. 
LOT FOR SALE—Stone house, frame barn, 
garden; 35 fruit trees, % mile from trolley. 
MRS. VINNIE SAYLOR, Limerick, Pa. 
FOR SALE—115 acres. Lake Front; 700 
orange trees; house and barn, $20,000. F. B. 
LYNCH, Box 924, Orlando, Fla. 
FOR SALE: Place 3-acres good land, and 
buildings ; near village ; soon stone road. C. 
E. YOUNG, Hyndsville, N. Y. 
FARM FOR SALE—100 acres, 50 cleared 
and 50 woodland, good hay farm. E. T. 
BROCK, West Danby, N. Y^. 
FOR SALE—182-acre Grain and Dairy 
Farm. On State Road. MRS. J. A. McBRIDE. 
R. 1. Stillwater, N. Y. 
FOR SALE—82%-acre farm, on State 
Road; 1% miles south of Hilton. FLOYD 
LOWDEN, N. Y. 
WANTED — A Farm to work on shares, near 
Phoenix, N. Y. DAVID MASON, Phoenix, 
N. Y. 
An Ad. Like This Costs You Nothing! 
This ad is POR SALE — Ayrshire calves, both sexes, of 
oo M/ J high production breeding at farmers prices. 
^ iiU Woras EDWIN HARADON, Route 4, Corning, N. Y. 
And Over 120,000 Folks Read It 
This offer is restricted to advertisements of cattle, sheep, swine and horses and is 
good if mailed to us before April 5, 1923. 
Classified Department, American Agriculturist.' 461 Fourth Avenue, New York 
Please insert the following advertisement in your classified department in your next available 
issue. This is in accordance with your special offer and it is understood this is to be free of charge. 
Name. 
Address. 
