RURAL, BOOKS. 



Every farmer, gardener, and fruit grower 

 should read and study books concerning bis 

 business as much so as those in other walks of 

 life. It is true that everything you see in 

 books does not apply to your individual case, 

 but by reading good practical books, many 

 valuable suggestions are found that must be 

 valuable to the reader. I am offering the fol- 

 lowing list, the most of which are in my own 

 library and I should not care to be without 

 them. The name in each suggests the subject. 

 Order all books by number. All books offered 

 are in cloth binding, except those otherwise 

 noted. 



No. 1 Agriculture. A. B. C. of, by Weld. $ 

 No. 2 Alfalfa, by F. D. Coburn 



3 Asparagus, by F. M. Hexamer. . . . 



4 Cabbage, Cauliflower and Allied 

 Vegetables, by C. L. Allen 



5 Corn, The Book of, by Herbert 

 Myrick 



6 Crops, Spiaying, by Clarence M. 

 Weed 



7 Manures. Talks on. (revised edi- 

 tion^, by Joseph Harris 1 



8 Market Gardening and Farm .Notes 

 by Landreth 1 



9 Onion Culture, The New, by 

 Greiner 



10 Soiling Crops and the Silo, by 

 Thomas Shaw 



11 Apple Culture, Field Notes on, by 

 Bailey 



12 Bulbs, Tuberous Rooted Plants by 

 C. L. Allen 1 



No. 13 Fruit Garden The, by, Barry 1 



No. 14 Peach Culture prevised edition 



Fulton 1 



No. 15 Pear Culture for Profit, by Quinn 1 

 No. 1G Plants, Propagation of, by A. S. 



Fuller 



No. 17 Window Flower Garden, by Hen- 



rich 



No. 18 Animal Breeding, Bv Thomas 



Shaw 



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No. 19 Cow, Keeping One 1 00 



No. 20 Pig, Harrison, bv Joseph Harris. . 1 00 

 No. 21 Horse, The, How to Buy and Sell, 



by Howden 



No. 22 Horse Doctor, Modern, by G. H. 



Dadd 



No. 23 Fruit Grower, The Practical, by 



S. T. Maynard, 128 pages 



No. 24 Corn Judging, Manual of, by A. 



D. Shamel 



No. 25 Farm Grasses of the United States 



of America, by W. J. Spillman, 250 



pages 1 00 



No. 26 Dairyman's Mauual, The, by Hen- 

 ry Stewart, 475 pages i 50 



No. 22 Nut Culture, The, by A. S. Fuller, 



290 pages 1 50 



No. 28 Home Floral Culture, by Rexferd. 



300 pages 1 00 



1 50 No. 29 Gardening for Young and Old, by 



Joseph Harris, 191 pages 1 00 



30 Money in the Garden, by O.uinn, 

 68 pages 1 



31 Sweet Potato Culture, by Fitz. . . 



32 Amateur Fruit (Growing, by Sam- 

 uel B.Green, 144 pages paper. 25 cloth. 



No. 33 Vegetable Garden, by Samuel B. 

 Green, 260 pages, paper 50c. cloth 1 



34 A Gold Mine in the Front Yard • 

 and How to Work It, by C. S. Har- 

 rison, 80 pages 1 



35 Sewing and Garment Drafting, by 

 Margaret J. Blair, this is a money 

 saver that should be in every home, 

 190 pases 1 



36 Poultry Manual, by Francis L. 

 Seweil and Miss Ida E. Tilson, paper 

 25c. cloth 



37 Strawberry Culture, by M. Craw- 

 ford, paper 



38 Farmer's Garden, The, bv H. W. 

 Colingwood. This is an extremely 

 valuable book that every person who 

 grows a garden should have. Paper 

 binding 7 5c, cloth 



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THREE PAPERS THAT EVERY FARMER AND FROST GROWER SHOULD READ. 



THE FARM JOURNAL. Enclosed you will 

 find a coupon offering this paper two years for 

 •the insignificant sum of 25c If you will read 

 the paper, every issue will be worth this to 

 you. Its reading matter is condensed usually 

 in short paragraphs and you do not have to 

 read a page or two to get an idea that can be 

 conveyed in as many sentences. If you are 

 not already a subscriber, don't fail to send this 

 coupon to the Farm Journal with 25c. If you 

 are not satisfied with the results, let me know 

 and I will personally relund your money. 



THE RUKAL NEW-YORKER. You will find 

 a little envelope enclosed in this catalogue, 

 addressed to the Rural New Yorker. In one 

 eud of the envelope is a little slot that holds 

 ten cents. By slipping a dime therein, writ- 

 ing your name and address on the envelope 

 where space is provided, and mailing direct to 

 the Rural New Yorker, they will send you 

 this paper on trial thirteen weeks. If it isn't 

 worth twice that to you after reading it, and 

 you can conscientiously say so don't fail to 

 advise me and I will personally return your 

 money. This paper is published weekly, and 

 like the Farm Journal, all advertisements are 



guaranteed to he reliable That alone is worth 

 a great deal The Rural New Yorker is made 

 up of practical, original matter and is not 

 composed of clippings from other papers. The 

 editor travels from place to place the countrv 

 over, and sees and knows what he is talking 

 about. Give the paper a trial. Be sure and 

 do, I think you will like it. Then they will 

 send you the paper a year for a dollar and give 

 you a book on Gardening that sells foi 75c. 



THE PRACTICAL FARMER. You will find 

 enclosed a coupon offering you this paper of 

 sixteen pages fifty two times a year for fifty 

 cents : or, better yet, three years for a dollar 

 bill. This paper is edited by Prof. W. F. Mas- 

 sey. who is world renowned authority on hor- 

 ticulture. This paper also publishes each week 

 a letter from T. B. Terry, who writes for the 

 Practical Farmer exclusively. His letters alone 

 are worth many times the price. Whether you 

 farm one acre or one thousand, you can't 

 afford to be without this paper. In fact you 

 need all three, and they all cost such a little 

 there is no excuse for being without them. 

 Send all subscriptions direct to the papers and 

 not to me. 



