276 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[July, 
(Advertisements on this page, $"3.50 per Agate Line of Space.) 
ESTABLISHED 1861. 
THE 
TEA COMPANY 
Receive their Teas by the Cargo from the 
best Tea districts of China and Japan, and 
sell them in quantities to suit customers 
AT CARGO PRICES. 
CLUB ORDERS PROMPTLY SUPPLIED. 
PRICE LIST OF TEAS. 
OOLONG (Black i, 70c, 80c, Ode., nest SI if) ft. 
MIXED. (Green an. I Mack), 70c., 80c, 90c, best $1 per ft. 
ENGLISH BREAKFAST (Black), 80c, 90c., fl, $1.10, best 
$1.20 per pound. 
IMPEItlAl. (Green). soc.,90c.,$I.$i.io. best SI.'J."> per pound. 
YOUNG HYSON (Green), 80c, 90c, $1, |1.10, Ijcst S1.83 per 
ponnd. 
KNCOLOIJED JAPAN. 90c, St. $1.10, best Sl.M per pound. 
UUNl'OWDliU, (Green), best $1.50 per pound. 
COFFEES ROASTED AND GROUND DAILY. 
GUOCTND COFFEE.20c.,25c.,S0c.,35c.,best40c.per pound. 
Hoti'h, Saloons. Boarding-house keepers, and Families who 
nse large quantities of Coffee, can economize in that article 
by using our FRENCH BREAKFAST AND DINNER COF- 
FEE, wliicli we sell at the low price of 36c. per pound, and 
warrant to »ive perfect satisfaction. KOAsTL.I) (UliLTOimil), 
SOc, 35c, best 40c. per lb. GREEN (Unroasted), 33c., 30c, 
Sac, best 35c per lb. 
"We warrant all the goods we sell to give entire satisfac- 
tion. If they are not satisfactory, they can be returned at 
our expense within thirty days, and have the money re- 
funded. 
: Great American Tea Company, I 
Nos. 31 and 33 VESEY-ST., 
: Post-Office Dox, 5,1.13, New Tori; City. 
UNIVERSAL 
ClOTHESWRINCER 
Recommended as "Best," by American AarinrUurif-t. 
(See Premium List and back numbers.! Sold by (balers 
generally. R. C.BROWNING, Gen. Agent, 
32<Uortlandt-st., .New V<<rk. 
HORSFORD'S SELF-RAISING BREAD 
PREPARATION 
Makes the most wholesome and best of bread, jiiscuit, 
cakbs, &c. Unlike some other yeast, it contains no POISON 
to create DYSPEPSIA, and tin* bread may therefore he 
eaten hot without detriment. Resolving itself into Phos- 
phate of Lime and soda, it prevents RICKETS, CHOLERA, 
and decay of TEICT1I. and promotes the growth of Muscle 
and Hone. In "raising" the dough'it does not, like other 
yeast, decompose Hour, hut adds nutriment to the bread, 
and otherwise improves it in quality and Quantity. Each 
package contains lull directions for use. Semi for pam- 
phlet, snpplied gratis. Ask your Grocer for "Horsford's 
Bread Preparation." WILSON, LOCKWOOD. EVERETT 
.'. i (>., Wholesale As-nls, 201 Fulton-st., New York. 
Interesting to Ladies. — I have bad one 
of Grover & Baker's machines in use fourteen 
years, during which time I have worked con- 
stantly on it, and it has never cost one cent for 
repairs. 
E. A. Page, 
Keene, N. H. 
PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES, 
For Farm, Mining, or 
MECHANICAL PURPOSES. 
These machines require no brick-work ; mounted on legs, 
they are especially adapted for use in Mills, Shops, Foun- 
dries, or Printing Rooms; or mounted on wheels, they are 
adapted for out-door work. Threshing, Wood Sawing, etc. 
Circulars, with description and prices, furnished on appli- 
cation to A. N. WOOD & CO., 
Eaton, Madison County, N. Y. 
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COL- 
LEGE, Amherst, Mass. For Circulars or any desired 
information, address the President, W. S. CLARK. 
Rural Improvements. 
R. M. Copeland, Author of Country Life, furnishes plans 
and advice for laying out and planting Public and Private 
grounds of every description. Refers to John M. Forbes, 
Boston: Kufua Waterman, Providence, R. I.: Francis G. 
Shaw, New Yorlc City; Rev. E. T. Fletcher, Indianapolis, 
Ind.; O. S. Rubbed, Philadelphia, Penn.: Dr. John T. Oil- 
man, Portland, Me. 40 Barrister's Hall, Boston, Mass. 
ITREE1 I Our New Catalogue of Improved 
Jt IiajU , sTKVCIl. DIES. MOKE THAN 
A IflO.Vfl'M is being made with them, 
S. M. SPENCER & CO., Brattleboro, Vt. 
AD. PUTNAM & CO., Produce Commission 
• Merchants, No. fis IVarl-st. New York. "Quicksales 
and prompt returns." £3T" Send for our weekly Price Cur 
rent and Marking Plate. _&$ 
W 
HY BE TROUBLED "WITH 
FLIES 
and 
MOSQUITOES? 
A SURE PREVENTIVE. 
W 1 bi <l © w Screens 
ON A NEAV FLAN. 
Neater, stronger, cheaper, and Better in Every Respect, 
than any other SCREEN in the marke' 
tail. Send for a Circular. 
:et. Wholesale and Re- 
E. S. & J. TORRET & CO., 
No. 11 Barclay-st., New York. 
American Weeds and Useful Plants. 
BY WILLIAM DARLINGTON, M. D. 
