1866.1 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
339 
IS^EW BOOKS. 
SAUNDERS' DOMESTIC POULTRY. 
B}' S. M. Saunders. New Edilion Re- 
viseil iiiul Enliirgptl. CoiVainina; Aiticles on 
tlie PrefLTiiljle Brecils of F;inii-Y;n(l Pci'illl'y, 
Their History ;ui<l Leailiiii;' Cliinicterislics, 
ivitli Compleie Instructions ibr Broi'dinganil 
FatteiiinL"-, and Preparing for Exliil)itiou at 
Poultry Shows, etc., cu-', derived from tlie 
Author's E.xiieriencc and Ol)servaiioii. 
Price, paper 40 cts., cloth 75 els. 
NOW RE.IDY, 
PEAT AND ITS USES. 
BY 
PEOFESSOR SAMUEL W. JOHNSON, 
or TALE COLLEGE. 
This is a thnrongldj' practical work, adapted to 
the use of Farmers, aud to all interested in the 
development of 
THE WEALTH IN THE PEAT SWAJIPS. 
It is systematically arranged in llireo parts, 
Part I, living the Orisin, Varieties and 
Chemical Cliaraclcrs of Peat and Swamp 
Muck; Part II, the Agricultural Uses of 
Peat and Mnck. Manner of Composting, Use in 
the Stable aud Brirnvard, Effects upoirdifferent 
Soils, etc. ; and Pjirt III treats oTi 
PE.^T AS FUEL, 
In which the manner of working peat In Eu- 
ropean countries is given, together with the 
descriptions of many E'iropean and American 
Peat Machines. — It is fully illustrated. 
Price, ^1.25. 
MY \TNEYARD AT LAKEVIEW ; 
Or, Successful Grape Culture. Being real 
E.xperience, with all the attractions of a Novel. 
Illustrated. Price, $1.2.5. 
QUINBY'S BEE-KEEPING. 
By M. QuiNET, Practical Beedieeper. Fully 
Illustrated. Entirely new. The result of '65 
years' of successful experience. Price .fL.IO. 
NEW BOOK OF FLOWERS. 
By Joseph Bkeck, Practical Ilorticulturist. 
Beautifully IlUmtrated. Price $1.75. 
MINIATURE FRUIT GvVRDEN. 
By TnOMAS Ri\T3its. lUuslraled. Orjiow to 
raise many kinds of fruit on i<mall trec-'t, with 
full directions for Training and Culture. 
Price .$ 1.00. 
ORANGE JUDD &, CO., 
41 Park Row, New York. 
eSJrr POBT-fAID OS RECEIPT OF PKICE. 
THE EXTRA TRIBUFE. 
THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN. 
A political struggle, rarely surpassed in importance or intensity, has been precipitated on th(i 
country by the treachery of Andrew Johnson and some of his official or persontd adherents to the 
great and patriotic parly by which they were intrusted with power. 
The aim of this treachery is to put the steadfast loyalists of the South under the feet of the 
" whipped but not subdued" Rebels, and to enable the latter to glut their vengeance ou the for- 
mer, whom they hale aud curse as responsible for the most unexpected overthrow of their darling 
" Confederacy." 
The recent wholesale massacres at Memphis and New-Orleans were but conspicuous manifes- 
taliims of the spirit now rampant in the South, whereof the pro-Rebel triumph in Kentucky is a 
more recent example. The soldiers of Lee, Beauregard, Johnston and Hood, are now the domi- 
nant power from the Potomac to the Rio Grande ; they elect each other to office in preference 
even to stay-at-home Rebels; they have supplanted nearly all others as policemen of Southern 
cities; they are organized aud officered as State militia; and they ruthlessly crush every demon- 
stration of loyal Whites or loyal Blacks in assertion of the Equal Rights of Ainericau Freemen. 
The school-houses of the Blacks are burned and their White teachers subjected to violence and 
outrage by unchanged Rebels, who relieve the work of murder and arson by cheers for Andy 
Johnson and execrations of Congress. 
The purpose of forcing representatives of the Rebel States into Congress, in clefianccof the loy- 
al oath, by Presidential fiat and Military power, is openly avowed, with threats that those who 
resist it shall be treated as rebels, and a civil war thus kindletl throughout the North and West. 
It has thus become imperative that those who stand for Liberty and Loyaltj' — for the right of 
the Union to exist and of Man to be Free — should organize aud work to sirengthen the hands of 
Congress for the inevitable contest before us. 
We must convince the South and the Copperheads that revolutions go not backward — that 
Emancipation is an unchangeable fact — that the glorious Civil Rights Act can never be repealed 
that the rights of the humblest American are henceforth guaranteed and shielded by the Federal 
Constitution, and must be maintained against all gainsn3-ers — that the days \vherein Blacks had no 
rights which Whiles were bound to respect have passed away forever. 
Wo hold to-day the power in all the Free States of 1860, in West Virginia, and in Missouri be- 
side. We must hold these in our ensuing elections, and add lo Ihcm Maryland and Delaware — 
the fcn'uier lost to us through treachery, otherwise Johnsonism. We must elect to the XLili Con- 
gress an overwhelming majority devoted to Loyalty, Nationality, and the inalienable Rights of Man. 
To this end, let Light and Truth be systematically diffused to every neighborhood, cveiy fire- 
side, throughout our broad country. 
To this end, we propo.=e an extra issue of The Weekly Tribune (identical in size and con- 
tents with the regular edition), which we will supply lo all orders received prior lo the 13lh of 
September, the sul)scriplion to commence on receipt of the money, on the following terms: 
2 copies for three months $1 
12 
■26 
60 
100 
. 5 
.10 
.20 
.30 
Payable always in advance. 
All friends of the cause are invited to form clubs ; but we employ no traveling agents, and 
warn all against paying money to other thau persons of known responsibility. 
Address THE TRIBUIVE, 
154 Nassan-st., IVe^v York. 
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6:ig Minor-Bt., FUiladelpUift. 
How to do it : 
Or, Dircctiona for knowing nud Doin'j; everyihlnK needful. 
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1 Volume, bound In boards, cluth back.s. Price 5ii cents, and 
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Short-Ifand Without a Master, 
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otlier Ktvles of Gold Pens. Send sianip for Circular. County 
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