18 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE 



Jan. 15 



Cornish Tnstriimeiits for^ 

 rcnl merit, ore iiiiex* 

 celle<i by any utiiei 

 irhntevcr tlie prli 

 or name or repu- 

 tation. 



One Vear's 

 Tree trial 



This Is our offer 

 to you — select any 

 Cornish piano or 

 organ, from the 

 least expensive to 

 the finest ever 

 built and we, 

 without ojd bit 

 of obligation on 

 your part, will 

 send the Instru- 

 ment to you di- 

 rect from our 

 factory with 

 the distinct un 

 derstandlng that 

 If the Instrument 

 does not come up 

 to your fullest 

 expectations ytm 

 are not to keep It, 

 and that the 



Trial Will Cost You Absolutely Nothing 



If the Instru- Two Years Credit If Needed 



ment does noti 

 prove >better 

 value for the 

 money than you 

 can get any- 

 where else— If it 

 is not as good an 

 Inslrumeut as 

 you can buy for 

 one- third more 

 than we ask— if 

 at any time 

 within a year 

 you feel that 

 you have not a 

 good bargain, 

 send it bacli; we 

 won't find one 

 word of fault 

 with your de- 

 cision, and you 

 will not be one cent out of pocket for freight or for 

 use of the Instrument. 



The Cornish Bond Protects You 



and holds us strictly to 

 this oifer. You are to have 

 the privilege of any terms 

 of payment that you n}ay 

 choose. You risk nothing. 

 We assume all re- 

 sponsibility, because 

 we know all about the 

 great beauty of material 

 and workmanship In Cor- 

 nish pianos and organs and 

 we know all about th ; 

 pure, sweet, rich tone 

 quality of our Instruments 

 and we know wli-^t a 

 quarter of a million 

 satisfied purchasers 

 think of them. 



If you keep the Instru- 

 ment It will cost you the 

 Kock-Bottom Factory- 

 Price, not one cent more, 

 and you will receive with 

 it our Bonded Guar- 

 antee which Insures the 

 Instrument for 36 years 

 against defect In material 

 or workmanship. 



Send For The New Cornish Book 



Don't think of buying before reading it. It is the 

 handsomest piano and organ catalog ever Issued. It 

 explains things you ought to know whether you buy 

 from us or not and tt is yours for the asking. Write 

 for it now and please mention which you are Inter- 

 ested la— piano or organ. 



WASHINGTON, N. J, 

 Established Over Hall a Cenliw"' 



We Save Von $100 and 

 more On a Piano 



Easy Terms 



Buv On The Cornish 

 Plan-.Save Uue-Tlilrd 



Cornisft Co, 



GOVERNMENT BULLETINS 



Continued from page xJ7, last issue. 

 Bulletins in this list will be sent free, so 

 long as the supply lasts, to any resident of 

 the United States, on application to his 

 Senator, Representative, or Delegate in 

 Congress, or to the Secretary of Agriculture, 

 Washington, D. C. Because of the limited 

 supply, applicants are urged to select only 

 a few numbers, choosing those which are of 

 special interest to them. Residents of for- 

 eign countries should apply to the Superin- 

 tendent of Documents, Government Printing 

 Office, Washington, D. C, who has these 

 bulletins for sale. Price 5 cents each to 

 Canada, Cuba and Mexico ; 6 cents to other 

 foreign countries. The bulletins entitled 

 "Experiment Station Work" give briefly the 

 results of experiments performed by the 

 State experiment stations. 



239 The Corro?ion of Fence Wire 



241 Butter-JVIaking on the Farm 



242 An Example of Model Farming 



343 Fungicides and Their Uses in Preventing 

 Diseases of Fruits 



244 Experiment Station Work — XXXIII 



245 Renovation of Worn-out Soils 



246 Saccharine Sorghum for Forage 



248 The Lawn 



249 Cereal Breakfast Foods 



250 The Prevention of Stinking Smut of 



Wheat and Loose Smut of Oats 



251 Experiment Station Work — XXXIV 



252 Maple Sugar and Syrup 



253 The Germination of Seed Corn 



254 Cucumbers 



255 The Home Vegetable Garden 



256 Preparation of Vegetables for the Table 



257 Soil Fertility 



258 Texas or Tick Fever and Its Prevention 



259 Experiment Station Work — XXXV 



260 Seed of Red Clover and Its Impurities 



262 Experiment Station Work — XXXVI 



263 Information for Beginners in Irrigation 



264 T!ie Brown-tail Moth and How to Control It 



266 Management of Soils to Conserve Moisture 



267 Experiment Station Work — XXXVII 



269 Industrial Alcohol: Uses and Statistics 



270 Modern Conveniences for the Farm Home 



271 Forage-Crop Practices in Western Oregon and 



Western Washington 



372 A Successful Hog and Seed-Corn Farm 



273 Experiment Station Work — XXXVIII 



274 Flax Culture 



275 The Gipsy Moth and How to Control It 



276 Experiment Station Work — XXXIX 



277 Alcohol and Gasoline in Farm Engines 



278 Leguminous Crops for Green Manuring 



279 A Method of liradicating Johnson Grass 



280 A Profitable Tenant Dairy Farm 



281 Experiment Station Work — XL 



282 Celery /-. ji- 



283 Spraying for Apple Diseases and the Codling 



Moth in the Ozarks 

 '>84 Insect and Fungous Enemies of the Orape 

 East of the Rocky Mountains 



286 Comparative Value of Whole Cotton Seed and 



Cotton-seed Meal in Fertilizing Cotton 



287 Poultry Management 



288 Nonsaccharine Sorghums 



289 Beans 



290 The Cotton Bollworm 



291 Evaporation of Apples 



292 Cost of Filling Silos 



293 Use of Fruit as Food 



294 Farm Practice in Columbia Basin Uplands 



CATALPA 



SPECIOSA TREES ^eT Zll^^ t^^n 



about the 150 acres I am growing for telephone 

 poles. H. C. ROGERS, Box 113, Mechanicsburo, 0. 



