Annual Premium List of The R ural New-Yorker. 
f N presenting the following list of articles to be given to those who secure subscriptions for The R. N.-Y., we can assert with 
confidence that every article offered in this list has been selected on its merits, and is guaranteed to give satisfaction. We 
offer these premiums for clubs because in them we can give club-raisers better pay than any paper could possibly give in cash. 
By consulting the different catalogues mentioned, you will see from the prices quoted that we offer you from 50 cents to $1 in 
value for each new subscription that you send us. We are able to do this because many manufacturers, recognizing the great 
advertising value of The Rural New-Yorker, give the articles outright for the purpose, and other articles not so given, are 
secured by us at less than the cost of production. Read the following list carefully, and you will be sure to find something you 
want, and that you can secure at the expense of only a little time spent in showing The Rural to your neighbors. We cant 
offer any such inducements in cash; but if you prefer cash, write us for private terms. 
The Rural New=Yorker from Now Until January 1,1895, for $1.00. 
CONDITIONS OF PREMlUfl OFFERS. 
These premiums are offered to subscribers only, but any one may become 
a subscriber by remitting SI for a yearly subscription. 
Your own subscription does not count in the club necessary to secure a 
premium. The premiums are given only for the work you do in getting others 
to subscribe. 
Send names as fast as received with remittance and select the desired 
premium as soon as you have sent names enough to secure it. No premium 
will be sent till selected by the club raiser, but it will be promptly sent when 
called for. 
When there is only one article of a kind offered, the first call gets it. 
Hence it will be well to mention a second choice. 
Any club raiser may, if he prefers, select two premiums instead of one, 
provided his club is large enough to aggregate the required number for both 
premiums. 
These offers hold good till September 1, 1894. 
If you are working for a special premium, and fail to get names enough to 
secure it, write us and we may be able to allow you to make up the balance in 
a small cash payment. 
Only full paid yearly subscriptions count in clubs for premiums, and the 
new subscriber must pay full subscription price. The R. N.-Y. is now 
For the First Club of 7. 
The Cyclone Seeder. 
Those who have carried grain on one 
arm or shoulder all day, and scattered it 
with the hand know that it’s hard work, 
and that it takes an experienced man to 
get the required amount evenly on the 
For the First Club of <>0. 
The Morgan Spading Harrow. 
Imagine a disc harrow with stout steel 
fingers, like the fore-finger half bent, and 
you have the Morgan Spader. You can 
see that as these fingers revolve on the 
ground they scratch, tear and spade up 
about on the principle of fumbling or 
pawing in the dirt. The motion stirs 
and breaks up the soil, giving an action 
nearer to that of spading than any other 
tool we have. It is especially useful in 
Cyclone 
Seeder 
Only One Dollar a Year ^ 3^2 
And at this rate is by far the most popular and attractive farm paper in the 
world. It ought to be easy to obtain subscriptions for it at this price, and 
when one considers that with each new subscription he helps himself to the 
extent of half a dollar or more on the price of some needed article in farm or 
home, he ought to see that there is a chance of obtaining good wages for time 
spent in canvassing. _ , . 
Readers who are acquainted with the paper can easily convince their 
neighbors of its merits and get their subscriptions. Send us a list of the names 
with the post-office addresses of the people whom you expect will subscribe. 
We will send them sample copies, and when you call later you will have no 
trouble to get their subscriptions. We don’t care for subscriptions for less 
than a year, but if any new yearly subscriber is not satisfied with the paper 
after he has read it, we will cancel his subscription and return his money 
through the agent who sent it. 
Specimen copies will be sent to any one who applies for them and who 
will hand them to his neighbors. 
CREAM 
Showing can In the 
Barden Cabinet 
Creamer. 
_moo«estown 
