286 



THE ILLINOIS FARMEK. 



Sept. 



THE ILLINOIS FARMER: 



A MONTHLY JOURNAL OP 



AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE. 



IS PUBLISHED AT SPRINGFIELD, ILLS., 



BY BAILHACHE & BAKER, 



AND IS 



EDITED BY M. L. DUNLAP, 



(THE "rural" of the CHIBAGO TEIBCNB.) 



TER3IS IN ADVANCE.— 11 a year; two copies 1 5C; fiye 

 copies «3; ten copies $6, and one to getter up of the club 

 twenty copies $10. 



It is not necessaey that the club should all be at one office 

 we send wherever the members of the club may reside. 



The postage on the Farmer is only three cents a year in 

 he State of Illinois, and six cents out of it. 



Specimens numbers sent free on application. 



Subsciiption money may be sent at the risk of the pub- 

 lisher. 



Exchanges and communications for the eye of the Editor 

 should be addressed, Illinois Farmer, Champaign. Illinois' 



All business letters are to be directed to the publishers, 

 Springfield. 



Tf BAILHACHE & BAKER. 



THE ILLINOIS STATE JOURNAL 



is CONFIDENTLY OFFERED TO THE PEOPLE OF 

 Illinois as the best and most reliable news, political 

 md commercial paper within their reach. It is published 

 at Springfield, the Capital of the State, and is the medium 

 .)f all oiEcial notices, published by State authority. Partic- 

 ular attention is given to commercial affairs and every 

 number contains copious reviews of the markets in the 

 jrincipal cities. 



TERMS : 



One copy one year. $2 09 



Three copies one year 5 00 



Six •■ " 7 50 



■Jen " " 12 00 



Twenty " " 20 00 



Payable always in advance. Persons sending clubs of ten 

 and upwards shall be ent'tled to an extra copy. 



Address BAILHACHE & BAKER, 



Springfirld, Illinois. 



THE 



ILLINOIS FARMER 



TERMS OP ADVERTISING : 



1 mo. 3 mo. 6 mo. 12 mo. 

 One page, or two columns j8 $20 $85 $oO 



Half a page or one " 5 12 20 30 



One fourth page or half colnmn.. 3 7 13 18 



One eighth or one fourth " .. 2 4 7 10 



One square of ten lines 1 2 4 7 



Card of five lines one year $7 00 



Ten cents a line for less than a square each insertion. 



All worthy objects advertised, and those of importance to 

 the Farmer will receive, from time to time, such editorial 

 notices as the Editor may consider them worthy of, without 

 additional charge. 



Implements and seeds to be tested should be sent direct 

 to the Editor, at his residence. Champaign. 



We have put the price of advertising within reach of all. 

 It will enable those who like to freely advertise their goods, 

 to do so at a cheap rate. 



Terms, cash. Yearly adverti4ers will pay semi-annually, 

 and all transient advertisements must be accompanied with 

 the cash to insure insertion. 



BAILHACHE & BAKER, Publishers, 

 Spr'ngfield, Ills. 



PRII^CE & CO.'S 



LIXN^ AN BOTANIC GARDENS & NURSERIES, 



Flushing, Long Island, near New York. 



Priced Catalogues, which are sent to purchasers 

 of trees, and to applicants who inclose stamps. 



No. 1 — Descriptive catalogue of fruit and ornamen- 

 tal trees and shrubs, raspberries, currants and other 

 small fruits. No. 2 — Roses, carnations, chrysanthe- 

 mums, phlox, iris, double sweet Williams and other 

 herbaceous flowering plants. No. 4 — Wholesale cat- 

 alogue for nurseries and dealers, comprising trees, 

 shrubs, roses, plants, bulbous flower roots, stocks for 

 engrafting, etc. No. 5 — Wholesale catalogue of veg- 

 etable, agricultural and flower seeds, and tree and 

 shrub seeds, etc. No. 6 — Descriptive catalogue of our 

 unrivaled collection of 160 select varieties of straw- 

 berries, with a "rejected list," and directions for cul- 

 ture. No. 8 — Wholesale list of native and foreign 

 grapes. No. 9 — Catalogueof bulbous flowers of every 

 class, together with tree and herbaceous pasonies, 

 dahlias, primroses, poleanthus, cowslips, auriculas, 

 daisies, iris and other rare flowering plants. No. 10 

 — AVholesale catalogue of the same. No. IS — Cata- 

 logue of greenhouse plants. No. 14 — Descriptive 

 catalogue of 400 native and 120 foreign varieties o 

 grapes. 



