SEED-TIME AND HARVEST 
29 
THE GREAT AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL OF 
THE SOUTH. 
t- ESTABLISHED 1839. — 
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR 
—AND— 
DIXIE FARMER, 
Published at Atlanta, Georgia. 
It combines five of the best Agricultural papers in 
the South and unites the patrons of these with its 
own large list of subscribers. The Press and people 
unite in its praise. Send 10 cents for trial copy. 
Subscription price $1.50 yearly. 10-11 
THE FARMER’S CALL, 
A Weekly Agricultural and Home Journal. 
Sixteen Pages and Cover —One Dollar a Year. 
The best paper for the farmer and his family. For 
the household it has no equal. Medical formulae and 
workshop new features. 
Send twenty-five cents for three months trial. No 
sample copies sent out. Address 
FARMER’S CALL, 
10—1 Quincy, Illinois. 
NEWS tite NORTHWEST. 
More fresh, desirable and accurate information 
about that fertile field for the enterprising is found in 
the MINNEAPOLIS FARMERS’ TRIB¬ 
UNE than in any other periodical publication. It is 
the leading weekly newspaper of the Northwest. 
The Tribune, for three months, with the 
U AUR-RAIHf Of MINNEAPOLIS andthe 
nAnlJ aa "l£UUE\ new northwest, 
a graphically written and beautifully illustrated vol¬ 
ume of 150 pages, full of valuable and trustworthy 
information of the Northwest and its Metropolis, sent 
for 65 cents. Book alone, postpaid, 50 cents, Tribune 
on trial three months, 20 ceDts. Sample copies free. 
10-1 The TRIBUNE, Minneapolis, MINN. 
SEND FOR 
Free Sample Copy 
“FARMERS’ HOME.” 
GIVEN AWAY! GIVEN AWAY! 
A Purse of Gold! 
A Bundle of Greenbacks! 
A Bag of Silver! 
and the.best Farm and Family Journal in America. 
A rare offer, a new offer, an offer that you should 
read. The publishers of the RVEAL NE- 
BKARKA will give these prizes to subscribers. 
Read the following conditions: 
The regular subscription price of the RXJRALi is 
$1.00 per year. During the next sixty days every let¬ 
ter containing $1.00 for a year's subscription and the 
names and addresses of ten reliable farmers, in an¬ 
swer to this advertisement, will be numbered, com¬ 
mencing with number one. Every odd number, or 
every other letter, will receive a due-bill for one dol¬ 
lar, which will be forwarded at once to the lucky 
subscriber, the number of whose letter was an odd 
number. By this it will be seen that 5 subscribers in 
every 10, 10 in every 20, 50 in every 100, 500 in every 
1,000, and so on, will receive a due-bill for $1.00. This 
due-bill may be applied on the holder’s next year’s 
subscription, or may be turned into cash if the 
holded will get his neighbor to subscribe for the 
RIJRA.Ii, put the money in his pocket and for¬ 
ward the due-bill, which will be taken as cash by the 
publishers. 
GOLD, SILVER & GREENBACKS. 
In addition to this offer, every fiftieth subscriber 
will receive $5.00 in Silver, every one liundreth 
subscriber will receive $10.00 in Gold, and every 
five hundreth subscriber will receive $20.00 in 
Crl* o 0 dt s • 
The p ublishers do not offer $500 in gold nor $2,000 
in gold—they offer only what they can afford to give 
and what they will send out. 
Do not forget to send the 10 names. 
THE RURAL NEBRASKA is a neat, re¬ 
liable Farm and Family Journal, stitched and cut, 
magazine form. It has 20 pages, 80 columns, and 
an attractive cover. The Tribune says; “The 
RURAL NEBRASKA is the Leading Ag¬ 
ricultural and Live Stock Journal of 
tlie West. 55 It has been established over fourteen 
years, during which time it has been a constant and 
welcome visitor to thousands ®f homes. It is a jour¬ 
nal you want; it is a journal you need; it is a jour¬ 
nal you cannot afford to be without, even at a cost 
of ten times the subscription price—much less when 
you can secure it for the small sum of $1.00 and have 
so many chances of securing a due-bill or a prize. 
SAMPLE COPIES. —We do not approve of 
giving anything, unless it be to a deserving object of 
charity—an ice cream festival, for instance, therefore 
do not ask us to send you a sample copy free. If you 
are anxious to see a sample copy before subscribing, 
enclose ten cents in your letter and then deduct the 
amount when you remit your subscription. 
Address H. S. SMITH & CO., 
106 and 108 S. 14th St., OMAHA, NEB. 
Mention this paper and give your full address. 
DAYTON, OHIO . 
N. B. We do not publish any fraud advertise¬ 
ments. Honest advertisers send for best rates. We 
are ripe and ready for the fall and winter. Address 
Farmers’ Home Publishing Co., Dayton, Ohio. 
Profitable Employment. 
fiNY MAN. 
SAMPLES 
FREE. Men & women making 
less than $70 per week should try 
our money-making business. 
Proof sent that either sex clear, 
$70 per week. Send stamp for a' 
$3 “Eye-Opener”and investigate i 
the best paying business extant. 
No hoys. Address, R. C. Merrill & Co., Chicago.. 
Sawing Made Easy. 
MONARCH LIGHTNING SAWING MACHINE 
SZEnSTT OUST 
30 I>AlYS' 
TEST TRIAL. 
For logging camps, wood-yards, farmers getting outs 
stove wood, and all sorts of log-cutting— i t is unrntaled. 
Thousands sold yearly. A boy of 16 can saw logs fast and 
easy. Immense saving of labor and money. Write 
for elegantly illustrated catalogue in 6 brilliant colors, 
also brilliantly illuminated poster in 5 colors. All free. 
Agents WanUd. Bin money made quickly. - 
MONARCH MI’G C0 (> (A) 206 State St., Chicago, HL 
