FANCIERS JOURNAL AND POULTRY EXCHANGE. 
495 

Light Brahmas exclusively. 

W. E. FLOWER, BREEDER OF ; 
CHOICE LIGHTjBRAHMAS, 
SHOEMAKERTOWN, PA. 
OAKDALE POULTRY YARDS, 
A. AJM EDD ER; 
Breeder of Leading Varieties of 
FANCY POULTRY, 
LAND AND WATER. 
A. A. MILLER, Oakdale Station, 
Alleghany Co., Pa. 
Address 

HOMING ANTWERPS, 
YOUNG BIRDS, 
PRICE, $10 PER PATR. 
JOS. M. WADE, 
39 N. Ninth St., Philadelphia, Pa. 


JOHN P. BUZZELL, CLINTON, MASS., breeder of high-class 
Brahmas and Partridge Cochins. At the New England Poultry Show, 
held in Worcester from the 20th to 2ist January, I had the pleasure of 
receiving 7 society prizes, and 7 specials. And at Massachusetts’ Poultry 
Show in Boston, in February, 1874, I had the pleasure of receiving 6 so- 
ciety prizes and 6 specials, including the champion cup, for the best trio 
of Light Brahma Chicks. I have a few fowls of the same stock as the 
above prize-winners for sale; and in the spring I shall be prepared to fill 
orders for EGGS from any of the above varieties, and from superior hens 
at $5.00 per dozen. 
eM CATERER. 
SELINSGROVE, SNYDER COUNTY, PENNA., 
Breeder and Dealer in first-class fowls of all the leading varieties. 
choice lot, bred this season, for sale after September Ist, 
at reasonable prices. 
Motto—“ LIVE, AND LET LIVE.” 
Send stamp for particulars or Circulars. 

A 

FANCIERS’ JOURNAL 
JOB PRINTING OFFICE. 
WE ARE NOW PREPARED 
TO 
EXECUTE WITH PROMPTNESS AND 
DISPATCH, ALL KINDS OF 
FANCY AND PLAIN JOB PRINTING, 
SUCH AS 
CIRCULARS, PRICE LISTS, ENVELOPES, 
BILL-HEADS, &e., &c. 
IN CASES WHERE OUR PATRONS DESIRE 
IT, WE WILL USE ANY CUTS THAT WE 
MAY HAVE, FOR A REASONABLE COM- 
PENSATION. 
4a- THE CUTS WE WILL USE HAVE 
NOT BECOME COMMON. 


“ORDER FROM HEADQUARTERS.”’ 
THE NEW 
AMERICAN STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE, 
As adopted at Buffalo, N. Y., January, 1874, by the 
AMERICAN POULTRY ASSOCIATION, 
And published by them. Price, $1 per copy. 
At wholesale in lots not less than 10 copies, 25 per cent. off. For larger 
lots and special rates, send for Price Card. 
EDMUND S. RALPH, Sec’y, Buffalo, N. Y. 
WRIGHT'S PRACTICAL POULTRY KEEPER. 
THE BEST BOOK ON THIS SUBJECT FOR THE MONEY EVER 
PUBLISHED. 
Price, $2.00, free by mail. 
FANCIERS’ JOURNAL, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Address 























BLACK BALDHEADS, 
From imported and home-bred stock. 
Birds for sale. 
Address H. A. BROWN, care of P.O. Box 180, N. York. 
About two hundred early hatched chicks and thirty 
old fowls, from some of the best strains in the country. 
Am selling out my entire stock of poultry and will sell 
these at a bargain, if taken together. Must be sold very 
soon. 
CHAS. P. NETTLETON, 
Birmingham, Conn. 

Box 5380. 
NATIONAL BEE JOURNAL.—MRS. ELLEN 8. TUPPER, 
Editor and Proprietor. Devoted exclusively to Bee culture, Two Dollars 
a Year. The National Bee Journal is issued on the 15th of each month, 
contains sixty-four pages, printed on fine paper, in neat, clean type, and 
for the year 1874 has been greatly improved. Mrs. Tupper, having pur- 
chased the Journal, has removed it to Des Moines, Iowa, where it will 
hereafter be published under her own supervision, She will write for 
no other publication but her own, and in that she will give the result of 
that long practical experience which has placed her among the best, if 
not the best, authorities in this country on the honey bee. 
Arrangements have been made with prominent bee keepers in this and 
foreign countries, for timely articles each month, upon important topics. 
A special department has been assigned to ‘ Notes and Queries,” in 
which the various questions which arise in the practical experience of 
bee keepers each month, will be given, with pertinent answers by the 
editor. These will be condensed into the smallest possible space, and will 
be one of the most interesting features of the Journal. 
The Journal will keep entirely clear of all entangling alliances with 
patent rights of whatever nature, and will be independent in the expres- 
sion of its opinions. It will aim to be reliable, give only such information 
as will be of practical utility to its patrons, discarding theories and mis- 
leading propositions. 
A limited space is devoted to advertising, which will be given to un- 
objectionable notices, at fair rates; and the large and rapidly increasing 
circulation of the Journal makes it a valuable advertising medium. 
For circulars, containing club rates, premiums, advertising rates, etc., 
address MRS. E. S. TUPPER, Des Moines, Iowa. 
