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GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTUKE. 



Dec. 



PREMIUM RULES. 



All collecting Premium names 

 lowing rules : 



1. You can close your list of names at any time, 

 and call for the premiums due; or you can add to 

 the list of names up to June, 1887. But— 



~. Send along the names as fast as gathered 

 (with the exact monej'), so that the subscribers may 

 begin to receive the .lournal at once. 



t^^Mark every name cr list of names, " J-'or 

 Ffi'in'iums," if so intended, and we will credit 

 them to the sender in our Premium Record. 



3. He stir<' to i/ive the Kfiiiie, J'ostojpre, Comi- 

 ty, and State, of each .siilmcrihrr mid of your- 

 self. 



4. All sample copies necessary to canvassers 

 will be sent postpaid free. 



5. Express or freight charges on the premiums 

 can be best obtained at your own nearest express 



should read carefully the fol- 



or freight office. When you order your premium, 

 be sure to tell how to send, and give name, county, 

 and State of your nearest express or freight office. 



6. To Foreign Readeris. Maihihle articles, 

 not exceeding 8 ounces, go to Canada lor 10 cts. per 

 parcel; but packages exceeding 8-i, oz. are excluded 

 from the mails to Canada. 'J'o all foreign countries 

 in the Postal Union, 18 cts. must Hcconipany sub- 

 scription for I'cstiige; and toiill other foreign coun- 

 tries, 42 cts. 



Ho»v to Send Money: Send monej' by P. (). 

 order, registered letter, express monej'-order, on 

 American Express Co., or get a N. Y. draft. For 

 small sums of less than $1.00, we will accept clean 

 postage-stamps, but we pi-efer postal-notes, but can 

 not be responsible for the loss of either. 



v^ 



BIG OFFER ; A LIBRARY FREE. 



For 2 New Subscribers to Gle.-vninqs, at $1.00 each, we will send any one of the following 

 books. Postage 13c each extra if sent by mail. The price of these books to those who want to buy is 40c, 

 or 52c postpaid. They are beautifully bound in cloth, with title in gilt, and contain from 200 to 600 

 pages, printed on excellent paper: 



Arabian Nights Entertainment, 450 pages. 



Children of the Abbey, by Roche; a very good 

 and interesting story. 



Dickens' Child's History of England; 341 pages. 

 An authentic history of England; written by the 

 very interesting author Charles Dickens— a book of 

 real value to old and young. 



Dickens' Shorter Stories, 350 pages of interesting 

 and profitable reading-matter. 



Half-Hours with Great Authors. 



Half-Hours with Great Humorists. 



Half-Hours with Great Novelists. 



Half-Hours with Great Story-Tellers. 



Gulliver's Travels and Baron Munchausen, by 

 Swift and Rasp. % 



Ivanhoe, by Sir Walter Scott; 431 pages. One of 

 the best writings of one of our best authors. 



Lady of the Lake, with notes; Scott's best poem. 



Jane Eyre; by Charlotte Bronte. A very interest- 

 ing and thoroughly good storj-. 



Last Days of Pompeii, by Buhver. Now when 

 that ancient city is being so thoroughly excavat- 

 ed, and reported in the papers, it will be interest- 

 ing to read this old standard work in connection. 



Last of the Mohicans, by (^oopor; 3.58 pages— a 

 most pathetic story of the struggles of a dying race. 



Oliver Twist; Italy and American Notes, 519 pages, 

 by Dickens, whose writings need no recommend. 



Our Mutual Friend, Pickwick Papers, Martin 

 Chuzzlewlt, others of Dickens worts 



Paul and Virginia, Rasselas, and Vicar of Wake- 

 field, by St. Pierre, Johnson, and Goldsmith. 



Bunyan's Holy War; 318 pages, by .John Bunyan, 

 the author of Pilgrim's Progress. 



Pilgrim's Progress, by John Bunj^an— a book that 

 has a circulation second only to the Bible; 422 

 pages. 



Robinson Crusoe; 472 pages— a book that every 

 boy will delight in reading; by Daniel Defoe. 



Romola, by Elliot. 



Scottish Chiefs, by Porter. 



Sketch Book, by Washington Irving; 374 pages— a 

 collection of fascinating sketches by one of our 

 best authors. Rip Van Winkle is one of the stories. 



Life of Washington. 



Life of Napoleon. 



Swiss Family Robinson— a history of the priva- 

 tions and experiences of a family, from actual life. 



Life, Speeches, and Memorials of Daniel Webster; 

 a book of 552 pages, of surpassing interest to every 

 boy who aspires to noble service of his country in 

 an office of public trust. 



Thaddeus of Warsaw, by Porter. 



Cook's Voyages Around the World— a history of 

 the thrilling adventures of that notable English 

 explorer Capt. Cook. 



The Christian's Secret of a Happy Lite— new edi- 

 tion, enlarged; ought to be read by every Christian. 



First Steps for Little Feet, by the author of the 

 Story of the Bible. 



Christmas Stories, by Dickens. If you do not be- 

 lieve in making Christmas a joyous time, you ought 

 to read some of these stories. 



Tom Brown's School Days at Rugby, by Hughes. 

 An amusing narrative of a schoolboy's experience. 



Life of Patrick Henry, by Wlrt. A biography of 

 one of the fathers of the Revolution, 



