or***: 



FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST. 



$3 A YEAR. 



EIGHT PAGES. 



THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST ia the only agricultural paper in the State, and the 

 best in the South. If you wish to get reliable information about Florida, its climate, 

 soil, and capacity ; accurate details as to the cultivation of the Orange and Tropical 

 Fruits, and the profits to be derived therefrom, subscribe to THE FLORIDA AGRICUL- 

 TURIST, an 8-page weekly paper, 32 broad columns. 



Opinions of the Press. 



THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST comes to us regu- 

 larly, and is full of useful hints as well as personal 

 experience in the culture of Florida's fruits arid 

 vegetables. It fills a void long felt in Florida jour- 

 nalism, is well worthy of support, and will become 

 almost a necessity to the fruit-grower in oar State. 

 Apalachlcola Times. 



It is a capital paper, and every farmer or planter 

 who invests in the amount of subscription will have 

 his' money back live, ten, and a hundredfold. In 

 fact, no man or woman who lives by the cultivation 

 of the soil can study his own interest and not be- 

 come a subscriber. at. Auguxtine Pi-ess. 



The Monticello Constitution of February 25, 1875, 



says : " THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST is the only 

 journal devoted exclusively to the interest of agri- 

 culturists, that is published in this State, and it 

 should receive a generous support. The proceed- 

 ings of the recent Fruit-Growers' Association are now 

 being published in its columns, which is of interest 

 not only to planters, but to every man who has a 

 permanent interest in the State. The typograpny 

 of the AGRICULTURIST is elegant, and it is edited 

 with marked ability." 



THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST, published in Jack- 

 sonville, Florida, is destined to rank with the best. 

 It has improved from the start, and will no doubt 

 meet with a liberal support. Palatka Herald. 



The following resolution was adopted at a recent I "To parties in the orange culture your paper 

 meeting of the Nassau county (Fla.) Agricultural j must be doubled in value. The plain statement of 



Society : 



"Resolved, That, recognizing, as we do, the im- 

 portance of having a live public journal devoted to 

 the agricultural interests of our State, we cheerfully 

 endorse THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURIST, published at 

 Jacksonville, and earnestly recommend not only the 

 members of our own but other societies and all oth- 

 ers interested in the welfare of Florida, to subscribe 

 for and thus help to maintain a journal which is 

 doing so much to develop our resources." 



A subscriber, writing from Duval county, Fla., 

 says: "I must acknowledge the immense value of 

 your paper to me and all new-comers, as a guide 

 and instructor. Any one number is worth a year's 

 price. Your recipe for bots in horses is just the 

 thing. I had occasion to use it last week, and saved 

 a valuable horse. Nothing can be better than your 

 instructions for monthly planting. As we have no 

 experience with this climate, we must learn from 

 those who have had it, and not many can afford to 

 lose one or two years experimenting. Too many 

 have already done so, and now they are gone away 

 crying down our State, simply because they would 

 not take, or could not get, proper advice. 



Address. 

 ^WSend ten cents for a specim 



facts and experience from such able correspondents 

 as your Mr. Fowler, Dr. Mason, and others, togeth~ 

 er with the work of M. Gallesio, furnishes valuable 

 information to be gotten nowhere else. I would 

 mention many other merits, but any one who reads 

 any single number of THE AGRICULTURIST will see 

 for themselves." 



Another, writing from Manchester, N. Y., says : 

 " I am so well pleased with THE FLORIDA AGRICUL- 

 TURIST, although only in its second year, that I 

 heartily wish that every lover of Florida and her 

 charming climate might read it, and hand it around 

 among their friends at the North, that they may 

 learn of the 'Land of Flowers.' Your paper has 

 passed its crisis, and can now well work its way in- 

 to the hearts of the best classes of readers both 

 South and North, and especially all through your 

 State. Many an agricultural paper at the North has 

 been published for years before it could compare 

 with your paper. I trust your people are proud of 

 their pioneer agricultural weekly. I am engaged in 

 organizing a colony for Florida, and intend to make 

 a permanent location during the coming summer." 



OH AS. H. WALTON & CO., Publisher*, 



Jacksonville, Fla. 



