And earn a liberal discount for early 
order and cash discount in addition on 
a Unadilla Silo. 
Don’t put it off. It’s the Unadilla Silo 
you want anyway because of its durability, 
silage keeping qualities and time and work¬ 
saving features. Write for big interesting 
catalog. 
Easy payments if desired. 
UNADILLA SILO CO. 
Box B Unadilla, N. Y. 
SEW 
S\bO 
My new reduced prices on the improved 
1925 Model Hercules makes it easy and 
cheap for you to remove every stump—to 
clear every acre on your farm as clean as a 
whistle. No stump or hedge too big or 
Stubborn for the Hercules, all-steel, triple 
power stump puller. It yanks ’em out in 
less time and with less effort than any other 
method. Make big money pulling stumps for 
your neighbors. Pull stumps for fuel. 1 make 
both horse and hand power machines. Lat¬ 
est, most up-to-the-minute improvements. Send 
today for catalog and 
00 special folder. 
B. A. FULLER, 7 
Pres. < 
Hercules Mfg. Co. 
723 29th St., 
Centerville, Iowa 
Hand 
Power 
Hercules 
: Samples & I 
! Roofing Book i 
.World’s Best 
Roofing 
“Reo" Cluster Metal Shingles. V-Crimp,.Corru¬ 
gated, Standing Seam. Painted or Galvanized Roof¬ 
ings, Sidings, Wallboard, Paints, etc., direct to you 
at Hick-Bottom Factory Prices. Save money—get 
better quality and lasting satisfaction. 
Edwards “Reo” Metal Shingles 
have great durability—many custom era report 15 and 
20 years' service.Guarantced fire and lightning proof. 
Free Roofing Book 
Get onr wonderfully 
low prices and free 
samples. We sell direct 
to you and save yon all 
in-between dealer’s 
profits Aek for Book| 
Mo. 162 
Lowest prices on Ready-Made 
Fire-Proof Steel Garages. Set 
up any place. Send postal for 
Garage Book, showing styles. 
THE EDWARDS MFC. CO. 
1212-1262 Pike $U Ciooinniti, 0. 
All Sizes 
Leather 
shoei 
An honeat to coodnosa 
quality shoe. Biggest 
bargain offered in 
years. The 
shoes are in¬ 
spected and 
built to 
stand .rigid 
specif i - 
c a t i o n 8 . 
Munson toe 
of chrome 
leather 
uppers; double thic« solid leather heels and soles 
will surely last more than 6 months. SEND K'O 
MONEY —Pay postman $2.85 plus postage on 
delivery Money bark if not satisfied 
INTERNATIONAL COMM. HOUSE, Dept., 
433 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 
B-393 
NATURAL LEAF TOBACCO 
Chewing 5 lbs. 51.50: 
10 lbs. $2 50. Smoking 
5 lbs. §1.25; 10 lbs. §2.00. Pay when received, pipe and 
recipe free. 
FARMERS TOBACCO UNION D1 PADUCAH, KY. 
Among the Farmers 
Fruit Growers to Meet at Rochester 
American Agriculturist, Decembei 
HARDER 
SILOS 
T HE annual meeting of the New York 
State Horticultural Society will be 
held at Rochester, N. Y. on January 
14, 15 and 16, according to Roy P. 
McPherson, secretary of the society. 
The annual meeting of the society is the 
big fruit event of the year, attracting 
thousands of growers from all parts of 
New York and adjoining States. The 
exhibit, both of fruit and equipment are 
worth going a long distance to see. 
Those who are contemplating exhibiting 
should get in communication with Mr. 
McPherson. His address is at LeRoy, 
N. Y. 
The society also holds an eastern meet¬ 
ing in the Hudson River Valley, at 
Poughkeepsie. The dates for this have 
not been decided as yet. T. E. Cross of 
LeGrangeville is in charge of the exhibit 
spacings at this eastern meeting. 
Coming League County Meetings 
Dec. 1—Constahleville, N. Y., 1:30 
P.M.; H. J. Kershaw, speaker. 
Dec. 2—Norwich, N. Y., 10:30 A.M., 
Chenango County sub-district; 
R. F. I^ewis, speaker. 
Dec. 3—Westfield, Pa., 10 A.M., Tioga 
County sub-district; H. J. 
Kershaw, speaker. 
Dec. 4—Bangor, N. Y., 7:30 P.M., 
Franklin County sub-district; 
C. A. Shepard, speaker. 
Dec. 4—Hornell, N. Y., G. A. R. Hall, 
10:30 A.M., Steuben County 
sub-district; H. J. Kershaw, 
speaker. 
