ADV EKTISEMENTh. 
HAMMOND’S SLUG-SHOT. 
(Registered.) 
Destroys all insects injurious to House and Garden Plants, Shrubs, Trees, Vines, Potatoes, Melons, Cab¬ 
bage, Currants and Vegetables and Fruits of all kinds. Sold by Seedsmen and Merchants who are alive to 
the needs of their customers. For information, send for pamphlet to 
“HAMMOND’S PAINT AND SLUG-SHOT WORKS,” 
I2tf . Flshklll-on-tli e-Hudson, N. Y. 
FAY 
'"««!"• roAprc t 
QUARTERS. |\lk EL O 
SMALL FRUIT* AND TREES. LOW TO DEALERS A\i) PLANTERS. EVERYTHING 
CLASS. FREE CATALOGUES. GEO. S. JOSSKLYN. FREDOIVIA. N. Y. 
INEWFRUJJSINIAGARA GRAPE! BERRY! 
Catalogue FREE||/irrrrD’0 UVDDin QHD Also all the older Fruits, Ornamentals, Ac. 
springs, N.Y. I 
Many Agents are Making $5 to $10 per Day “ 
Selling our New Work on Farming, 
Single Copies mailed for 02.50. Send for HWll ■ lib I mini I H I Vs 
[ Table of Contents and Terms to Agents. PETER HENDERSON & CO., 35 & 37 Cortlandt Street, New York. 
HOW THE FARM 
NEWS & 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 ofthe Northwest. 
'I he Tribune, for three months, with the 
HAND-BOOK 'MVm-fWNW 
a graphically written and beautifully illustrated vol¬ 
ume of 15) pages, full of valuable and trustworthy 
information ofthe Northwest and its Metropolis, sent 
for 65 cents. Pook alone, postpaid, 5 > cents, Tribune 
on trial three months, 2 > cents. Sample copies free 
l The TRIBUNE, Minneapolis, MINN. 
“FARMERS’ HOME.” 
DAYTON, OHIO . 
N. B. We do not publish any fraud advertise¬ 
ments. Honest advertisers send for best rates. Wi 
are ripe and ready for the fall and winter. Add rest- 
Farmers’ Home Publishing Co., Dayton, Ohio 
THE FARMER’S CALL, 
A Weekly Agricultural and Home Journal. 
Sixteen Pages and Cover—One Dollar a Year. 
--:o:- 
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, 
i"—> Quincy, Illinois. 
FARM ECONOMIST, 
Published Twice a Month. 
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS A YEAR. 
A High-Class paper at the lowest rates. Edited by 
R. S. Thompson, aided by Waldo F. Brown, J jhn M. 
Stah , W. W. Stevens and others of the most able ag 
ric dtural writ, rs in the United States. Send 25 cents 
in stamps for your own subscription and make up a 
club. Sample copies free Liberal premiums to 
canvassers. FARM ECONOMIST, 
Id-3 _ Springfield, Ohio. 
The Only Weekly Bee Pape} in the World. 
THE BEE JOURNAL, 
[Established in 1861.) 
Monthly, 50 Cents a Year—Weekly, $2 00, 
(invariably in advance,) 
not only sustains its former excellent reputation, but 
exceeds the expectations of its best friends, by ad 
trancing progressive ideas upou Bee Culture It is 
the Best and Most Thoroughly Practical 
Publication on Bees and Honey in the World, and all 
those who keep bees should take 
THE WEEKLY BEE JOURNAL. 
It is edited bv Thomas G Newman, whose reputa 
tion is world-wide Send for a Sample Copy. 
9A Address, THE BEE JOURNAL, Chicago, Ill. 
A $5 MAGIC LANTERN for $2. 
,, c nciiuuuj laruem cuariiETE. Dy man post-paid 
to any address, for $5*3.©O. The lenses are the same as use< 
in lanterns that retail for $10.00. We also send Views, Show- 
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who buys a lantern to give delightful evening entertainment 
in churches, school-rooms, and their own homes, charging-til 
admission of 10c., and make from $10.00 to $25.00 at each exhl 
bition. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded, ft U W 
BATES A CO., 106 Sudbury St., Boston, Mass. ' 
’J 
