870 
SUPPLEMENT TO THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
©EC 10 
RURAL NEW-YORKER’S 
1850. STERLING AND LIBERAL COMBINATIONS. 1885. 
Enterprise Meat-Chopper, 
Every family should have one. Size No. 
10 will thoroughly cut one pound in a ‘min¬ 
ute. The meat is chopped—not mashed. 
The machine is simple and durable. The 
ponce is $3.00, and we give it for three sub¬ 
scribers. The RURAL sells nothing except 
the R. N. F. The No. 22 cuts two pounds 
per minute. Price 4.00, Given for four 
subscribers. This is the size you should have. 
Address The Enterprise M'f'g Co., cor 3rd. 
and Dauphin Streets, Philadelphia, Pa., 
for circulars. 
$ 3,300 
In PRESENTS to SUBSCRIBERS 
FOR CLUBS. 
SEND FOR THE RURAL OF NOV. 14. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
What You Can Get 
By sending One new Subscriber. 
List 1.—Any present subscriber who will 
send ns one new nue. may select any one ol 
the following : l'i plants of the Marlboro 
Raspberry, or Pi plants of Rancocas Rasp¬ 
berry, »>r six plants of Golden Queen Rasp¬ 
berry, or eight plants of the Jewell Straw¬ 
berry, or three plntiis of the Earbart Ever¬ 
bearing Black-cap Raspberry, or one 
l’ongbkeepsie Red, or one Lister Prolific 
Grape Vine, or a combination Saw Set, or a 
a beantitnl Silver-Plnted Butter Knife, or 
either “ Needle "Work” or “Knitting and 
Crochett, M by Jennie .lime, or any book ol 
the “One Syllable Series.” See regular 
Premium lor Subscriptions. 
Never Sells any Premiums. 
IT IS NOT A TRADE PAPER. 
Liberal Pay for Pleasant Work. 
FOR TWO NEW SUBSCRIBERS. 
kny cue sending two new subscribers, may 
select any two of the above, or a Niagara 
Grape Vine, or a Louderback's combination 
tool, or a needle bay knife, or a pearl rug 
maker, or a dust-pan, or a pair of shears 
or a knife, or a shot flask, or a watch charm, 
or a harmonica, or a Premium driJJ, or 
“Stop Thief” Scale, or any one of the 
following books : American Political Ideas, 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Fruit Culture, Talks 
Afield, How To Paint, Low Cost Houses, 
Comforting Thoughts, Highways of Litera- 
ure, Boy’s Useful Pastimes, "What Girls Can 
Do : Simple Ailments of Horses. 
For Three New Subscribers. 
You may select an Enterprise Meat Chop 
per No. 10, or two knives, or a knife and pair 
of shears, or a pruning knife, or a pair of 
folding scissors, ora pruning saw, or a Wilson 
Wbiffletree, or any one of the following 
books : Home Studies in Nature, Wallace’s 
Ben Bur, Boots and Saddles, The Man Won¬ 
derful, Beecher’s Life Thoughts, The Rose, 
successful Men, Talks to Farmers. 
The great national standard of Rural Journalism. It is the accepted medium for the 
introduction of all New Plants, Seeds, and farm implements. These are tested regardless 
of cost at the Rural's Experiment Grounds of 300 acres. ItB Free Seed and Plant Dis¬ 
tributions have popularized many of the most valuable varieties in cultivation. It is 
original from beginning to end, It employs the best writers in the world. It is the 
first journal to have established Experiment Grounds; the first to present oareful and 
original illustrations of plants of all kinds, of cattle, farm and garden helps, poultry, 
large and small fruits, grapes, and everything appertaining to rural life. Over 500 en¬ 
gravings yearly. Over 600 writers. It is edited by practical farmers. It combines the 
best features of the daily and weekly press with all that can instruct, elevate and inter¬ 
est the rural home. It oosts more to publish than any other weekly in America, It is 
for the North, South, East, West. The ablest farm and garden weekly in the land. It 
is pure, trustworthy, sparkling, alive, independent, and faithful. It exposes all frauds. 
It answers over 5,000 questions in its Farmers’ Club. Free specimen copies will give f 
full account of its present Free Seed Distribution, and of the sterling presents offered for 
dubs. We want you to KNOW that the Rural New-Torkeris the be3t journal of its olase 
published. It will help you to make money and to spend it judiciously. Fine paper, 16 
pages, $2.00 a year, Subscribe now. Address the Rural New-Yorker, 34 Park Row, N. Y. 
