Read How Two Men Make 



$12,000 A YEAR 



Clear Profit on a Small Farm 



FOUR years ago the Comings, father and son, both in poor health, and 

 with no practical experience, took up egg-raising on a few acres of land 

 in New Jersey, beginning with only thirty hens. To-day they have one 

 of the greatest egg-producing plants in this country, and a business that, with 

 1953 hens, paid a clear profit last year of more than twelve thousand dollars. 



The 



CORNING EGG-BOOK 



(entitled " $6.41 per Hen per Year ") , tells HOW these two men did it. Not theories, but 

 facts; not air-castles, not expectations, but methods, tested and proved by experience. It 

 tells how they found a market eager to get choice eggs at high prices. It tells how they 

 learned to meet that demand with an unfailing supply, m winter as in summer. It tells of 

 their problems and failures, and how they overcame them and won SUCCESS. It gives 

 photographic pictures of their plant, with working drawings of important buildings, etc. 



And it gives beginners just the help they need to make money in this unlimited field. 

 Your chances of success are far better than theirs, for you have their experience to guide 

 you. The knowledge which cost the Comings much hard cash and years of experiment is 

 at your command for the price of a dozen eggs. 



Here are some of the Things that the CORNING EGG-BOOK tells 



The troubles of grreat hotels in getting reliable eggs. How to prevent the drafts that kill chickens. 



The prices paid for Corning eggs thruout the year. How to save 97 per cent of the young chicks. 



Number of eggs sold each month thruout the year. Why and how they make the hens scratch for food. 



How to get most eggs when other people get none. Why they send hens to roost with full crops. 



When to hatch chicks that are to lay winter eggs. How to make hens attend strictly to business. 



How to grow juicy broilers in nine weeks. Why they raise only white-shelled eggs. 



How to mix the feed that makes the most eggs. How to have May chicks laying eggs in October. 



The Corning Egg-book is sold in combination with the 



FARM JOURNAL 



to Increase its Subscription List to ONE MILLION Next Year. 



Farm Journal has for thirty-three years conducted a poultry department known the 

 country over for the ability of its editors and the value of ifs contents. Besides this strong 

 section, which of itself makes the paper valuable to every chicken-owner, its other depart- 

 ments are ably conducted and widely quoted. It is the standard monthly farm and home 

 paper of the country, with already more than three million readers. It is clean, bright, 

 mtensely practical ; boiled down; cream, not skim-milk. Its editors and contributors know 

 what they are talking about, and can quit when they have said it. It is for the gardener, 

 fruitman, stockman, trucker, farmer, villager, suburbanite, the women folks, the boys and 

 girls. It is illustrated, and well printed on good paper. It has not a medical or trashy 

 advertisement in it. More than half a million of its subscribers pay five and ten years 

 ahead — a very remarkable fact. 



H^reis . srX"Ejk''°K'K' ini Both for Sl.OO 



Our Offer Farm Journal for five years -"-^V-r l-XX X V-TX U^ J. • V/V/ 



Cash, money-order, or check. And if you order within TEN DAYS we will also 

 send FREE '^' Poor Richard Revived," a splendid 48-page FARM ALMANAC for 1910. 



Farm Journal, 1095 Race St., Philadelphia 



