H 



ERE'S the place where Two Egg- 

 Raisers make 



$12,000 a year 



/ ff/im/'se of the lline irreal layhiff houses, luil/t 4>00 ptiUels alu'ciys al zvorl;. 



READER, if you want to know how two city people, in poor health and 

 without experience, have in a few years built up an egg-business that clears 

 over $12,000 a year, subscribe now for FARM JOURNAL, and get with 

 it the 



Corning Egg"Book 



which tells all the secrets of their success, and describes the methods by which they obtained a profit of $6.41 

 a year per hen. (.sw- offer be/ozc.) 



Talk about "best-selling novels"! Why, nearly 100,000 copies of this book sold in less than six months ! 

 You see, these men discarded old methods, and in spite of many failures, stuck at it until they learned the secret 

 of making liens lay the most eggs in winter. That discovery marked a new era in poultry raising, and 

 tliousands are eagerly studying how they do it. 



Their success opens up a new money-making business of unlimited possibilities. With this book for a 

 guide, men or women living in or near cities can raise eggs the year round, and sell them at high prices, or eat 

 them and save the high prices. The demand for fresh eggs, especially in winter, is never satisfied. Learn how 

 to supply well-to-do customers reffiilar/y, and they will take all you can raise, at high prices. Egg-raising is 

 much simpler than poultry raising. The hard work of killing, dressing, and marketing fowls is left out. The rest 

 can be done by men in poor health, women, school boys, girls, and others not qualified for regular business. 



The publishers of the Farm Journal saw the immense value of a book that should describe the proved 

 and tested methods of the Comings. So, after careful investigation, they decided to publish the Corning Egg- 

 Book, and offer it to all who subscribe for the Farm Journal on the offer below, to make the paper better 

 known to all people, in city or country, who are interested in groiving things. 



The FARM JOURNAL is made for every one who raises or wants 



to raise poultry, eggs, fruit, vegetables, milk, butter, honey, etc., as well as grain and cattle. It has the l.vrgest 

 CIRCULATION OF ANY FARM PAPER IN THE WORLD — over 750,000. It has departments devoted to housekeeping, 

 dressmaking, recipes, and bright, fresh reading for boys and girls. It is brief, condensed and PR.\CTICAL. 

 No long-winded essays. "Cream, not skim-milk," is its motto. It is now running a series called "Back to the 

 Soil," true stories of city people who have changed to country life, intensely interesting. It never prints a medi- 

 cal or trashy advertisement, and its columns are an absolutely reliable guide in buying. Most of its subscribers 

 pay FIVE TO TEN YEARS AHEAD. It is a Special favorite with women. Every one who has a garden, yard, flower- 

 bed, or even a kitchen, ought to have this bright, cheery, useful home paper. Those who merely e.xist in cities 

 ought by all means to get it, for it brings a whiff of outdoor life into their homes, and may help them to escape 

 to the country and really live. 



SPECIAL OFFER : We will send, post- 

 paid, the Farm Journal for FOUR FULL YEARS, 

 with the Corning Egg-Book, 



Both for $1.00 



cash, money order, check, or stamps. Book and paper 

 may go to different addresses, if necessary. 



FARM JOURNAL, 101 Clifton St., Philadelphia, Pa. 



Cut out and send this Coupon 



Farm Journal, ioi Clifton St., Philadelphia 



Enclosed find $1.00. Send the Farm Journal 

 for four years, beijinnine with the Decem- 

 ber issue, and the Corning Keg-Book, to 



N'ame. 



P. O. 



R F. D State. 