Dec. 5—Springville, Pa., 10:30 A.M., 
Susquehanna County sub-dis¬ 
trict; R. F. Lewis, speaker. 
Dec. 5—Candor, N. Y., 8 P.M., Tioga 
County sub-district; H. J. 
Kershaw, speaker. 
Dec. 6—North Lawrence, N. Y., 1:30 
P.M., St. Lawrence County 
sub-district meeting; C. A. 
Shepard, speaker. 
Dec. 6—Whitney Point, N. Y., 10:30 
A.M., Broome County sub¬ 
district; R. F. Lewis, speaker. 
Dec. 8—Argyle, N. Y., 1 P.M., sub¬ 
district of District No. 3; C. A. 
Shepard, speaker. 
Dec. 12—Lottsville, Pa., 2 P.M., I. 0. 
O. F. Hall, Warren County 
sub-district; H. J. Kershaw, 
speaker. 
New York County Notes 
Saratoga County. —We are having a 
pleasant fall for outdoor work. Rain is 
much needed at present time. Frosts 
held off until very late in the season, 
which gave potatoes and corn an oppor¬ 
tunity to make late growth. Neither 
crop is quite up to the average yield. 
But few silos are filled to capacity. Much 
of the corn is soft and not filled well. 
Cattle are reported to be in good condition 
and most farmers have plenty of fodder 
for the winter. Eggs are very scarce and 
are bringing 65c a dozen wholesale. 
Apples are very scarce indeed. There 
seems to be none in the market. Butter 
is bringing 45c a pound wholesale. Milk 
prices are generally more satisfactory. 
Grains and feed of all kinds are high 
priced. The high cost of coal is creating 
a good demand for hard wood for good 
prices quoted. There seems to be a 
strong tone of optimism among farmers 
this fall. The demand for scrub cattle is 
weak but fresh milch cows are bringing 
high prices.—E. S. R. 
Washington County. —Wheat is about 
all sown with about the usual acreage 
going into that crop. It is coming up 
fine. Farmers are now in the middle of 
corn husking, reporting about half a 
crop. Practically all of the apples have 
been picked, the crop is not as good as it 
was last year. Very few horses or cows 
are being sold, but hogs are meeting good 
sale at $10 a hundred. Butter 40c a 
pound, eggs 40c a dozen.—D. J. W. 
Broome County. —Fall work had been 
very backward. Much more corn than 
usual was hit by frost before cutting. 
Most farmers have finished threshing, 
reporting fair grain yields and advancing 
prices. Very few have finished digging 
potatoes. Apples and pears are abundant 
through this section but quality is rather 
poor. Markets seem to be flooded and 
prices way down. Pears are bringing 
from $1 to $2.75 and apples are around $1. 
Eggs are scarce and are bringing from 60 
to 65e. Very few are offered on the 
market. Chickens and fowls are less 
plentiful than usual.— Mrs. E. M. C. 
Ontario County. —We have had a 
fine fall for farm work. There is still 
plenty to do. Potatoes and cabbage are 
very low in price. Potatoes are bringing 
35 to 40c a bushel and cabbage an where 
from $3 to $5 a ton. The ground is 
getting quite dry. We have had no rain 
for some time and the ground is therefore 
very hard.—-H. D. S. 
North Country Notes 
T 'HE first of November finds the farm 
work much farther along relatively 
than the first of October. The uncertain 
weather conditions of September had 
held up silo filling and thrashing until 
it seemed like a hopeless task. As a 
result a lot of corn went into the silos 
during the last month in rather poor 
condition—both as ' to moisture and 
mould. 
Not a drop of water fell during the 
whole month of October following the 
deluge of late September which soaked 
and packed the ground. 
The oat crop was very irregular. Some 
localities had a good yield while others 
were relatively low. Individual farms 
varied widely too. Some men had the 
largest yield in years- and others had 
almost failure. Most of the oats were 
more or less discolored, regardless of the 
yield however, as the weather was very 
catchy during most of the harvest which 
came nearly two weeks later than usual. 
Most of the oats will be ground for cattle 
feed during the winter. 
A lot of farmers are sowing a peas, oats 
and barley mixture for their grain crop, 
and this gives them a good mixture for 
their dairy ration with the addition of 
some higher protein feeds. With clover 
hay very little else is required for the 
summer milking farms. The mixture as 
a rule came out with good weight this 
year although the acre yield was not all 
that could be desired. 
Milk prices are averaging low, and 
farmers have to watch their step very 
carefully. Hay is moving slowly at $10 
to $14 according to the quality and the 
buyer. There is a large quantity of lower 
grades of hay this year, and the tendency 
is upward on the high grades as far as 
price is concerned. Potatoes have been 
bringing thirty-five to sixty cents, and 
extreme large ones making more or less 
trouble for the growers. Some men had 
a number run as large as two and a half 
to three pounds each.—W. I. R. 
