PREMIUMS 



AWARDED BY THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE, 1862. 



Jlgricultural. 



D. H. Furbish, Portland, Maine, for the best machine for sow- 

 ing cereals broadcast, (Cahoon's Broadcast Seed Sower.) Ex- 

 hibited by Mapes &, Lockwood, No. 23 Cortland street, New 

 York. Gold medal. 



A. M. Halsted, Rye, N. Y., for the best hand cultivator. Sil- 

 ver medal. 



Whittemore Brothers, Chicopee Falls, Mass., for a chaff cutter. 

 Exhibited by Mapes & Lockwood, No. 23 Cortland street, New 

 York. Diploma. 



Levi A. Beardslee, South Edmeston, N. Y., for a hay elevator 

 and horse-power fork. Exhibited by Mapes & Lockwood, No. 23 

 Cortland street. New York. Diploma. 



Whittemore, Belcher & Co., Chicopee Falls, Mass., for a hay 

 and cornstalk cutter. Exhibited by Mapes & Lockwood, No. 23 

 Cortland street. Diploma. 



Thaddeus Selleck, Greenwich, Conn., for an improvement in 

 horse shoes, being the application of Franklinite. Diploma. 



Hitchings & Co., No. 248 Canal street, New York, for improve- 

 ments in heating conservatories. Gold medal. 



Sanford & Mallory, No. 5 White street, New York, for San- 

 ford's flax dressing machine. Large gold medal. 



L. A. Roberts, Brooklyn, N. Y., for an essay on the cultivation 

 of the apple. G old medal. 



Geo. H. Hite, Morrisania, N. Y., for a paper on pruning the 

 pear. Diploma. 