Revised, with addition?, 
BY PROF. GEORGE THURBER. 
An enumeration and description of useful Plants and 
Weeds, which merit the notice, or require the attention 
of American Agriculturists. 
CONTENTS. 
Remarks on Weeds. 
Structural Botany. 
Analytical Key to 
Natural Orders. 
Botanical classification. 
Botanical Terms. 
Authors 1 N ihes. 
Botanical Names. 
English and Foreign Names. 
Names of Plants Illustrated. 
SENT POST-PAID. PRICE, $1.75. 
GARDENING FOR PROFIT 
Iu the Market and Family Garden. 
By PETER HENDERSON. 
Everything is made perfectly plain. Read the Table 
of Contents. 
Men Fitted for Gardening. 
Amount of Capital Required. 
Profits of Market Gardening. 
Manures and Implements. 
Location, Situation, Preparation. 
When, and Where to Sow. 
Transplanting; Insects. 
Varieties and Cultivation. 
Packing for Shipping. 
Preservation in Winter. 
Find Out from this hook how to make money from 
your Garden, 
SENT POST-PAID, .... PRICE, $1.50 
COPELAND'S COUNTRY LIFE. 
A COMPENDIUM OF 
AGRICULTURAL &. HORTICULTURAL 
Practical Knowledge. 
By ROBERT MORRIS COPELAND. 
It contains 926 large Octavo Pages and 250 Engravings, 
and embraces Descriptions, nints, Suggestions and De- 
tails of great value to those interested in Country Life. 
The following are some of the matters of which it treats : 
DRAINING. 
CATTLE. 
SHEEP. 
SHRUBS. 
FRUITS. 
FLOWERS. 
VEGETABLES. 
HOT-HOUSE PLANTS. 
CRAPE CULTURE. 
ORNAMENTAL TREES. 
The r . iieiieii Garden receives particular attention. 
In short, as its name indicates, the book treats of almost 
every subject that needs consideration by those living in 
the country, or having anything to do with the cultivation 
of the soil. 
SENT POST-PAID, .... PRICE, $5.00. 
ORANCE JUDD & CO., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
NEW 
American Farm Book. 
ORIGINALLY Br 
R. L. ALLEN, 
Author of " Diseases of Domestic Animals" and formerly 
editor of the " American Agriculturist" 
REVISED AND ENLARGED BT 
LEWIS F. ALLEN, 
Author of "American Cattle,'" editor of the "American 
Short-horn Herd Book" etc. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
Everything connected with the business of farming 
finds a place in it ; soils, manures of every kind, irriga- 
tion and draining, grasses, grain and root crops, fruits, 
cotton, hemp, fences, farm buildings, domestic cattle, 
sheep, poultry, and the like. The work has been written 
with great care by men qualified to discuss the subject, 
and it is really valuable. The chapter on soils should be 
read carefully by every farmer who desires to make the 
most of the land he cultivates. The chapter on fruits 
constitutes an important feature of the work ; and there 
is nothing in it which is not well considered and useful. 
Worcester Daily Spy. 
Comprehensive and careful, telling, and telling specif- 
ically, just what the tillers of the soil need to know, it 
will prove of great advantage to all who faithfully follow 
its counsels iu the spirit in which they are given. 
Congregalioncdisl & Recorder. 
It intelligently and quite fully discusses the various 
operations of farm life, and is invaluable to all engaged 
in agriculture. Farmer's Cabinet. 
For the young man of rural tastes, but without a train- 
ing at the plow-handles, who asks for a general guide and 
instructor that shall be to agriculture what the map of 
the world is to geography, it is the best manual in print. 
For the working farmer, who in summer noonings and 
by the winter fireside would refresh his convictions and 
reassure his knowledge by old definitions and well-con- 
sidered summaries, it is the most convenient hand-book. 
From its double authorship one might expect some show 
of patch-work, the original statement of the author of 
l^Uli, annotated and qualified by the writer of this year. 
But this has been wisely avoided. The book is a unit, 
and shows no disparity of style nor contradiction in 
statement. Practically it is altogether a recent and time- 
ly volume. Only so much of the original Book of the 
Farm, by R. L. Allen, as time could not change, has been 
adopted by the reviser. New York Tribune. 
It is a volume of over five hundred pages, and in ils 
present shape comprises all that can well be condensed 
into an available volume of its kind. 
Barlford Daily Times. 
It is almost as comprehensive as a cyclopaedia. We 
can safely recommend it as a valuable and standard work. 
Salem Gazette. 
It has a very wide range of subjects, taking up nearly 
all matters that are most important to farmers. Com- 
prising the combined wisdom and experience of two em- 
inent agriculturists, it must prove of great value to the 
class for whom it is prepared. New York Observer. 
It is crammed full of just the information that is want- 
ed, which it is a pleasure to recommend. We know of 
no belter encyclopaedia of farming. 
_Yr ir York Independent. 
In ils present revised and enlarged form, it is a work 
that every practical farmer may consult with advantage, 
and none can well afford to do without. 
Christian Intelligencer. 
It is something in favor of this work that it has been 
before the public for many years. The original work was 
prepared with extraordinary care, and contained a vast 
amount of general truth that is as applicable now as it 
was then ; it has therefore been made the basis of the 
present work, which, to all intents and puiposes, is new, 
since it is adapted to the present improved state of agri- 
cultural knowledge. Every department is prepared with 
conscientious care and with a view of making the work 
a reliable source of agricultural information. 
Chicago Republican. 
SENT POST-PAID PRICE $2.50. 
ORANCE JUDD & CO., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
