OUR CLUBBING LIST. 
For the convenience of our readers we will club 
Seed-Time and Harvest with any of the papers 
named in this list. Remit the amount given in the 
right hand column, and you will receive both papers 
for one year, postpaid, Seed-Time amd Harvest from 
us, the other also directly from the place of publica¬ 
tion. If you want more than one paper with Seed- 
Time and Harvest, add the corresponding prices of 
the right hand column, and deduct therefrom 35 
cents for every additional paper. For instance, you 
want Seed-Time and Harvest with Rural New- 
Yorker and Farm and Garden, add $2.25 and .70 = 
$2.95, and subtract .35 = $2.60, which amount should 
be remitted to us. 
Our magazine and the others ordered with it, need 
not necessarily be sent to the same address. 
Be sure and make all remittances to the Publisher 
of Seed Time and Harvest, 
ISAAC F. TILLINGHAST, La Plume, Pa. 
$1 .50 American Agriculturist. $1.50 
.50 American Bee Journal (monthly).80 
1.00 American Garden. 1.25 
1.00 American Rural Home. 1.25 
1.00 Beekeeper’s Magazine. 1.25 
4.00 Century Magazine. 4.00 
1.00 City and Country.75 
1.50 Coleman's Rural World. 1.75 
2.50 Country Gentleman. 2.50 
1.00 Cricket on the Hearth.75 
2.00 Demorest’s Magazine. 2.00 
.50 Farm and Fireside.90 
1.50 Farmer and Fruit Grower. 1.75 
.50 Farm and Garden.70 
.50 Farm and Home.•..75 
.50 Farm Journal. .75 
4.00 Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper.. 3.75 
1.00 Fireside at Home.75 
.60 Fruit Recorder. 75 
2.00 Gardeners’ Monthly. 2.00 
.50 Green'8 Fruit Grower.75 
.50 Home and Farm (semi-monthly). .90 
4.00 Harper’s Magazine. 3.75 
4.00 Harper’s Weekly. 4.00 
1.10 Household. 1.25 
f- j j old subscriber*— 1.40 
*1.00 Husbandman... .) new »» _ 1.10 
1.25 Ladies’ Floral Cabinet. 1.25 
1.25 Ohio Farmer. . 1.40 
.50 Our Country Home.80 
.50 Orchard and Garden.75 
1.25 Poultry World. . 1.25 
2.00 Prairie Farmer. 1.60 
2.00 Rural New-Yorker, including free seed 
distribution... 2.25 
1.60 Southern Cultivator and Dixie Farmer. 1.75 
3.00 St. Nicholas. 3.00 
3.20 Scientific American. 3.00 
3.00 The Independent. 3.00 
1.50 The N. Y. Weekly Tribune. 1.50 
1.25 Vick’s Monthly Magazine. 1.30 
1.65 Western Rural. 1.90 
1,00 Weekly World, N. Y . 1.20 
.50 Western Plowman.75 
1.75 Youth’s Companion (new subscribers).. 1.75 
Youth’s Companion (renewals or transfers 
from one family member to another) . .2.25 
SPECIAL LIBERALITY. 
To induce our friends to favor us with as many 
subscriptions as possible, we make this offer: For 
every Two Dollars sent us for subscriptions at above 
rates, the sender may select and receive one of the 
following books free: 
Green’s How to Propagate and Grow Small Fruits, 
Terry’s A B C of Potato Culture. 
Pierce’s A B C of Carp Culture. 
Tillinghast’s Manual of Vegetable Plants. 
Joseph's Money in Potatoes. 
Parry’s Fifty Years Among Small Fruits. 
Wintering' Cabbages. 
In wintering cabbages observe the follow¬ 
ing rules: 
Leave them out as late as possible, as 
more cabbages are spoiled by being put in 
winter quarters too soon, and by being 
kept too warm through the winter than by 
freezing. 
Pull before severe freezing, wrap the 
outside leaves neatly around the head and 
turn the plants root side up upon the 
ground, close together in beds not more 
than six feet wide, and with alleys not less 
than the same width between the beds. 
They can generally be left safely in this 
shape for several weeks. Just before the 
ground is expected to freeze up solid, the 
cabbages should be covered three or four 
inches deep with soil from these alleys. 
The roots are left sticking out. Thus pro¬ 
tected the cabbages will winter all right. 
The cellar is not the proper place for this 
vegetable. 
As it is not so much the falling, but the 
lighting that hurts, so in the case of vege¬ 
tables it is not the freezing, but the thaw¬ 
ing that does the damage. Let the thaw¬ 
ing go on gradually, as in potatoes left in 
the ground all winter, and the fruit or veg¬ 
etable will not be spoiled for food. Frozen 
apples, potatoes, onions, etc., if intended 
for immediate use, should be thrown into 
cold water, where they will thaw without 
spoiling. 
Chicago Socialists drank 800 kegs of beer at a pub¬ 
lic picnic where a conspicuous motto was “Our Chil¬ 
dren Cry for Bread.’’ 
