"Look Beyond the End of 

 \bur Nose" 



grandfather used to say. A big Florida fruit grower 

 remarked that he had to go to California to learn that 

 he had been wrong for twenty years. So the potato 

 growers of Maine get hints from Colorado; the apple 

 men learn how to cooperate from the orange growers. 

 Here's where the national-farm-weekly idea comes in. 

 If you want to travel north, east, south, west and get 

 your long-distance lessons in money-making methods 

 without spending carfare, look beyond the end of your 

 nose and get the national-farm- weekly habit; in other 

 words, read The Country Gentleman. 



THE DOUBLE-PROFIT FARMER isn't resting on a 

 one-legged stool. He is setting his crops to his livestock 

 and marketing the stock with a chance to make a profit 

 on both. He is growing apples and eggs, or berries and 

 broilers, on the same land on the double-crop plan. He 

 is selling direct and getting both the producer's and the 

 retailer's profits. He is fitting two or three specialties 

 together to get the insurance of diversified farming, 

 and he is safeguarded against total failure because he 

 has three legs on his stool. Double-profit combinations 

 are the backbone of the small place and they are de- 

 scribed in nearly every issue of The Country Gentleman, 



The marketing end of the farm business — getting the 

 profit — is the keynote of The Country Gentleman, 

 the national farm weekly. Five cents the copy, of all 

 newsdealers; $1.50 the year, by mail. 



THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY 



Independence Square Philadelphia, Penna. 



— S 



