“Fresh Eggs All Winter” 
The secret that brought $12,000 a year 
to two egg-raisers is told in the 
Corning Egg-Book 
T HE story of the Comings is already familiar to Rural New-Yorker readers, thousands 
of whom have already bought the book and joined the Farm Journal family. You have 
no doubt read of how these two egg-raisers, coming from the city in poor health and 
beginning on a little place at Bound Brook, N. J., with only thirty hens, have in four years 
built up a business that in 1909 paid them a Profit of Over $12,000 a Year. But 
perhaps you thought of their achievement as you think of aeroplanes or Polar explorations,— 
interesting, but having no close or vital relation to you. 
The Corning Egg-Book opens up a new money making business of tremendous possibilities. With this book for a guide, men and 
.women busy with farm work can raise fresh eggs the year round, and sell them at high prices. The demand for “ fresh-gathered, fancy 
One of the three laying houses, with 1500 pullets always at work, shelling out eggs hy the bushel. 
eggs 
out. 
” is never satisfied. Egg-raising is much simpler than poultry-raising. The hard work of killing, dressing and marketing fowls is left 
The rest can be done by men in poor health, women, school-boys, girls, and others not qualified for the hard work of the average farm. 
Thousands of ambitious men and women have perceived these new possibilities, and the Corning Egg-Book is having an 
immense sale. Over 80,000 copies have been sold and the eighth edition is now ready for delivery. Its great and peculiar value lies in its 
tested and proved methods of raising fresh eggs all winter. To insure this result all your operations must be carefully calculated to FIT 
THE SEASONS, and 
Now is the time to begin 
One R. N.-Y. reader wrote the other day, “ My egg yield has just doubled since I have used Corning methods.” Even if you are not going into the poultry 
business in a large way, now is the time to lay the foundations of improvement in the average farmer’s flock. You might just as well increase your income or give 
your wife and children a little extra ‘‘pin money.” You have the room, the buildings, the feed, all you need is modern methods of care and feeding to greatly 
increase your income from the chicken yard. 
The publishers of the Farm Journal realized the importance of what the Comings had done, and saw that, thousands of people would want to know how 
two novices could in four years make egg-raising pay $12,000 a year. So in order to make their paper better known to people living in suburbs and small towns, 
with ground for gardening and keeping hens, they are now offering the Corning Egg-Book to all who subscribe to the 
FARM JOURNAL 
to increase its subscription list to ONE MILLION for this year 
The Farm Journal, 33 years old, has the greatest circulation of any farm paper in the world, over 700,900 already. But it wants a million, and won’t be 
entirely happy till it gets them. Its readers, however, say it is already the happiest and brightest paper of all. It believes in sunshine, kind words, honesty, 
prosperity, and ‘‘farmers and workers at the first table.” It is clean, brief, ‘‘boiled down,” intensely practical. ‘‘Cream, not skim-milk,” is its motto. 
“Judge Biggie” and Harriet, his wife, have for thirty year stood up for the farmer’s wife, the boys, the girls, and the dumb animals, and are so optimistic that 
they have hopes of even “Peter Tumbledown.” The Farm Journal never prints a fraudulent or trashy advertise¬ 
ment, and readers trust it so fully that advertisers get most unusual returns. We have no hesitation in saying the 
R. N.-Y. is one of the best weekly farm papers published and, knowing the kind of a paper its readers prefer, we have 
no hesitation in saying you will like Farm Journal too. Someone once called the two papers “ Cousins.” 
CUT OUT AND SEND THIS COUPON 
SPECIAL OFFER 
We will send postpaid, the CORNING EGG-BOOK and FARM 
JOURNAL for the balance of 1910 and all of 1-911, nearly two years. 
cash, money order or check. 
SO CEKTTS 
Book and paper may go to different addresses, if desired. 
FARM JOURNAL, 1094 Race St., Philadelphia 
Farm Journal, 1094 Race St., Philadelphia 
Enclosed find 50 cts. Send the Corning 
Egg-Book and Farm Journal for the balance 
of 1910 and all of 1911, nearly two years. 
Name. 
Address. 
R.F. D 
