Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 May 1912 — Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
J. H. Perkins & Co. PERKINS Wind Mills, Tanks, Gaso- ~ line Engines, Plumbing and Repairing. ]frr Jt Give us a call ’ n need °f A anything in our l’ ne - Office and Ji jj z shop on West Washington St. Opposite Mc - qBBj Kay’s Laundry Phones: Office 45 407 or 261
toward I convincing you of the splendid I g quality of these vehicles flawless h ® materials and superb workmanship. I When you buy your new bug'g'y we want 0 g you to join the million odd enthusiastic owners ® of Studebaker vehicles who can’t say enough y in approval of the service they’ve obtained JI from them. Studebaker buggies have been making friends for 60 years. 16 You’d better get acquainted- Come in and see our stock — “-Z; wMBI any time.. xJX/j \Jx C. A. Roberts. “S.“ R
GET THESE jfe. Money-making Secrets ZjLtr WITH Farm Journal JPt p3OI= JDt= —ll— it- in ■ Fnr 00 you can s et now not onl y th e farm x 4>I.VV Journal for four full years, but also ||| your choice of any one of the famous booklets, “Money-making-Secrets, which other people have bought by the hundred thousand. Just note what the information given in one of these booklets “The Million Egg-Farm,” did for Robert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton, i Poultry Secrets” tells how to Fl In May, 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks. He Spent jllSt One iecrets l ar more important. I I week the methods now given in this book,—his only preparation for the business. Result—this greenhorn raised 95 per cent, of all his chicks, and 1350 of them were pullets. Poultry Secrets tells you ife secret.) In less than seven months he was getting 425 and sehing them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost averaged $4.00 a day, leaving im OX ER $17.00 A DAY PROFIT, —and this before all his pullets had begun laying. p| Isn’t Money-making Secrets” a good name for such booklets? I J Read what people say of the other booklets, and of the Farm Journal itself:—
“I find your Egg-Book worth untold dollars,” says Roy Chanit, Illinois. “What it tells would take a beginner years to learn. z "lam much pleased with the Butter Book,” writes F. J. Dickson, Illinois, "and would like to know how I could secure 300 copies, one for each patron of our creamery.’’ “Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on D duck-raising.” says F. M. Warnock, Penna. “If your other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Egg-Book. I would consider them cheap at double the price, saysF. W. Mansfield. New York. T. F. McCrea, a missionary in China, writes, “I t found Garden Gold a great help in my garden this summer. I lost my health in the great famine, trying to save the starving Chinese, and I am trying to get it back by getting near to the SOl *‘ After a long tussle with the Chinese language and mission problems, it is a great rest to get out with the vegetables, E ree i?l et< r. , am saving money and regaining my health. My wife and I both find Farm Journal indispensable.’’ “The Farm Journal beats them all,” writes T. H. Potter, Penna. "Every issue has reminders and ideas worth a year s subscription. “One year I took another agricultural paper,” I says N. M. Gladwin, Washington, "and it took a whole column 1 I to tell what Farm Journal tells in one paragraph.” U “I was very greatly helped by your garden page,” writes Mrs. Joe Lawrence. Saskatchewan. "I was never juccessful m growing cabbage until last summer, when I tried the Farm Journal way. Now I have more than I need to use.” “Farm Journal was a regular visitor at my boyhood home,” writes Dr. William Davis, New Jersey. When the first copy came, it carried me back ten years, and I felt a boy again. I shall never be without it again—l want home to seem like home. When it arrives, I feel the gladness jump right into me. 1 begin on the first page and read to my wife until half-past ten ', a J’“ 5 1 through tije month I drink of its cream. You must __ work hard to keep it so rich.” DFarm Journal is good for the man behind sie winter, as well as the man in the field,” says J. I. Sloat, a Virginia bank clerk. If I could get as good interest on every dollar as t * e *•“??? Farm Journal, I would soon be a millionaire,” says A. W. Weitzel, Penna. I f Farm Journal FOUR full « . f m a 4 a a 11 smt "both so I I FARM JOURNAL, 333 N. Clifton St., Philadelphia || g H'rite tor free sample copy, with premiums to club agents.
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