Gleanings in bee culture . on given m one of them, The MillionEgg-Farm, did for Robert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton, Pa. In May 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks. He spent justone week studying the methods now given in this book. This was hisonly preparation for the business. Result this greenhorn raised 95per cent of all his chicks—a most uncommon record! Of these, lo50proved to be pullets. In less than seven months he was getting 425eggs daily, and selling them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost averaged $ a day, leaving him OVER $ DAY PROFIT—and this before all hispullets had


Gleanings in bee culture . on given m one of them, The MillionEgg-Farm, did for Robert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton, Pa. In May 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks. He spent justone week studying the methods now given in this book. This was hisonly preparation for the business. Result this greenhorn raised 95per cent of all his chicks—a most uncommon record! Of these, lo50proved to be pullets. In less than seven months he was getting 425eggs daily, and selling them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost averaged $ a day, leaving him OVER $ DAY PROFIT—and this before all hispullets had begun laying. Isnt Money-making Secrets a goodname for such booklets ? Read what people say of the other book-lets, and of the Farm .Iournal itself:— I find your Egg-Book worth untold dollars. saysROY CHANEY, Illinois. What it tells would take abeginner years to learn. -I am much pleased with the Butter Book, writesF J Dickson, Illinois, and would like to know nowI could secure 300 copies, one for each patron of our. Is this cock properly heldf^Poultry Secrets tellshoiu to carry fowls, andmany other secrets farmore important. creamery. Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck-raising, says F. M. Wabnock, Pennsylvania. If your other booklets contain as much valuableinformation as the Egg-Book I would consider themcheap at double the price, says F. W. Mansfield,New York. I think your Egg-Book is a wonder, says C. , Pennsylvania. The Farm Journal beats them all, writes T. , Penna. Every issue has reminders andideas worth a years subscription. One year I took another agricultural paper, saysN M Gladwin, Washington, and it took a wholecolumn to tell what Farm Journal tells in one par-agraph. If I could get as good interest on every dollar as Iget from the Farm Journal, I would soon be a mil-lionaire, says A. W. Wkitzel, Pennsylvania. Farm Journal is good for the man behind thecounter, as well as the man in the field, says J. , a Virginia bank cl


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectbees, bookyear1874