The best sewing machin e in the world, working nnon an 
entirely new principle, will be given to agents for 40 subscri¬ 
bers—freight paid. Lowest retail price, $60. We guarantee 
it in every way. It must not be classed with the low-priced 
sewing machines offered by other Journals. It is worth $60 
See Premium List, which will be sent to all applicants. _ 
BOOK PREMIUMS 
RURAL REW-YORIER 
Clubs with all other Papers at 
the lowest possible rates. 
See our regular Premium 
List. Sent to all 
Free. 
WHAT ¥0U CAN GET FOB FOUR 
NEW SUBSCRIBERS, 
A No. 2 Ideal Fountain Pen and Holder, 
with filler and case ; warranted to fit the band 
and please, or a No. 22 Enterprise Meat Chop¬ 
per, or an Emerson Cross cut Saw, or any of 
E. P. Roe’s Works, or a Farm Bell worth $5. 
or a Wheeden Toy Engine. 
Five New Subscribers. 
Will entitle the sender to a Cole Plow, or a 
Key stone Washer, or a Syrup Pitcher, or a 
half dozen teu spoons or forks, or a game bag_ 
Six New Subscribers. 
Will entitle the sender to the Field Force 
Pump, |6, and worth to any fruit grower or 
any house holder, twice the money, or an 
Accordeon, or a Perfect Milk Pail, or Key¬ 
stone Wringer. See regular Premium List 
for full descriptions. 
REMEMBER! 
The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
clubs with the WEEKLY IN¬ 
TER-OCEAN, including our 
Free Seed Distribution, for 
$2 65 
" With the DETROIT FREE 
PRESS with its Household 
Supplement, including the 
Rural’s Free Seed Distribution, 
for $2.75. 
Subscribe through the 
RURAL NEW-YORKER. Send 
to the above journals for 
free specimen copies. 
l EC0N0M1CAL AND USEFUL, 
Ideal Fountain Pen, 
Every one who has any 
writing to do should have one 
of these delightful pens. It is 
not only worth its weight in 
gold, but is indispensible to 
every man who has occasion to 
write. Full description, write 
to the Ideal Fountain Pen Co., 
155 Broadway N. Y., for a cir¬ 
cular. For a club of four sub¬ 
scribers we will give a No. 2 
pen worth $4. Eor a club of 
five we will give a No. 2 Pen 
with a gold-banded holder, or 
a No. 3 pen, either worth $5. 
Either of these pens will be 
sent in a substantial case and 
postpaid in registered letter, 
and warranted to fit your hand, 
or exchanged for one that does. 
You may step in and ask your 
pen dealer to show one, and get 
his price for it, and thus see 
that the best way is to secure it 
by getting up a club for the 
RurAL. 
Please do not get the idea 
that this is a cheap stylograph- 
ic pen or the penograpb, or any 
other of the inferior pens. It 
is not, but a first class gold pen 
with a hard rubber fountain 
holder and one which we have 
used with so much satisfaction 
that, alter trying all the others, 
we would not part with it for 
any price. Farmers, Clergy¬ 
men, Boys, Girls, School-teach¬ 
ers, Evcrjbody, here is a 
chance you cannot afford to 
neglect. No more useful or 
appropriate present can be 
found for Christmas, New 
Yeat’s or birthday, and you 
can cam one with little effort. 
We should have calls for 500 
at least. We know it will 
please all. 
What You Can Get for Eight New 
Subscribers. 
Ei * ht subscribers entitle the sender to a 
Shepherd Lawn Tennis Racket, or a violin 
Post hede 886 com ^ ete * ” •« Mp,. 
Ten subscribers will entitle the sender to 
Nature’s Serial Story by E. P. Roe, or a com¬ 
bined anvil and vice, or an Accordeon. 
Twelve subscribers will entitle the 
sender to a Lewis Force Pump, or a 
Universal Scale, 
der, to a Sun Type writer. 
wiueuuuo tne sen- 
6. Forty subscribers entitle the sen¬ 
der to a No. 4 Avery Sewing Machine 
(see premium list), delivered freight 
paid. 
7. Fifty subscribers entitle the sender to a 
Syracuse Sulky Plow complete, with extras, 
and freight paid if not amounting to over 
8 . Fifty-seven entitle to #57 Mystic Range 
zr *V V n wwtto toe sender to 
a Lady’s Gold Chatelaine Watch, or Peiper 
breech loading shot gun, or a BradleyMower. 
For a full Illustrated Decep¬ 
tion of our Free Seed Distribu¬ 
tion for 1886, send for the Nov. 
14 issue. 
