THE GEN1ESEE FARMER. 



71 



S 



PALDING'S PREPARED GLUE 



SPAJL DING'S PREPARED GLUE ! 

 SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE I 



SAVE THE pieces: 



ECONOSI Y : DISPATCH '. 



J:^~"A Stitch in Time saves Nine."„^J 



An accidents will Itappen,, even in well-regulated families, it 

 is very desirable to liave some cheap and convenient way for 

 repairing Furniture, Toys, Croclcery, «&c. 



SPALDING'S PKEPAEfb GLUE 

 meets all such emergencies, and no household can afford to be 

 without it. It is always rea.ly and up to the sticking point. There 

 is no longer any necessity for limping chairs, splintered veneers, 

 headless dolls, and broken cradles. It is just the article for cone, 

 shell, and other ornamental work, so popular with ladies of refine- 

 ment and taste. 



This admirable preparation is used cold, being chemically held 

 in solution, and possessing all the valuable qualities of the best 

 cabinet-makers' Glue. It may be used in the place of ordinary 

 mucilage, being vastly more adhesive. 



"USEFUL IN EVERT HOUSE." 

 N. B. — A Brush accompanies each bottle. Price, 25 cents. 



Wholesale Depot, No. 30 Piatt Street, New York. 



Address 



HENRY C. SPALDING & CO., 



Box No. 3,600 New York. 



Put up for Dealers in Cases containing four, eight, and twelve 

 dozen— a beautiful Lithograph Show-Card accompanying each 

 package. 



^-A single bottle of SPALDING'S PREPAPvED GLUE 

 will save ten times its cost annually to every household. .,^3 



Sold by all prominent Stationers, Druggists, Hardware and 

 Furniture Dealers, Grocers, and Fancy Stores. 



Country Merchants should make a note of SPALDING'S PRE- 

 PARED GLUE, when making up their list. It will stand any 

 I climate. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE! 



USEFUL IN EVERT HOUSE. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT STATIONERS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT DRUGGISTS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT HARDWARE DEALERS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT HOUSE-FURNISHING STORES. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT FURNITURE DEALERS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT FANCT-GOODS DEALERS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 SOLD BT GROCERS. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 

 BOLD BT COUNTRY MERCHANTS GENERALLY. 



Manufactnred br 



HENBY C. SPALDING & CO., 



4:8 Cedar Street, New York. 



Address Post-Offlce, Box No. 8,600. Dec, 1859.— Ijr 



THE PEOPLE'S MILL. 



SANFORD'S PATENT 



A FARM MILL, Portable, simple, compact, and made on an 

 entirely new principle, wllh plates having a reciprocating 

 and oscillating, instead of a rotary motion, wiih all the power 

 applied within one inch of the center of the shaft, and one that 

 has been fully tested and in proved by two years' experience, is 

 now offered to the public. Every Mill is tested, and not one is 

 sent out unless it will grind a bushel of hard corn fine enough lor 

 stock feed in eight minutes ; many kinds of grain it will grind 

 much faster. 

 It is the Premium Mill for the People, and obtained 



THE SILVER MEDAL AT TIIE LATE EXHIBITION 



at the American Institute in the city of New Tork. 



The People's Mill can be put into any Saw-mill. 



The People's Mill Is the cheapest Mill ever offered to the public 



The People's Mill is the simplest Mill ever made. 



The People's Mill is the most durable in use. 



The People's Mill has the most grinding surface of any porta- 

 ble mill. 



The People's Mill requires less power than any othei? doing the 

 same amount of work. 



The People's Mill requires less speed than any other mill. 



The People's Mill is adapted to any kind of power. 



The People's Mill is not a rotary mill. 



The People's Mill obviates all the objections to the cast iron 

 rotary mill. 



The People's Mill will grind all kinds of grain, coarse or fine. 

 for feed. 



The People's Mill will grind plaster, bones, salt, all kinds of 

 grain, malt, peas, beans, spices, etc., etc. 



The People's Mill, largest size, requires about two horse power. 



The People's Mill only requires about two hundred and fifty 

 revolutions per minute. 



The People's Mill, largest size, will grind from 150 to 200 bush- 

 els of grain in 24 houi-s. 



The People's Mill may be renewed at the cost of the plates 

 which will be furnished at 50 cents each. 

 The plates are made of hard iron, dressed or grooved on both 



sides, and the reciprocating motion keeps the grinders sharp. 



There is no bolt to it, which, we think, experience iias proved of 



no use on portable mills. The common sieve is sufficient for all 



ordinary family purposes. Three sizes — 



No. 1, A HAND-MILL, PRICE $20, Na. 2, $30, No. 3, $40. 



LIBEF.AL DISCOUNT MADE TO DEALEP.S. 



A mill may be seen in constant use at my shop ; also at No. 17 

 Spruce St., New York, a few doors below the Tribune Building. 



2^~ I will fill all orders for Belting at cost. 



Address R- !■• H01VARD, 



Buffalo, N. Y. 



I^T* I also manufacture the Improved Ketchum Grass and 

 Grain Harvester. Feb'y— 3t 



1860. AMERICAN STOCK JOURNAL. 1860. 



THE great success which has attended the publication of the 

 First Volume of the AMKRICAN STOCK JOURNAL, has 

 induced the Proprietor to undertake. several improvements for the 

 Volume commencing January, lS6ii, and he now offers it to the 

 public with the assurance that its pre.sent high character will be 

 fully sustained, and no effort will be spared to render the paper an 

 indispensable necessity to rdl interested in the Breeding and Man- 

 agement of our Domestic Animals. 



The VETERINARY DEPARTMENT will be under the edi- 

 torial direction of Doct. GEO. H. DADD. the distinguished Vet- 

 erinary Surgeon, and the late Editor and Proprietor 6t the Amer- 

 ican Veterinary Journal. 



Each number of the paper contains -32 large octavo pages, and 

 is handsomely illustrated. It is publi.Hhe<l monthly at ih Pakk 

 Row, New Tork. Terms, $1 per year, invariably in advance, 

 with a liberal discount to clubs. 



p^~ Specimen copies gratis. Money may be sent at publish* 

 er's risk, in registered letters. 



D. C. LINSLET, Proprietor. 



C, M. 8AXT0N, BARKER, & CO., Agents, 



j 2t No. 25 Park Row, New Tork. 



CRANBERRY CULTURE. — The sulwriber has issued a 

 Circular on the CRANBEKRT AND ITS CULTURE, and 

 will forward it free of charge, by mail, to those wishing it. He 

 also has the plants for sale, for both High and Low lands, and 

 will forward them in a fresh state, by Express, to all parts of the 

 United States. Price, Bell and Washington varieties, $5 per 1000, 

 or $20 per 5000 plants ; Barberry and Cherry varieties, $3 per 

 1000, or $11 per 5000 plants. Address 



' '^ PAUL CHILSON, 



Peb'y 2t Bellingham, Norfolk Co.. Mass. 



RUSSIA OR BASS MATS — Peleeted expressly for budding 

 andtving. GUNNY BAGS, TWINES, !IAY RoPE, &c., 

 suitable for Nurserymen and Farmers, for sale in lois to suit, by 

 D. W MANWARING, Importer, 

 Sept, 1869.— ly* 248 Front Street, New Tork. 



