20 



Gleanings in Bee Culture 



GET THESE 



MONEY -MAKIN6 SECRETS 



with FARM JOURNAL 



l*^r\v* ^ 1 (\(\ you can get now not only the FARM 



1 KJl ipl.UU JOURNAL for FOUR full years, but also your 



choice of any one of our famous booklets, "Money-making Secrets," 

 that other people have bought by the hundred thousand. 



Just note what the information given in one of them, "The Million 

 Egg-Farm," did for Robert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton, Pa, 



In May, 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks. He spent just 

 one week studying the methods now given in this book. This was his 

 only preparation for the business. Result this "greenhorn" raised 95 

 per cent of all his chicks — a most uncommon record ! Of these, 1350 

 proved to be pullets. In less than seven months he was getting 425 

 eggs daily, and selling them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost aver 

 aged S4.00 a day, leaving him OVER §17.00 

 A DAY PROFIT— and this before all his 

 pullets had begun laying. 



Isn't "Money-making Secrets" a good 

 name for such booklets ? 



Read what people say of the other book- 

 lets, and of the Farbi Journal itself: — 



Is this cock properly heldf 

 '"Poultry Secrets'^ tells 

 how to carry fowls, and 

 many other secrets far 

 more important. 



"I find your Egg-Book worth untold dollars," says 

 Roy Chaney, Illinois. "What it tells would take a 

 beginner years to learn." 



"I am much pleased with the Butter Book," writes 

 F. J. Dickson, Illinois, "and would like to know how 

 I could secure 300 copies, one for each patron of our 

 creamery." 



"Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck- 

 raising," says F. M. Warnock, Pennsylvania. 



"If your other booklets contain as much valuable 

 information as the Egg-Book I would consider them 

 cheap at double the price," says F. W. Mansfield, 

 New York. 



"I think your Egg-Book is a wonder," says C. P. 

 Shirey, Pennsylvania. 



"The Farm Journal beats them all," writes T. H. 

 Potter, Penn'a. "Every issue has reminders and 

 ideas worth a year's subscription." 



"One year I took another agricultural paper," says 

 N. M. Gladwin, Washington, "and it took a whole 

 column to tell what Farm Journal tells in one par- 

 agraph." 



"If I could get as good interest on every dollar as I 

 get from the Farm Journal, I would soon be a mil- 

 lionaire," says A. W. Wbitzel, Pennsylvania. 



"Farm Journal is good for the man behind the 

 counter, as well as the man in the field," says J. I. 

 Sloat, a Virginia bank clerk. 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE, 

 Medina, Ohio. 



Enclosed find Sl.OO for which send Gleanings 

 for one year and Farm Journal for five years, or 



for four years with this booklet 



to this address: 



Name 



Address 



MONEY-MAKING SECRETS 



These booklets are 6 by 9 inches, all profusely illustrated 



POULTRY SECRETS is a great collection of discov- 

 eries and methods of successful poultrymen. It grives Felch's 

 famous mating- chart, the Curtiss method of securing- 50 per 

 cent more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring- 

 fertility, with priceless secrets of mating-, breeding, feed and 

 feeding-, how to produce winter egrg-s, and others long jealously 

 g-uarded, now first published. 



HORSE SECRETS exposes the methods of "bishop- 



ing-," "plug'ging," cocaine and gasoline doping-, and other tricks 

 of "gM)s" and swindlers, and enables any one to TELL AN UN- 

 SOUND HORSE, It also gives many valuable training, feeding, 

 breeding-, and veterinary secrets. 



The MILLION EGG-FARM tells all of the methods 



by which J. M, Foster makes over $18,000 A YEAR, mainly from 

 eg-gs. Back-yard chicken-raisers, learn all about the "Rancocas 

 Unit," and how Foster FEEDS his hens to make them produce 

 such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. 



CORN SECRETS, the great NEW hand-book of 



Prof. HiiMen. the 'T'orn King," tells how to get ten to TWENTY 

 BUSHELS MORE PER ACRE of corn rich in protein and the 

 best stock-feeiling- elements. Pictures make every process plain. 



THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells of seven cows that 



produced HALF A TON OF BUTTER each year (110 pounds is the 

 average). An eye-opener for daii-ymen. Get it. weed out vour 

 poor cows, anil tiu'n good ones into record-breakers. 



GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your back- 

 yard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your 

 grocery bills, keep a better table, and get cash for your surplus. 

 It tells hciw to plant, cultivate, harvest, and market. 



DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duck- 

 farm near Boston makes every year 60 cents each on 40,000 duck- 

 lings. Tells why ducks pay them better than chickens, and 

 ]ust how they do everything. 



TURKEY SECRETS, the latest authority on turkey- 

 raising, discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous 

 Rhode Island ' turkey - man " who supplies the wonderful 

 Thanksgiving turkeys for the White House. It tells how to 

 mate, to set eggs to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to pre- 

 vent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY. 



Gleanings in Bee Culture 

 Great Combination Offer 



By specal arrangement with the publishers, 

 for a limited time we can offer the Farm 

 Journal FIVE years and CIleanings in 

 Bee Culture one year in advance, BOTH 



FOR SI. 00. Or Farm Journal FOUR years and any 

 one of the booklets, "Money-making Secrets," with 



one yei?'^'.'?' ALL THREE for $1.00 



This price is good for a few weeks only, and may 

 be increased at any time without notice. 



Any subscriber who is in arrears for either paper 

 can take advantage of this offer by paying up in full 

 to date, and adding 81.00 for the combination. 



