AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
Ammonia. 
Approbation, Liberal. 
Bachelors, No place for. 
Bound Volumes, and Back Numbers. 
Breaking up of Court. 
Buckwheat. 
Burlington Vt„ Farming about. 
Californian Poetry. 
Camel in America, Domestication of the, 
Cattle. Mr. Miller’s Sale of. 
“ Moving. 
“ Transportation of Beef. 
Coming out Plump. 
Corpulence a Crime. 
Correspondents <t Contributers, Note to. 
Cool Decidedly. 
Crops, Prospect of.. 
Difference, A very slight. 
O'-'- Extraordinary Fidelity in a. 
Dorking, White. 
Dreadful. 
Editor’s Farm Notes, Providence R. I_ 
Farm Notes, Our. 
Fever and Ague. 
Flour going East by a new Route. 
Force of Habit. 
Garden, What it should be. 
Gardens that never fail. 
Gooseberries, Cultivation of. 
Grain, Swelling of. 
Horse, A Monster. 
“ Show in Rhode Island. 
Horticultural Show in Rhode Island. 
“ Society of New York. 
Horticulture, Foreign. 
Horticulturists, Note to. 
nour. The last. 
Markets. 
Manure, Housing. 
Mowing. 
Needle Swallowed and Extricated.. 
Newspapers vs. Whiskey. 
Nitrogen. 
Ox, Runaway, in Broadway. 
Patent Claims, Agricultural.. 
Promise, A. 
Quackery in Medicine. 
Railway Car, How to get a seat in. 
Roses. 
Snake Killing Extraordinary. 
South, Intemperance at the. 
Sparrowgrass Mr, & Mrs. 
Spelling, Excuse Bad. 
Tools, Get them ready. 
Trade, Have a. 
Subscriptions Expiring. 
What next. 
Yankee, Frenchman’s description of a— 
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Special Notices to Subscribers, Correspondents, &c- 
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Address ALLEN & CO., 
189 Water street, New-York. 
J. A. GRAY, Printer, 95 and 97 Cliff street, N.Y. 
PUBLISHERS’ ANNOUNCEMENT! 
Twelfth Volume of 
THE AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
THE LEADING WEEKLY AGRICULTURAL PAPER OE THE COUNTRY. 
T1SE AMERIC A KT ^a.C3HlICITIiiTITR.IST, 
A weekly Periodical of 16 large quarto pages, making an annual volume of 832 pages of 
nearly double the size of those in the first ten volumes of the Agriculturist. 
N. B. The work is divided into two semi-annual volumes of 416 pages, each volume having a com¬ 
plete index. 
It is beautifully printed with type east expressly for it, and on the best of clear white paper, with 
wide margin, so that the numbers can be easily stitched or bound together. 
A copious Index is weekly added, which will be fully amplified at the end of each half yearly vol¬ 
ume for the bound work. 
COMPREHENSIVE IN ITS CHARACTER, 
Each volume will contain all matter worth recording, which transpires either at home or abroad, 
and which can serve to instruct or interest the Farmer, the Planter, the Fruit-Grower, the Gardener, 
and the Stock-Breeder; thus making it the most complete and useful Agricultural Publication£of the 
day. 
CORRECT AND VALUABLE MARKET REPORTS. 
The Markets will he carefully reported, giving the actual transactions which take place from week 
to week, in Grain, Provisions, Cattle, Ac., thus keeping our readers constantly and reliably advised 
as to their interests. During the past year the knowledge obtained from these Market Reports alone, 
has saved our readers thousands of dollars, by informing them of the best time to sell or purchase. 
SUCH A PAPER IS DEMANDED BY THE FARMING COMMUNITY. 
The Publishers confidently believe that the agriculturists of this country are becoming too much 
awake to the demands of their own calling, to be longer satisfied with the slow monthly issues of a 
paper professedly devoted to their interests, or to trust alone to the irresponsible extracts in a “ farmer’s 
column,” so popular just now in papers chiefly devoted to business, politics, or literature; and they 
look for the united support of all the intelligent farmers of this country in their continued effort to fur¬ 
nish a weekly paper of high and reliable character, which shall he progressive, and at the same time 
cautious and conservative in all its teachings. 
ESSENTIALLY AN AGRICULTURAL PAPER. 
The Agriculturist will not depart from its legitimate sphere to catch popular favor by lumbering 
up its pages with the silly, fictitious literature, and light, miscellaneous matter of the day; it has a 
higher aim; and a small part only of its space will he devoted to matters not immediately pertaining 
to the great business of agriculture. The household as well as the out-door work of the farm will re¬ 
ceive a due share of attention. The humbugs and nostrums afloat in the community will be tried by 
reliable scientific rules, and their worthlessness exposed. It is the aim of the publishers to keep this 
paper under the guidance of those who will make it a standard work, which shall communicate to its 
readers only that which is safe and reliable. 
AN INDEPENDENT JOURNAL. 
The American Agriculturist stands upon its own merits; and the truthfulness, zeal and ability which 
it brings to the support of the interests of the farmer. It is untrammeled by any eoUateral business 
connections whatever; nor is it the organ of any clique, or the puffing machine of any man or thing. 
Thoroughly independent in all points, its ample pages are studiously given alone to the support and 
improvement of the great agricultural class. 
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT. 
The American Agriculturist is under the editorial supervision of Mr. A. B. Allen,— its principal 
editor for the first ten years—and Mr. Orange Judd, A.M., a thoroughly practical farmer and agricul 
tural chemist 
They will be assisted by Mr. Lewis F. Allen, an eminent practical farmer, stock breeder, and 
fruit grower; Rev. Wm. Clift, and Mr. R. G. Pardee, both widely known as pleasing and instructive 
writers on gardening and other departments of practical agriculture, and, in addition to these, a 
number of other eminent agricultural and horticultural writers. 
A11 the editors are men practically experienced in th eir profession, each of whom can handle the 
Plow as well as the Pen. 
THE CHEAPEST PAPER IN THE COUNTRY OE ITS CHARACTER, 
The American Agriculturist is supplied to regular subscribers at a cost of less than four cents a 
number, of sixteen large pages; and to large clubs for less than two and a half cents. Each number 
will contain suggestions for the treatment of soils, manures, crops, stock, Ac., which will often be 
worth to the reader more than the cost of the paper for a year. 
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the publishers. 
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To single Subscribers, 
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The Post-Master, or other person sending a club of twenty or more, will he presented with an 
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ALLEN & CO., 
18 9^Water street, New-York 