Maryland Notes 
Cumberland County. —We have been 
having very dry, pleasant weather. 
Water is very scarce. Many cisterns are 
perfectly dry and many farmers are haul¬ 
ing water quite a distance. Newly sown 
wheat is in great need of rain. Some of 
the late sown wheat is not even up yet. 
The apple crop was a failure through this 
section. Corn is also in bad shape, not 
fit even to crib on account of so much 
soft corn, which is a general complaint. 
Very little corn has been husked as yet. 
Many hogs are being fed f»:* market. 
Wheat is bringing $1.30, com $1.20. oaks 
50c, with pro**peeks of going higher very 
soon.—J. B. K. 
Are Easier 
To Buy 
You can now buy a 
genuine Harder Silo 
on the most liberal terms ever offered to 
silo purchasers. You can meet the pay¬ 
ments out of your milk checks and soon 
own clear and free the best silo that money can buy. 
The new patented Harder-Victor Front is the most 
important silo improvement of recent years. 
Write today for particulars ot 
our easy-payment plan and our 
free book, * Saving with Silos." 
Investigate the time and labor- 
saving features of the new 
Harder-Victor Front. Learn 
how others are making extra 
profits. 
HARDER MFG.CORP. 
Box F Cobleskill, N.Y. 
Jhnenic&iu 
SEPARATOR 
Turns and cleans easily. Skims warm 
or cold milk thoroughly. Prompt ship¬ 
ments from stock nearest you. Writefor 
free catalog and Easy Payment Plan. 
American Separator Co. 
Box l 752 Bainbridge. N.Y. 
POWER MILKER 
Complete WHEH V roi? get L it ’ _ 
Seed for .ran- A?° *S Fw>« 
tioaml offer I Milk PrrtSBDEaa 
8 to 40 cows sn hsur- mij. Costa 
nothing to install. Easy to clean. 
I Milks the human way—easy aa 
-the cows. 30 Diyt Trial— 
10 Year Guarantee --Cash 
or Easy Terms—a year ta 
pay. Writs for FREE 
BOOK, "How to Judra 
Mi kora". Get yours nowl 
OTTAWA MFG. CO. Box 607 Magee Bldg. Pittsburgh, Pa. 
BARGAIN BOOK 
Write for my new cut 
E ric* catalog: before yoo 
uy Pence, Gatos, Steel Posta 
Barb Wire, Paints or Roofing, 
SAVE A LOT OF~MONEY 
My Factory-To-Farm Freight Paid- 
sares you fully 1-3. Send for catalog 
today and see for yourself the money 
you can save. 
THE BROWN FENCE & WIRE CO. 
Dept. 3001 Cleveland, Ohio 
ICE 
PI OWS PI0W3 §22.00 up. 
WM. 11 PRA *. M f r., 
1 UULb La Gran~e ille. New York 
FAILURE 
TO BREED, ABORTION, ETC., 
in All Animals Guaranteed Cured, 
ausos and treatment explained in 
o r Free Booklet. Remedy $2 Bot. 
The 3reed-0 Remedy Co., P.O. Box 240-A, Bristol, Conn. 
CATTLE 
Guernsey Bull-Calves 
flff or We are offering choice of two bull 
JL _ calves about eight months old for 
Price $100.00 
Both bulls sired by May Rose bulls and out of cows either 
on test or with official records. Send for pedigrees and 
description, they are bargains. 
Herd officially tested for tuberculosis. 
OAKS FARM Cohasset, Mass. 
HOLSTEINS & GUERNSEYS 
250 head of fresh cows and close springers to select 
from. If you arc in the market for fancy young cows 
that are large in size and heavy producers it will pay 
you to see this stock. Tuberculin test. 
A. F. SAUNDERS, Cortland, N. Y. 
Telephone 1476 
I afpc TJ Reg. Jersey bull 6 months old whose 
Vjr r ivrv Dams produced 18,050 lb. milk, 938 lb. 
fat. 12,000 lb. milk. 600 lb. fat each per year. Buy now 
for next Spring and save half cost of bull. Price §75. 
S. B. Hunt Hunt, N. Y. 
SWINE BREEDERS 
200—Pigs For Sale—200 
Yorkshire and Chester Cross and Berkshire 
and Chester Cross. All good healthy pigs six 
to seven weeks old, $3.75 each; eight weeks old, 
$4.00 each. I will ship from one to fifty C.O.D. 
on your approval. No charge for crating. 
A.M. LUX, 206 Washington St.,Woburn, Mass. 
