868 



G^LEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Nov. 15. 



For November Only. 



Two Papers for the Price of One. 



Tl>e Farm Journal, of Pliiladelphia, one of the cleanest, brightest, and most valuable of the agricultu- 

 ral monthlies, has made such favorable clubbing terms that we are able to Give a Year's Subscription Free 

 on tlie following conditions: Send us !fl.(K1 to renew your subscription before tlie time paid for is up. If you 

 are in arrears for Gleanings in Bke Crr/ruRE you must pay up to the end of this year and for a 

 year In advance, wlien you will be entitled to the Farm Journal for a year also. If you secure a 

 new subscription to Gleanings, and send $1.00 for the same, you may have the Farm Journal a year to pay 

 for your ti-ouble, or you may have it sent to the new subscriber if you wish. AH new subscriptions to either 

 paper will receive the rest of this year remaining, after your subscription is received, and all of next year. 



This offer is good only for this Month of November. 



After this iiioiilh the clui) [ii-ice will be $1.10; and to tliose wl[() ai-e in arrears for Gleanings, the best 

 clublprice is ^f l.~(i, unless all aircars are paid and a year paid in advance. That you may liuow what others 

 thinli of tlie Funn JaKriinl we give here a few testimonials from leading agri<-ultiiral writers and editors as 

 to what they think of it. 



What a Practical Connecticut Fruit=grower 

 and Nurseryman thinks of it. 



I read tlie Farm Journal because it is Ijright, point- 

 ed, and interesting, from beginning to end, adver- 

 tisements and ail. Life is short— I am busy— and 

 there is often the pith of a column article in a half- 

 inch paragraph in the Faint Journal. If I want the 

 paddings and trimmings, I can make them up in my 

 own mind nights and Sundays, when at work or on 

 the wing: P((/»i ./((((/'uai does not intrude them on 

 me. The whole paper is full of sunshine. 



Soulli OlantonJnirij, Ct. J. H. Hale. 



From the Department of Agriculture. 



The Farm Journal is unique, practical, valuable. 

 There are points sometimes in a single number 

 worth the suljscription price for a whole year. 

 Edwin VVillits, 

 First Assistant Secretary of Agriculture. 

 WasMuijton, D. C. 



Just as Good for California. 



I hope you will get tlie one million subscribers you 

 are trying for. I am sure your paper merits them. 

 It is certainly the best farm paper I have ever seen, 

 as it fairly bristles witii suggestions and wrinkles 

 that are most useful in e very-day life on the farm. 

 CSan Diego Co., Cal. J. Jessop. 



It is Doing anGood Work.! 



Tlie Farm Journal carries to its readers a large 

 amount of helpful information in condensed, avail- 

 able form. It is doing a good work, and I wish it 

 continued success. Prof. W. A. Henry. 



Madison, Wisconsin. 



Crisp, Newsy, Never Prosy. 



The Farm Journal is crisp, newsy, tells much on a 

 page, is up to the times, often in advance, and with- 

 al practical. Its contributors are among the best, 

 and never pro.sy, and one wants to read all the pages 

 first, and each one is the best. This is why I read 

 the Farm Journal. .Tohn Gould. 



Aurinxi, Ohio. 



Word from Joseph Harris. 



The Farm Journal is full of good things. I do not 

 see how any intelligent farmer, gardener, or fruit- 

 grower can help reading it. 



Morcton Farm, N. Y. Joseph Harris. 



Yes, I do read the Farm JoHrnal. Why? Because 

 it is tlie cleanest, brightest, and best paper of its class 

 —in my judgment. 



E. S. Carman, Editor of the Rural New-Yorker. 



Riverside Park, N. J. 



If you wish to judge of its merits yourself, address a request for sample copy either liere or to Farm 

 Jbumctl, Philadelpliia, Pa., and you will receive it promptlj'. if you want to take advantage of this offer, 

 do it now. Remember that a month passes very rapidly, a'nd with ir will pass one of the best opportunities 

 of the year. If you are already a reader of theFarmJoucnaf you can have your subscription advanced a 

 year on this olfer. 



AUQITE ST0VE=MAT5. 



We have decided to continue our October inemiuin for another month; that is, we will send free post^ 

 paid one of these indispensable household articles, on the same conditions that we send the Farm Journal 



above — as a premium for a new sulj- 

 scrijjtion, or to those who pay for a 

 jear in advance before the time paid 

 for is up, or who pay all arrears up to 

 the end of this year, and for a year in 

 ad\ance. This offer will positively be 

 wilhdrawn Deceiiihci- 1st. After that 

 dale, to get the mat will require 10 cts. 

 e.xtra. 



Canvassing time is Iiere again, and 

 many are improving their time and 

 their revenue bj' selling tliese stove- 

 mats. It is one of the most ready sell- 

 ers of any thing that an agent can 

 cari'y. We furnish them at $1.(10 per 

 doz.; 6 doz., $5.60; 13 doz., $10.50; sent at 

 your expense. If sent by mail, the 

 postage is 6c each ; 60c per doz. We get 

 10 gross from the factory every two or 

 three weeks, and rejoice when the sales 

 they bring to every housekeeper who uses tliem. 



ncrease, because of the blessinu 



A. I. ROOT, 



Medina, Ohio. 



