G N ii 'OCT' EVENING LE-nftER?HlTJADELPHIA TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1915;, IM- .1 .-I.- ..-. ,- 1 W... ,- .,. . - ,. ...... ... . ..- i" " ' . ...-,. - , " fsriP ii ... -i IMml !SJc -OlTy ' i i .. i . - i . --H l . ' '' . ' "' ' ' " 1 YOT wlJSpJKu vf f , ,, k RS5cSKRfe((ra7 w&u&zM . mmmg&Qgzm&$ wmmmmmmfsmmfsmimMsmmms,., A MS8ggw K.g'T r , c-r-J '. JI J1"-wi-i-iiwMwjawaMW UIItglPjr If YvVSaX 7p'Jr gjMgag v "O L? ' h" JSy , r ( W s The third of four advertisements descriptive of The Country Gentleman Farming today is a highly technical business. A farm paper, to serve its readers fully, must qualify as a technical authority. It must be able to give advice on a range of subjects as wide as all agriculture and as deep as all science. This advice, too, must be on a plane equal to that of government bulletins, and of the best experts. Such service must be prompt, for growing crops and destructive pests do not wait It must be personal, for the inquirer asks only the difficult, unusual questions to which he cannot find an answer in the experience of his own neighbors. It must be thorough, for thousands of dollars investment may hang upon one decision. It is this authoritative, prompt, personal and thorough service which The Country Gentleman gives its readers, and which has won their confi dence and support. Tne service is ren dered through the mails by a department in The Country Gentleman known as the R. F. D. Letter Box. The farmer writes a letter to the R. F. D. Letter aBox Department, asking the question that is troubling him. In two or three days, or a week at most, he receives his answer and can at once put into effect the practical sug gestion it brings. More than 100 experts aid in rendering this service, They are picked men men prominent in the Federal De partment of Agriculture, state experiment stations and colleges, successful operators of large and small farms, orchards, dairies, poultry plants. Only skilled specialists in some one branch of modern agriculture are chosen and each advises only on his specialty. And although this service is gratuitous to the reader, the adviser is paid a fee for these replies, in proportion to the knowledge and attention they require. This, together with the deep interest which each of these men himself takes in the progress of scientific agriculture, ensures careful and complete treatment of the questions. The rapidity with which the Volume of this correspondence has grown shows its true usefulness. Often more than 100 letters, a day are answered. A Nebraskan asks what kind of a container should be used for peas and beans to be shipped twelve miles to market by express, Some of the questions from readers answered by The Country Gentleman Replanning an old farm The kind of clover to sow Varieties of apples to plant A man in Minnesota asks about draining a peat bog. A Californian asks about the feed values' of milo maize and cotton seed when fed to hogs. An Indianan requests a plan for a basement stable. Hundreds of these letters come from persons who say: "We followed your advice before with such good results that we want to ask you some more questions." And there are many farmers who regularly depend on The Country Gentleman and come back over and over again. ) H fr A significant feature of the correspondence is that 25 of the letters are either signed or obviously written by women. They emphasize that country women are closely concerned with actual work on the farm and that they read The Country Gentle man and rely upon it quite as much as do their husbands. Pruning the raspberry Fertilizers for celery Growing flowers for market Remedy for asparagus rust Spray for strawberries Nuts to grow in the North A plan for shrubbery planting Lime for alfalfa Ground barley for milch cows How to smoke pork Treatment for foundered horse Crops to grow for pigs Dry mash for poultry Installing the water wheel Forms for concrete posts Where to buy bean threshers Plan for farm tool house How to find customers for eggs How to lay out a homestead The best books on bee keeping Breaking bad habits in a dog How to can string beans Pasture crops for bees Tanning rabbit skins Control of Canada thistle Cost of cold storage Selling buttermilk cheese Cost accounts for a farm How to keep farm help Treatment of hog cholera Kitchen sewage disposal How to clean soy bean seed Recipe for sweet cider Alfalfa for silage Old auto for farm power Plan of convenient kitchen ' This whole service has two results of importance to the manufacturer who is judging The Country Gentle man as a medium for reach ing the farm market : 1. It develops among the readers a downright con fidence in the publication, a reliance and a habit of responding to what they read in it. This respon siveness is illustrated" by the fact that one article in The Country Gentle man recently sent 10,000 letters to the Department of Agriculture from o5r readers. This responsiveness adds much to the value of the advertising columns. 2. This correspondence also means that the readers advise the publication. They do this unknowingly, through these same in quiring letters. The questions, tabulated and classified, -show the trend of thought among farmers what they are thinking and doing, what they want to know about where they need help. To the editors,' therefore, these letters are, every month , the inspiration of new features for the pub lication itself, which bring it closer and closer to the true needs of its readers. , i TH CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY, INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA ' m I I 7 Ladies Home Journal The Saturday Evening $ast ; The Country Gentleman p: