794 AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



Fanny Field's Poultry Books 



Here is Your Chanee 



TAKE \OIIR CHOICE OF TWO 



Of the following 40-page booklets. We offer two as a Premium for sending 

 us $1.00 for One New Subscriber to the Bee Jouknal for one year. 



rivo of them for sending us One New Subscribe? > or we will mail tlie 3 for 50 cts. 



Poultry for Market and Poultry for Profit.— It 

 is written for tliose wisbiiig' to malse poultry profitable. 



Contents— Clears $4.49 on each fowl. Cost of'keepiug' 

 adult fowls per year. Cost of raising- chicks to 6 mo. old. , 

 Spring- management. 12,480 egg's from 100 hens a year. 

 Feeding for eggs in winter. Hatching-houses. Cleanli-I 

 ness. No sickness among the fowls. A word to farmers'' 

 wives, sons, daughters, and others interested in poultry. 

 60-acre poultry farm that yields a clear profit of $1,500 a 

 year. 81 chicks out of 100 eggs with incubator. Raisingf 

 broilers. Food for chicks. Turkey raising. Keeping eggs.' 

 Cause of death of young turkeys. Keeping poultry on a village lot. Feed 

 in winter. Mechanic's wife clears $300 annually on broilers. Artificial rais- 

 ing of chicks. Incubators. Capons. Caponizlng. Tells everything about 

 the poultry business. Sent postpaid, for 25 cents. , 



Our Poultry Doctor, or Health in the Poultry Yard and How to Cure Sick Fowls. 

 —It tells how to cure— Chicken Cholera, Roup, Lice, Gapes, Leg Weakness, Scaly Legs. Chills. 

 Cramp, Cough, Canker, Diarrhea, Crop Bound, Sore Eyes, Break Down, Soft-Shell Eggs, Bum- 

 ble Foot, Chicken-Pox, Apoplexy, White Comb, Frost-Bites, Moulting; Breaking Sitting Hens, 

 Feather-Eating, Egg-Eating; Chiggers. Diseases of Turkeys and Ducks. Recipe for Douglas 

 Mixture. Everything about Poultry Diseases and their Cure. Price. 30 cents. 



Turkeys for Market and Turkeys for Profit.-The author reared in one year 150 

 Turkeys, and did the work for a family of 5, netting her $:500. No farming pays like Turkeys. 

 Contents— Age of breeding stock, about the Gobbler. Best and most profitable breeds. Set- 

 ting the eggs. Care while hatching. Profit per head. Care until fully feathered. Food for 

 the young. Save the feathers, they bring good prices. Number of hens to a Gobbler. Narra- 

 gansett Turkeys. White Turkeys. Bronze Turkeys. Common Turkeys. To restore chilled 

 Turkeys. Diseases of Turkeys. Leg weakness. Killing a'ld dressing. Mark your Turkeys, 

 Marketing. Capital and number to begin with. All about Turkey-Raising. Price, 25 cents. 



GEOKG-E W. YORK <fe CO., 



CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. 



FRUIT-GROWERS' LIBRARY FOR $1.00. 



The following 5 Books (price. $1.25) will be sent postpaid for only $1.00, 



or we will give " Rural Life " with your choice of any one of the other 



four (making two books) for sending us One New Subscriber to the 



Amekican Bee Journal for a year. Read the descriptious. 



How We Made the Old Farm Pay. is the title of a book (64 pages) by Chas. A. 

 Green, giving liis personal fxperieuce on a fruit farm which he made yield a generous fortune. 

 It is bound in elegant liihtjgiaphed cover, printed on fine paper and beautifully illustrated. It 

 gives much practical information in regard to fruit-growing, and also gives the author's expe- 

 rience as a Nurseryman. Price, 25 cents. 



Green's Five Books on Fruit-Culture- Devoted 1st. to Apple and Pear 

 Culture; :^nd, Plum and Cherry Culture, 3rd, Raspberry and Blackberry Culture; 4th, Grape 

 Culture; 5th. Strawberry Culture. It is a book of 129 pages, giving the practical experience 

 of Chas. A. Green in growing all kinds of fruit. It is profusely illustrated and cannot fail to 

 be of interest to every lover of fruit gardens. Price, 25 cents. 



Garden and Orchard is the title of a new book ty Chas. A Green ; 94 pages, illus- 

 trated. This is Mr. Green's latest book on fruit culture. It gives full instructions in regard 

 to Thinning and Marketing Fruits ; also Pruning, Planting and Cultivating. It contains the 

 latest experience in Spraying, Evaporation and Cold Storage. It has a long chapter on Berry- 

 Growing of all kinds, besides other valuable information, which cannot be found in any other 

 book. Price, 25 cents. 



Rural Life.— its scope is as broad as its title, and the matter is presented in a con- 

 cise, "boiled-down " manner, giving the experience of many in few words. Among the sub 

 jects treated are these: Economy; Pi-osperity and Adversity; Character; Health; Remedies; 

 Mistakes of life; Domestic and Household Affairs; Planting and Culture of Vegetables, Plan- 

 ting, Culture. Trimming and Training Vines, Trees and Plants, Bees, Poultry, Live-Stock and 

 Farm Topics, etc., with comprehensive Index. 100 i)ages. Price, 25 cents. 



How TO Propagate and Grow Fruit.— This book (72 pages) gives brief in- 

 structions in budding, grafting and layering. It also gives almost every method known for 



the propagation of fruit trees, vines and plants. There are many people who could increase 

 their .stock of valuable varieties if they (;ouId secure information on this subject. Money can 

 fiade bj' purchasing rare and valuable varieties, and increasing them rapidly by layerin 

 ding or otherwise. This little book by Chas -V. Green tells how to do It. Price, 25 cents 



Address, GEORGE W. YORK & CO., 56 Fifth Ave., CHICAGO, ILIa. 



