No. 11. 



J}gricuUural Pitpers. 



357 



tlicr point connected with this subject. Ac- 

 cording T,o our terms, new subscriber.^ must 

 commence with the beginning or middle of 

 the volume. In all cases, when persons sub- 

 scribe when the volume is far advanced, they 

 are furnished with the preceding numbers, as 

 above stated; when the year e.xpires, unless 

 we have orders to the contrary, the Cabinet 

 is discontinued ; and in a number of instances, 

 in due time a formal complaint is entered that 

 A B subscribed for the Cabinet, and has not 

 received a number for such a period of time. 

 We turn to our books and the matter is at once 

 e.vplained. The difficulty lies here. The 

 person in question, notwithstanding he was 

 furnished with the back numbers, expected 

 the work for one year/rowi the time he sub- 

 scribed. All that is necessary to prevent dif- 

 ficulty, is a little care and attention on the 

 part of subscribers. We wish them all to 

 make themselves well acquainted with our 

 terms. We refer to these complaints, not that 

 they are numerous, but because they exist to 

 some extent, and that we wish to have the 

 proper remedy applied to every thing of the 

 kind. 



Each number as received should be stitched, 

 if convenient, in a paper cover, being first 

 careful to see if the sheet is properly folded, 

 then cut open, so as to be conveniently read, 

 and then laid carefully aside. By this means 

 they will be in a fit state for binding at the 

 completion of each volume. As it is our de- 

 sire that all who take the work should have it 

 perfect, we wish those who do not receive 

 their numbers in due season to give ns timely 

 notice thereof, and duplicate copies will be 

 sent. 



Considerhig the nature of the business, the 

 thousands we supply with our works, and the 

 great number of agents employed, the obscure 

 manner in which hundreds of names are 

 written, tlie irregularity in some cases of 

 transportation, &c., we congratulate ourselves 

 that the great mass of our subscribers have 

 received their papers with so much regularity. 



The present volume of the Cabinet, in ad- 

 dition to a great variety of useful and inter- 



esting articles on all the various departments 

 of Agriculture, Husbandry, and Rural Econ- 

 omy, contains entire two valuable treatises, 

 either of which are worth tar more than the 

 amount of a year's subscription, viz.: — f. On 

 THE Varikties, Propehties, Classification, 

 AND Cultivation of Wheat. II. On the 

 Management of the Dairy, particularly 

 with respect to the Making and Cvrino 

 OF Butter. — By Dr. James .Anderson. 



Agricultural Papers. 



In order to accommodate our friends, and 

 aid as far as possible the diffusion of agri- 

 cultural knowledge, subscriptions will be re- 

 ceived at the office of the Farmers' Cabinet 

 for the following named ])ublications: 



1. ♦' TIic Cultivator," ixiltlishcd inontlily 

 at Albany, under the editorial direction of 

 Judge BuEL, price one dollar per year. This 

 meritorious work is too well known to require 

 any recommendation at our hands, (t^ The 

 first four volumes of the Cultivator are on sale 

 at the office of the Cabinet, and may be had 

 neatly bound in one volume, price three dol- 

 lars and fifty cents. The fif'.h volume, bound 

 separately, price one dollar and fifty cents. 



52. Tlie Genesee Parmer, a weekly news- 

 paper, in the quarto lurm, published at Roches- 

 ter, New York, under the direction of Luther 

 Tucker, E?q., price two dollars per year. 

 The Farmer has reached its ninth volume, 

 and is still conducted with that distinguished 

 ability which secured f()r it, in the first years 

 of its existence, a high reputation for useful- 

 ness, and an extensive circulation. The 

 iMo.NTiiLY Genesee Farmer, consisting of 

 10 pages, quarto, is made up of selections 

 from the weekly Farmer, ft is consequently 

 a valuable work, and has a fair circulation. 

 Price fifty cents per year. 



3. TUc Elaine Farmer, piiblislied weekly 

 at Winthrop, Maine, eight pages, quarto. 

 The seventh volume is now in a course of 

 publication. Two dollars per year. Dr. E. 

 Holmes, editor. The Farmer is an excel- 

 lent work, although not devoted exclusively 

 to agriculture. We have occasionally en- 

 riched the Cabinet with extracts from its 

 pages. 



4-. Tlie Farmers' Moutlily Visiter, pub- 

 lished at Concord, N. Hampshire. Eacn num- 

 ber contains 16 large quarto pa^es. Price 

 seventy-five cents per year. The Visiter is 

 conducted by Hon. Isaac Hill, Governor of 

 the State. It exhibits n^uch industry ; con- 

 tains a large amount of matter of a practical 

 character, and is destined, we think, to take 



