1884. J 
AMERIGA'N AGEIOULTURIST. 
519 
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The American Agriculturist is bet¬ 
ter now than ever before. 
First 2—Tlie American Agriculturist has been enlarged and yastly im-.ij 
►proved in all its various departments. It is now ^minted on super-calendered 
►tinted paper with a glaze and finish which give clearness and distinctness to 
► the type and illustrations. 
Second ;—Iii addition to the old staff of Editors and life-long contribu- 
►tors who have aided in making the Journal what it is to-day, new names ^ 
► have been added to our Editorial force, which will be still further strengthened.^ 
► with fresh acquisitions. - ' ' 
TIlird ;—Joseph Harris, the founder of the “ Genesee Farmer,” author of.< 
► “Walks and Talks on the Farm,” etc., and whose agricultural Avritings have.^ 
►made him famous on both continents, has become one of the active Editors of.^ 
►the American Agriculturist. 
► Fourth :—The very note-worthy improvements made in the American Ag- 4 , 
>ricuUurist since June last, embrace a complete transformation in the character 
► of the illustrations. Hew and talented Artists have been employed, until the,j 
► engravings and illustrations in the American Agriculturist have become, dur-.^ 
► ing the past four months, more numerous and far superior to those aq»pearing^ 
► in any similar publication. The American Agriculturist has for years been 
►the recognized authority in all matters pertaining to agriculture ; it has now,^ 
►this year, become the first Illustrated Agricultural Journal of the world. 
Fifth :—Hew methods and new agents for mailing have been employed, so^ 
►that American Agriculturist the office as regularly as clock-work,^ 
►and if any number fails to reach the subscriber, our new plan for discovery^ 
►immediately makes known the cause. 
Sixth ;—The premium articles offered this year have been selected conjointly^ 
► by the Editors and Publishers, to specially meet the wants of our great army^ 
► of subscribers. While the list comprises very many new articles, those which ^ 
have proved specially popular and desirable in the pasture retained; all of 
^them have been secured at great bargains, of which our subscribers get the 
benefit. 
Seventh S—Every subscriber to the American Agriculturist, new or old, 
whose subscription for 1885 is forwarded immediately to us, together with 
$1.65, is entitled to the ]\ew Ajiiciicau Agriculturist Fasnliy Cyclopaedia, fully 
described on third cover page. 
Eighth;—All former, or new subscribers, whose subscriptions and money 
are received before October 30th, will receive the October, Hovember, and 
December numbers of this year free. Subscribe immediately. 
50,000 Wanted. 
Men, women and children, to canvass during the 
next few weeks for the American Agriculturist. 
Everybody who sees a copy of the paper, and the 
Family CyCLOP.EDiA, which is presented with it, 
ought to be induced to subscribe without much 
-talk or labor. 
Our Great Premium List. 
From every quarter we have received the most 
complimentary notices of our very handsome Pre¬ 
mium List issued as a Supplement to the October 
American Agriculturist. Hardly forty-eight hours 
elapsed from the mailing of this premium list, be¬ 
fore we began to receive orders for numerous 
articles among the very many offered. Our readers 
can rely upon their being just as represented. 
Flease write us if any particulars are desired about 
any of the premiums. Furthermore, we shall be 
glad to ascertain for any inquirer the cost of 
freight or expressage on any article in the list 
which is not pre-paid. 
The German American Agriculturist. 
Have you any German neighbors ? Have you any 
German gardeners or German workmen of any class 
in yonr employ ? Ton cannot furnish them with 
more interesting and valuable reading matter than 
is contained in the columns of the German Ameri¬ 
can Agriculturist. On landing here from the 
fatherland, the first money the German emigrant 
spends after paying his railroad fare, should be for 
a year’s subscription to the German American 
Agriculturist. It aims to make them acquainted 
and familiar with the soil, and the best modes of 
farming and gardening in the new world to which 
they have come. Price, post-paid, $1.50 a year. 
Our Very Latest Books. 
Published, ImjMrIed, and sent post-paid on receipt of price. 
f'.ais—'i'lieir Joints and Classilication, 
witli C'liaptcrs on Fuliiic Ailiiicnls and Ilioir Kcnicdies, 
How to Train lor Pcrlormiiig Tricks, etc., by IV. Gordon 
Sla'nles, M. U.. eic. Since Cat Siiows have become an 
iiisUUnioii in England and in tliis country, a cat litera¬ 
ture follows as a matter of conrse. The work, llie title 
of wliieli we liave given above, is a 12mo., of nearly five 
Imndred pages, and illnstrnted by colored engravings of 
the different breeds. Tlie antlior, who is a well known 
autliority on Dogs, has brouglit togelhera large amount 
of cat lore, and relates many cat stories in an easy, talky 
manner. In wliat may be regarded as tlie practical 
portion of tlie work, is a cliapter on “Classification 
and Points,” anotlicr on “Tricks and Training,” and 
tliat wliicli will probably most interest owners of pet 
cats, one on Feline Ailments. Price, post-paid, $3.00. 
Modern Window hardening.—Treated un¬ 
der Aspects, iSfortli, South, East, and West, liy Samuel 
Wood. Tlie title of this work is ratlier a misnomer, 
as about two-tliirds of its one imndred and seveiity-six 
p.'iges are devoted to out-door gardening, iiicliulirig the 
ciillure of vegetaliles. Being by an Englisii author, and 
for tlie English climate, tlio work, if followed as a 
guide ill tills country, would mislead. If tlie difference 
in climate be kept in mind, and proper allowances made 
for it, the work will be found to contain many useful 
suggestions, and in its selections of plants is quite tip to 
the time. Price, post-jiaid, $1.25. 
'Sfoiir PlsmEs.—Plain and Practical Directions for 
Uie Treatment of Tender and Hardy Plants, in the 
House and in tlie Garden, by James Slieclian. The 
Orange Jiuld Company, New York : Tlie above title well 
describes tlie cliaracter of tlie work—“ Plain and Practi¬ 
cal.” Tlio antlior, a commercial florist and gardener at 
Genova, N. Y., lias endeavored, in tliis work, to answer 
tlie many questions asked by Ids customers, as to the 
proper treatment of plants. Tlio book sliows ail tlirough, 
tliat its antlior is a practical man, and lie writes as one 
witli a largo store of e.vperience. Tlie work betler meets 
tlie wants of tiie amateur who grows a few plants in the 
window, or lias a small flower garden, tlian a larger 
treatise intended for tliose wlio cultivate plants upon a 
more extended scale. The appearance of the work, just 
as window gardeners are seiting tlieir plants in order, is 
timely, and it will prove to be tlie book tliey have been 
looking for. Paper covers, posl-iiaid, for 40 cents. 
-ffobiicco Culture.—A New and Enlarged Edition. 
Orange Judd Company, New York; Tiie American Ag¬ 
riculturist offered prizes for the best essays on Tobacco 
Ciiltnre, witli a view of obtaining an exhaustive treatise 
for publication in its cobiiniis. A largo luiinber of essays 
were received, incliidiiig many of great value. Fourteen 
of the numlier were selected and published in pamplilet 
form. Another edition is now in jiress, enlarged 
by tlie addition of a cliaplor on the Manufacture of 
Tobacco. This cliapter was written in answer to the 
numerous inquiries regarding tlio conversion of the leaf 
into its inaniifactiired forms. Price, post-paid, 25 cents. 
Tlie Practical Poultry Keeiser,—A Complete 
and Standard Guide to the Maiiagemeiit of Poultry, for 
domestic iiso, the markets, or exhibition, by Louis Wright. 
New Edition, with colored plates. The Orange Judd 
Company, New York: As a rule, an English work upon 
any rural subject is unsuited to Americans. The book, 
the full title of wliicli is given above, is a marked excep¬ 
tion to the rule. Wlion tlie work llrst appeared, it was 
found to ho so practical and altogetlier so excellent, that 
the publisliers at once arranged to publisli an American 
edition, and it immediately took its place as a standard 
work on Poultry. Successive editions have been pub¬ 
lished, and the last, with colored plates of the leading 
breeds, is more complete as well as more elegant than 
any of its predecessors. The antl.or treats all that relates 
to poultry-keeping in a common sense nianiier, as rare as 
it is acceptable. If tiiere is a better work on Poullry, we 
are unable to name it. Price, post-paid, $2.00 
Tlie Forester. — A Practical Treatise on the 
Planting, Rearing, and General Management of Forest 
Trees, by James Brown, LL. D., Inspector of Woods 
and Forests, Port Elgin, Onl. This is a large 8vo. vol¬ 
ume of about nine hnndred pages. The fact tliat a work 
of this size has readied a fiftli edition, indicates to a cer¬ 
tain extent tliat it has real value. Tlio subject is treated 
in its various brandies, and is well illustrated. We are 
surprised, that at this day an antlior slionld classify trees 
or other plants by the Liiiinean System. This, however, 
does not affect the practical cliaracter of the work. In 
the present interest in Forestry in tliis country, every 
work of real value is welcome. As the author has had a 
Canadian experience, the book is more likely to bo suited 
to the United States than one by an author witli an ex¬ 
clusively Europoan training. Price, post-paid, $10.00. 
