March, 1911 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



69 



Pick Out Your Books 

 Choose To-day 



new books, will show 

 Send to-day. Your 



Book No. 1 



Tells how two men made "$6.41 per 

 Hen per Year" — explicit directions fol- 

 lowed by Edward and Gardner Corning, 

 the expert poultrymen. 236 subjects, 25 

 clear illustrations, all condensed into 64 

 pages. 



Book No. 2 



The man that owns, uses, buys, or loves 

 a horse, needs "Horse Secrets," by Pro- 

 fessor Alexander, Department of Horse 

 Breeding, University of Wisconsin. Full 

 of horse sense. 



Book No. 3 



From amateur to expert, and how you, 

 too, can succeed in the egg business is 

 told in the " Million Egg Farm" book. 

 238 subjects treated in detail, 47 cuts. 



Book No. 4 



One man sold a $10,000 cow for $85, be- 

 cause he had never seen our book, "Half a 

 Ton of Butter per ^.ow per Year." Get 



it, and know how much cows are worth. 



Book No. 5 



Michael K. Boyer knows the poultry 

 business from A to Z. He spent years in 

 gathering and testing these "Poultry 

 Secrets." They are worth hundreds of 

 dollars to you. 65 subjects covered com- 

 prehensively, tersely, honestly. 



Book No. 6 



"A good garden saves doctor bills, drives 

 away the. blues, sweetens the home and 

 puts gold in thy purse" — 213 subjects 

 covered by Jacob Biggie. Inimitably 

 interesting and informing. 4g pictures. 



Book No. 7 



"Corn Secrets," by Prof. P. G. Holden, 

 the corn-belt authority. 143 important 

 points covered — 104 illustrations. This 

 is perhaps the most accurate corn man- 

 ual written. 



Book No. 8 



Free courses in agriculture are fully de- 

 scribed in our new first aid to prospective 

 farmers, "Shall I Farm" — 232 subjects, 

 a few good pictures, 64 pages, long wear- 

 ing cover, complete index — a book full of 

 commonsense. 



Book No. 9 



"The Curtiss Poultry Book" covers 226 

 subjects, written by a pioneer in the 

 poultry business. Six indispensable form- 

 ulas for feed mixing. 



Just one money-saving idea, from the 1653 topics in these nine brand 

 you how to add dollars upon dollars to the value of your property, 

 books are waiting. Know the facts that will make your work easier — and yield more money, besides 



Here are other folks' experiences — how they got 

 more results for less work. You can do as they 

 did. Pick out your books right now. Perhaps 

 never before has such a valuable and easily read 

 set of farm books been published — you need them 

 — get them at once. See descriptions in left- 

 hand column. 



These books are 

 They are abso- 



These nine books, printed from large type, and easy to read, 

 are crowded with boiled-down facts that you can use every day. 

 They tell not only how others have raised poultry and eggs, 

 and made money at it, but how you can do it, too — how you 

 can get bigger profits from your cows, whether you have two 

 or twenty — how you can be sure you're getting a square deal 

 in a horse trade — how you can grow more corn from every 

 hill — how you can make a 10 x 20 garden yield as much as 

 most folks get from a 20 x 40 plot. 



All these things and many more are told. 



the cream of the life experience of experts. 



lutely authentic — or Farm Journal wouldn't offer them to you. 



Get your set now ; profit by all these other folks' efforts. 

 They're enjoying the results of their money-saving efforts — so 

 can you. Just use the coupon below. 



Why You Need Farm Journal 



Farm Journal is printed for those who want to know about 

 flowers and vegetables, poultry, dogs and other pets, horses 

 and cows, crops, good roads, building and odd jobs, improve- 

 ments around the place. It has home doctoring hints, dress- 

 making helps, ideas for an evening's fun, cookery suggestions 

 — why there isn't any thing worth while it doesn't have. 



Farm Journal is the only paper of its kind in the world. It 

 helps the amateur and the expert. It helps the man or 

 woman who cultivates a square rod or a square mile. 



Farm Journal believes in clean fence rows, sharp tools, and 

 the 101 little conveniences that go to make a happy family. 

 Take advantage of this offer now. 



What 

 Readers Say: 



EAST 



Frank Wolfe, N. Y. — "Our people have 

 learned to call Farm Journal 'the monthly 

 sunshine.' " 



A. S. Austin, N. Y. — "Once read, Farm 

 Journal is hard to do without." 



M. E. W. King, Del.— " The books 

 came all right. 1 like them and think I 

 shall learn a great deal from the study of 

 each one." 



E. A. Nichols, Mass. — " I received the 

 Garden Book and Almanac and am very 

 much pleased with them." 



Mrs. C. M. Spalding, Conn. — "I have 

 been an appreciative reader of Farm 

 Journal for 25 years and have a paid-up 

 subscription for the next 15 years." 



WEST 



F. J. Carrol, Ohio. — " Let me say that 

 am most happily disappointed in Farm 

 Journal. I expected to be 'stung,' but 

 discover it to be the only really helpful 

 paper for the farm that I have yet seen." 



Mrs. Mary L. Perry, 111. — " More in 

 one column than most others in a whole 

 page." 



W. F. Hildebrecht. Ohio.—" I consider 

 your paper so valuable that my subscrip- 

 tion is paid to Dec. 1017" 



NORTH 



Robert L. Haddock, Minn.— "The 

 October number just received. I would 

 not take a dollar for it." 



S. Moore, Sask. — " Every home in the 

 West should have Farm Journal." 



SOUTH 



W. H. Lanzer, Tenn. — " Five farm 

 papers come to our home, but Farm 

 Journal is the best." 



Andrew J. Shipor, Va. — "Farm Journal 

 is not like any other farm paper, but far 

 better and more interesting." 



James Trotter, Tenn. — " I like Farm 

 Journal for its plain facts." 



How to Get the Three Books You Pick Out 



Use the coupon or write a letter, enclosing a dollar bill or a money order or even stamps (we take all the risk, remember) — 

 and the 3 books you select will be shipped, fully prepaid and your name entered for Farm Journal, until January 1, 1913. 

 If you care for only one book, send only fifty cents 

 — you get all these splendidly helpful issues of Farm 

 Journal in either case. You can have all your money 

 back if not satisfied. Additional books, 20c each. 





I 



REWARD FOR PROMPTNESS 



A copy of the latest revised edition 1911 of "Poor Richard's Al- 

 manac," 48 pages, will be included with every $1 order— as long 

 as the Almanacs last. Hurry your order along. 



SPECIAL MONEY-BACK COUPON 



Farm Journal, 145 Clifton St., Philadelphia, Pa. 



Enclosed is $1.00. Please send me books Nos and Farm 



Journal until January 1st, 1913 — also the Almanac if I am in time. 



Name 



P. O R. F. D 



County State 



