868 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Nov. 15. 



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I Do You Want to Make More Money on Your Farm? | 



^ Of course you do. and the best way to do it is to find out ^ 



= how others who are more successful do it by subscribing for — 



I THE PRACTICAL! pfl^JVIEH, 1 



= OF PtfmADELiPHlA, PA. I 



^ The most thoroughly up-to-date and practical agricultural weekly published. It leads the agricul- S 



= tural thought of the country. It is the only paper for which T. 6. Terry writes, and is the only = 



~ farm paper published whose contents are directly applicable in an intensely practical manner to the S 



s: every-day work on the farm. Its editors coinprise the leading agricultural writers of the country := 



= Us Unique Special Departments: Short Cuts; Mistakes. Failures, and Successes; Experience Pool; — 



S Farm Implement Annex, and Postal Card Correspondence, all supported by contributions from its sub- = 



— scribers, keep it in direct touch with its readers every week in the year. In addition, it has departments — 

 j= ably edited by the acknowledged ex pert sin their various lines, devoted to the following subjects: Garden, jjZ 



— Stock and D liry, Horticulture, and Home Circle. Complete and reliable market reports every week. In — 

 5S fact, it contains every thing that goes to make it the best, brightest, and most practical agricultural — 



— paper published. Subscription price, $1.00 per year. .Sample copies free for the asking. — 

 = THE PRACTICAL FARMER'S SUPPLY-CATALOG contains hundreds of useful articles for the = 

 ™ home and on the farm, and at prices that will astonish you. Send for a copy. The price is a postal EE 

 22 card addressed to The Farmer Co., Philadelphia, Pa. SJj 



Iff ftp By a special arrangement with the publishers of THE PRACTICAL, FARMER E 



TlHl we r ' re enabled to offer both it and GLEANINGS until January 1, 1901, for the = 



""■W" small sum of $1.10. Address all orders to GLEANINGS. ' = 



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IF YOU ARE A BEE = KEEPER 



and interested in farming, you want The Best Farm- 

 ers' Paper in the World. You will find it in 



The : National : Stockman : and : Farmer 



of Pittsburgh, Penn. 



Editor Bee=Departraent, : Dr. C. C. Miller. 



It is the best, the brightest, the purest. Thirty-six 

 pages weekly. A sample will convince you. A postal 

 request will bring it. We want to hear from every 

 subscriber of Gleanings. Write us at Pittsburgh, Pa. 



ONLY 5 CENTS. 



The Michigan Farmer wants every one of our 

 readers to give their paper a trial. They offer 

 to send it every week to Jan. 1—9 weeks-for 

 only 5c. It finely illustrated agricultural, 

 live-stock, and family paper-just what you 

 want. Send the 5c in stamps and try it. They 

 will positively stop it Jan. 1 if you don't renew. 

 They are all right. We offer it in our club list 

 by the year. Address at once 



The Michigan Farmer, Detroit, Mich. 



QUEENS FOR BUSINESS. 



Warranted. As they run, 50 cents each; 

 select, 75 cents; tested, $1.00; select tested, 

 SI. 50 and up. For particulars see Sept. 15 

 Gleanings and free circular. 

 J. B. CASE, Port Orange, Fla. 



EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. 



Gleanings in Bee Culture 

 and The Ohio Farmer both 

 One Year for Only $1.10. 



A business bargain for the business farmer ! The 

 Ohio Farmer stands at the head of agricultural jour- 

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 to its readers than any other paper of its kind. It is a 

 farmer's paper — practical, reliable, and entertain- 

 ing. Twenty pages weekly, with liberal illustrations, 

 and complete market reports from all the leading 

 market centers. Ten different departments. It will 

 pay you in dollars and cents to read it a year. Sample 

 copies free. 



The Ohio Farmer, Cleveland, Ohio. 



FOR SALE.— DIRT CHEAP. ONLY $350.00 CASH. 

 One lO-h.-p. engine and boiler with pump and all 

 connections in good shape; one 18-inch planer — worth 

 $100 to any factory; two saw-tables; one cutter to cut 

 entrances to sections and bottom-slats — cost when 

 new $75, a good machine: 30 feet of line-shafting with 

 hangers, pulleys, and belting. For more particulars 

 write to J. W. Bittenbender, Knoxville, Iowa. 



