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FOUR VALUABLE PHEMIIJMS 



Are offered to the four Agents of the Farmer's Monthly Visitor icho will procure the four largest numbers of new sub- 

 scribers' for that paper, paying in all cases the subscription for one year in advance according to the terms of the conditions. 

 These four premiums will be as follows : ,.,,.,,. , 



1. Webster's Dictionary, the largest and best in the English Language— the entire work unabridged in one volume 

 croion quarto, with the portrait of the Author : revised by Professor Goodrich of Yale College. Price $6. 



2. The Complete Works of William Shakspeare ; with a portrait from the Chandos Picture, and forty beautiful en- 

 graved illustrations, bound in Russia leather. Price $6. 



3. Spark's Life of Washington, royal octavo with illustrations : Price $5. 



4. Spark's Life of Franklin, royal octavo icith illustrations . Price $5. 



Ao-ents of last year with renewed lists for advance payment may include present subscribers in their count of numb 

 ££§= Subscriptions to be returned on or before the 25lh January next. 



oers. 



THE CHEAPEST AGRICULTURAL PAPER IN THE UNITED STATES : 



THE FARMER'S MONTHLY YISITOR, 



PUBLISHED AT CONCORD, N". H. 



' Those who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God, whose breasts he has made his peculiar deposit for substantial and genuine virtue." — Jefferson. 



On the first of January, The Monthly Visitor will have 

 been. published ten years in one hundred and twenty suc- 

 cessive numbers, containing each sixteen pages of the royal 

 quarto size, and being of itself a library of instructive mat- 

 ter, valuable even after its time, to the common farmer. 

 During the term of its existence, in all the old thirteen At- 

 lantic States of the Union, there has been an awakening at- 

 tention to the necessity of agricultural improvement ; and 

 in that time the six New England States, in many of their 

 counties, have made greater agricultural advances than in all 

 the previous half a century of years. The Visitor has had 

 its humble share in arousing the spirit of improvement ; in 

 none, or very few instances, has it published those mistaken 

 articles calculated to mislead : it claims the alone merit of 

 holding back in the Morns Mullticaulis speculation — it has 

 recommended no new plan or system of agriculture where 

 its editor felt any uncertainty about its practicability. Our 

 aim has been to adapt all recommended improvements es- 

 pecially to New England and to Northern cultivation. That 

 the Visitor has had its influence in many neighborhoods, is 

 proved to its editor in repeated acknowledgments of its 

 readers and patrons in all the New England States. 



Our annual subscription list has varied in the last nine 

 years between 2500 and 6000 : the smaller number will 

 scarcely pay the ordinary expenses of publication at the re- 

 duced prices. The labor of the editor all the lime has been 

 gratuitous. 



While our paper is the cheapest in the country for the 

 quantity and value of its matter, it is such a publication as 

 interferes with the circulation of none of the other useful 

 publications of the day. It has no controversy with any of 

 the religions or political dogmas of sects or parties — it has 

 presented no matter calculated to provoke the hostility of 

 the mendacious, to awaken obstinate prejudice, or to raise a 

 blush upon the cheek of modesty — it is fitted for the read- 

 ers of both the parlor and the kitchen. 



The Visitor is issued from the Bookstore of JOHN F. 

 BROWN, Concord, N. H., to whom all subscriptions and 

 communications (paid or free of postage if possible) may be 

 directed as for the business of the new year. 



T ERMS. 



To single subscribers, Fifty Cents. Ten per cent. will, 

 be allowed to the person who shall.send more than one sub- 

 scriber. Twelve copies will be sent for the advance pay- 

 ment of Five Dollars ; twenty-five copies for Ten Dollars ; 

 sixty copies for Twenty Dollars. The payment in every 

 case to be made in advance. Old subscribers who neglect 

 payment beyond the year will be charged seventy-five cents 

 a year. Those paying in advance, who receive the first 

 number of a new year, will return it at once if they do not 

 wish to continue, with the name of the town or place where 

 it is received : otherwise, they will be considered permanent 

 subscribers. 



rr^ Money and subscriptions by a regulation of the Post 

 Master General, may in all casts be remitted by the Post 

 Master, free of postage. 



33= All gentlemen who have heretofore acted as Agents 

 are requested to continue their Agency. 



gj= Subscribers' names as far as obtained, may be return- 

 ed to JOHN F. BROWN, Concord, N. H. Agents can if 

 they please retain the heading of the subscription for new 

 subscribers. This heading taken from the newspaper and 

 pasted over white paper may be used by any of our friends 

 as a subscription for extending the circulation of our cheap 

 paper. 



AGENTS FOR THE VISITOR. 



Gentlemen to whom this number of the Visitor is direct- 

 ed are requested to act as Agents in extending the circula- 

 tion of the Visitor. We have taken the liberty to publish 

 the foregoing list, from among our generous patrons, and to 

 ask each of them to take the agency at their respective 

 places. 



SUBSCRIBERS' NAMES. 



RESIDENCE. 



NO. COPIES. 



