158 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
[Mat, 
VERY SIGNIFICANT FACTS. 
Tlie following recommendations are from some of the most 
distinguished American and English scholars. They are but 
a few from many which have been received, testifying to the 
superiority of 
Worcester’s Quarto Dictionary. 
These testimonials are of the highest value, for they have all 
been given during the present year, and after an examina¬ 
tion of this work and of that which Is endeavoring to hold 
the position of a rival. The scholars of America and of Eng¬ 
land, with scarcely an exception, have decided in favor of 
Worcester. Not a single scholar, equal in authority to any 
one mentioned below, can be cited as giving, after a compa¬ 
rison of the two works, the preference to Webster’s Dic¬ 
tionary. We give the testimony:— 
From Hkkbekt Coleridge, Secretary of the London Phil¬ 
ological Society, England. 
Your magnificent present reached me here at length safely 
yesterday, and I lose no time in returning you my cordial 
thanks for your kindness. The London agents of your pub¬ 
lishers, in their letter to me (which I got before the book it¬ 
self), described it as a new edition of Webster, and I hardly 
felt inclined to be very grateful, as my opinion of Dr. Web¬ 
ster is hut small; and my surprise and pleasure were conse¬ 
quently all the greater when I found out what I had really 
become possessed of. 
Asa work of practical utility, your book appears to me to 
be nearly perfect, and I expect to derive immense assistance 
from it. 
From C. C. Felton, LL.D., President of Harvard College. 
Aware of the labor and care which had been devoted to 
this (the department of scientific terms) as well as to other 
parts of the work, I felt assured that Worcester’s Quarto 
Dictionary would more nearly meet the public wants than 
any other hitherto published. 
My expectations have been more than fulfilled. I find it 
not only rich beyond example in its vocabulary, but careful¬ 
ly elaborate in all the details, and thoroughly trustworthy 
as a guide to the most correct and elegant usage of the 
language. 
From the Kev. Joseph Boswokth, D. D„ F. R. S., Professor 
of Anglo Saxon, Oxford, England. 
It is the most complete and practical, the very best, as well 
as the cheapest English Dictionary that I know. 
From George P. Marsh, LL.D., Author of Lectures on the 
English Language. 
The work of Dr. Worcester is unquestionably much supe¬ 
rior to any other general dictionary of the language in every 
one of these particulars (orthography, pronunciation, de¬ 
finition, fullness of vocabulary, and precision and distinct¬ 
ness of definition.) 
From Rev. W. Whewell, D.D., Master of Trinity College, 
England. 
X have repeatedly consulted the Dictionary, since it has 
been in my possession, and have seen reason to think it 
more complete and exact than its predecessors. 
From Charles Richardson. LL.D., the oldest living Eng¬ 
lish Lexicographer, England. 
I sincerely hope you may enjoy from your brethren, both 
in America and England, that tribute of honor to which you 
have earned so undoubted a title. 
From D. R. Goodwin, D.D., Late President of Trinity Col¬ 
lege, Hartford. 
It was but a short time since that I was led to commend 
another dictionary as, on the whole, and with some Excep¬ 
tions, the best and most complete tiling of the kind within 
my knowledge. The commendation was honestly given at 
the time; hut now it must be withdrawn in favor of yours. 
I consider your dictionary, in orthography, pronunciation, 
and definitions, as superior to any of its predecessors. 
From Rev. W. B. Sprague, D.D., of Albany, N. Y. 
My opinion of Worcester’s Quarto Dictionary, after having 
given it as extended an examination as my circumstances 
■would admit, is, that there is no other dictionary in the lan¬ 
guage, that compares with it for completeness, accuracy, 
comprehensiveness, and precision, and perhaps I ought to 
add, that I have arrived at this conclusion rather contrary 
to a preconceived opinion. 
From Rev. Henry A. Boardman, D.D., of Philadelphia. 
I particularly like it (the Dictionary), 1. Because of its 
very comprehensive character i 2. Because it adhei es to the 
settled orthography of our noble language—discarding those 
innovations which, however countenanced by certain pub¬ 
lishing houses, have never to any extent been accepted by 
tlie scholars of our country. 
From Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, Boston. 
I can add nothing to the tributes whicli have been paid to 
tills work, both at home and abroad; but I may offer you my 
best thanks for having supplied us with a Dictionary so in- 
aispensable to every one who writes or speaks the English 
language. 
From Thomas Carlyle, England. 
So far as i have examined, it is a most lucid, exact, com¬ 
prehensive, altogether useful-looking Dictionary; the de¬ 
finitions of meaning are precise, brief, correct; tlie wood-cuts 
occasionally a great help; new fields are opened with suc¬ 
cess ; every thing is calculated for conveying information by 
the directest road. 
From Hon. F. W. Ricord, State Superintendent of New- 
Jersey. 
Although I have many other Dictionaries at hand, I find in 
the use of this the greatest economy of time and labor. 
From Charles Dickens, England. 
It is a most remarkable work, of which America will be 
justly proud, and for which all who study the English lan¬ 
guage will long have reason to respect your name, and to be 
grateful to you. 
From Louis Agassiz, LL.D. 
It is of great importance, when the nomenclature of science 
is gradually creeping into common use, that an English lexi¬ 
con should embrace as much of it as is consistent with the 
language we speak. I am truly surprised and highly delight¬ 
ed to find you have succeeded far beyond my expectations in 
making the proper selection, and combining with it a re¬ 
markable degree of accuracy. More could hardly be given 
except in a scientific cyclopaedia. 
The following lines are quoted from Harper's Magazine for 
September. They serve to show very truthfully the com¬ 
parative value of recent and old commendations 
“ Injustice.—O ur attention has been called to a species of 
injustice of which publishers are sometimes guilty, in pub. 
lishing commendations of school-books, without giving the 
dates when they were written. Especially does this merit 
reproval when these commendations are old, and when it is 
known that the writers have subsequently commended other 
and later publications in tlie same department. It will read¬ 
ily be seen that this is frequently not only an act of injustice 
to teachers who have had the courtesy to commend a book, 
but that it is also a fraud upon the public.” 
SWAN, BREWER, & TILESTON, 
131 Washington-st., Boston, Mass. 
FOR FAMEES 
AM© OTHERS. 
[Any of the following books can be obtained at the of¬ 
fice of the Agriculturist at the prices named, or they will be 
forwarded by mail .postpaid, on receipt of tlie price. Other 
books not named in the list will be procured and sent to sub¬ 
scribers when desired, if tlie price he forwarded. All of these 
books may well be procured by any one making up a libra¬ 
ry. Those we esteem specially valuable, are marked with a *.] 
American Bird Fancier.....$0 25 
American Farmer's Encyclopedia..... 4 00 
American Weeds and Useful Plants*... 1 50 
Allen’s (It. L.) American Farm Book*.. 1 00 
Allen’s Diseases of Domestic Animals.... 75 
Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture........ 1 25 
Allen on tile Culture of the Grape. 1 00 
American Architect. 6 00 
American Florist’s Guide... 75 
Barry’s Fruit Garden*. ... 1 25 
Bement's (C. N.) Rabbit Fancier. 25 
Boussingault’s (J. B.) Rural Economy... 1 25 
Bridgeman’s Young Gardener’s Assistant*. .. 1 50 
Bridgeman’s Kitchen Garden Instructor... 60 
Bridgeman's Florist’s Guide. 60 
Bridgeman’s Fruit Cultivator’s Manual... 60 
Brock’s (Joseph) Book of Flowers*.... 1 00 
Brandt's Age of Horses*..... 50 
Bement’s Poulterer’s Companion *. 1 25 
Buist’s American Flower Garden Directory ........_ 1 25 
Buist's Family Kitchen Gardener*... 75 
Central Park Guide*. 25 
Chorlton’s Grape-Grower’s Guide*. 60 
Cole’s (S. W.) American Fruit Book... 50 
Dadd’s (Geo. II.) Modern Horse Doctor*. 1 00 
Dadd’s (Geo. H.) American Cattle Doctor..— 1 00 
Dadd’s (Geo. H.) Anatomy of the Horse. 2 00 
Dana’s Muck Manual for Farmers.... 1 00 
Domestic and Ornamental Poultry. 1 00 
Downing’s Landscape Gardening*..... 3 50 
Eastwood on the Cranberry* ... 50 
Elliott’s Western Fruit Book ...... 1 25 
Every Lady her own Flower Gardener. 50 
Every Man his own Lawyer... 1 25 
Farm Record, for 25 years. 3 00 
Farmer’s Practical Horse Farrier... 60 
French's Farm Drainage *..... 1 00 
Fessenden’s American Kitchen Gardener.. 25 
Field’s (Thomas W.) Pear Culture .. 1 00 
Fish Culture*.. —... 100 
Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses*.. —. 1 25 
Fruits and Fruit Trees of America (Downing’s)**.. 1 75 
Guenon on Milch Cows.... 60 
Hall’s (Miss) American Cookery.... 1 00 
Herbert’s Hints to Horsekeepers**..— 1 2o 
Jenning’s Horse and his Diseases .....*. 1 25 
Johnson on Manures.. 75 
Langstroth on the Honey Bee*.... 1 25 
Liebig's Lectures on Chemistry... 50 
Leuehars’ Hothouses...... 1 2a 
Linsley’s (D. C.) Morgan Horses.. 1 00 
Mayhew’s Illustrated Horse Doctor. 2 50 
Milburn on tlie Cow and Dairy....... 50 
Miles on the Horse’s Foot... .... 50 
Norton’s Scientific Agriculture...... 60 
Our Farm of Four Acres_*_cloth 50 cts.; paper.... 2o 
Onion Culture*......... 21 
Olcott’s Sorgho and Impliee..... 1 00 
Pardee on Strawberry Culture.. —.. 60 
Pedder’s Farmer’s Land Measurer ..... 50 
Quinby’s Mysteries of Bee keeping*... 1 00 
Randall’s Sheep Husbandry. 1 2a 
Richardson oil the Dog... 2o 
Richardson on the Hog .. 
Rose Culturist. . .. 25 
Robin’s Produce and Ready Reckoner.. 50 
Shepherd’s Own Book . " uu 
Smith’s Landscape Gardening........ l 2a 
Spencer’s Education of Children**.. 1 00 
Stephens’ Book of tlie Farm .2 vols. 4 00 
Stewart’s (John) Stable Book— ... I™ 
Thomas’ (John J.) Farm Implements *....... 1 
Thomas' (John J.) American Fruit Culturist. l 25 
Todd’s (S. E.) Young Farmer’s Manual.... lg 
Tucker’s Register Rural Affairs....... 2a 
Turner’s Cotton Planter’s Manual... } J" 
Warder’s Hedges and Evergreens*. ........ 1 w 
Week's (John M.) Manual on Bees. 25 
White’s Gardening for the South. i 2a 
Yale College Lectures ...... ... 25 
Youatt and Spooner on the Horse... .. i «> 
Youatt and Martin on Cattle.......- l 25 
Youatt on tlie Hog... 7a 
Youatt on Sheep .... —......•••■• 
THE 
SUNDAY-SCHOOL WORLD. 
From the organization of the Society, in 1824, the Ameri¬ 
can Sunday-school Union has published one or more 
periodicals as a means of communication with its friends and 
patrons, and as an aid and encouragement to ttiose who are 
charged with the responsible and sacred office of Sunday- 
school Teaching. Both the form and price have been modi¬ 
fied from time to time, but, for the most part, the desian and 
matter have been restricted to the legitimate province of the 
institution as a Sunday-school agency. 
“The Sunday-school World” will be published on the 
first Wednesday of every month, and will embrace the 
interests ot tlie Snnday-schools, and their improvement and 
extension at home and abroad. 
It.will contain a general survey of the Missionary field oc- 
cupied by The American Sunday-school Union and 
kindled institutions m the United States and other parts of 
Christendom. 
It will present a summary of Sund^-school intelligence 
from all sources within reach, and a view of the progress 
and prospects of religious education generally. 
One or more topics, of practical interest to’Sunday-school 
Teachers, will be discussed in eacli number. 
The Sunday-school World will also contain notices of 
new books, and acknowledgments of contributions to the 
benevolent objects ol tlie Society. 
U®"Tn the size and shape we have adopted for the Sunday- 
school orld, we had. some reference to the convenient 
form of a . bound volume If tlie character of the paper is 
what tlie Society intend it shall he, it will have a permanent 
value, and will be worthy of preservation for future re¬ 
ference. 
B^”We are gratified to find that our first issue has been 
received with sucli general approbation by the public. 
The second number is now ready. Specimen copies fur¬ 
nished gratuitously. 
TERMS : 
The Sunday-School World will be furnished on the fol¬ 
lowing Terms , viz.: 
Single copies.... $0 50 a year. | Ten copies.$4 50 a year 
Twenty copies.$8 00 a year. 
SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BE RECEIVED IN PHILADELPHIA AT 
THE HOME DEPOSITORY, 1122 CHESTNUT STREET. 
In New-York, by GEORGE G. SCOFIELD, 599 Broadway. 
In Boston, by P. KEMP, 141 Washington Street, 
ALSO, BY 
Cp^II'Y’ 41 West Fourth-st., Cincinnati, Ohio. 
w^ T T?T^WIS- N ^?o 1 T? and0lpIl ' st *’ Chi cago, Illinois. 
BULKLEY, §13 Fourth-st., Louisville, Kentucky. 
J. W. McINTIRE, 9 South Fifth-st., St. Louis, Missouri. 
It is a Good Business, and it Pays 
To sell reliable Agricultural Books. We want a few good 
Agents. Terms liberal. 
SAXTON & BARKER, Agricultural Book Publishers, 
_ 25 Park-Row, New-York. 
School Teachers Wanted. 
The subscriber wishes to employ one School Teacher in 
each county of the United States, to travel and introduce tlie 
“New Encyclopaedia of all Nations,” and the “ Pictorial New 
World, with Steel and Colored Engravings, Maps, Charts, 
&c. Just issued. Apply by letter immediately to 
_HENRY BILL, Publisher, Norwich, Conn. 
P ROFITABLE Employment may be had by ad- 
dressing (post-paid.) B. SEARS, 181 William -st., N. Y. 
To Onion Criowers. 
A neat pamphlet of 42 pages, containing the condensed 
but plain directions of Seventeen practical Onion Growers » 
residing in different parts of the country ; and embracing 
full directions for every item of labor from selecting seed 
and preparing ground, to harvesting and marketing crop. 
Nowhere else can so full, complete, and useful informa¬ 
tion on this subject be found. Sent post-paid on receipt 
of 21 cents (or seven 3-cent stamps). Address 
Publisher of American Agriculturist. 
Prof. Wood’s Mew Botany. 
CLASS BOOK OF BOTANY, being Outlines of the Struc- 
ture. Physiology and Classification of Plants, witli a Flora ot 
tlie United States and Canada, by Alphonso Wood, Principal 
of Female Academy, Brooklyn. Price $2. 
This, without doubt., is the' most thorough and practical 
text book ever published. A. S. BARNES & BURR, 
_ ,„ 51 and 53 John-st., New-York, 
^Publishers of National Series of Standard School Books. 
P ASCHALL MORRIS’ DESCRIPTIVE SEED 
CATALOGUE, ALMANAC AND GARDEN MANUAL 
for 1861, with complete lists of vegetables. Directions for Cul¬ 
ture, and other information of importance to the Farmer and 
Gardener, forwarded by mail on remission of stamp 
Also illustrated implement and Nursery Catalogues. 
PASCHALL MORRIS. Agricultural and Seed Warehouse, 
__ 1120 Market-st ., Philadelphia, Pa. 
farm produce 
SOLD O N COMMISSION, 
Such as Flour, Butter, Cheese, Lard, Provisions of all kinds. 
Grain, Eggs, Poultry, Game, &c., &c. 
ISAAC EMENS, 226 FKONT-ST., NEW-YORK. 
SUCCESSOR TO. THE FIRM OF HAI&HT & EMENS. 
Refers tojhe Editor American Agriculturist. 
Cashier, Market Bank, 
■ E. R. Cooper, 
New-York. 
Mammoth Cabbage. 
Marblehead Mammoth Drumhead Cabbage, averaging over 
30 lbs. a plant by the acre! Sometimes weighing over 60 lbs- 
and measuring nearly six feet around the solid head. 
Mason and Stone Mason Cabbage, under high culture often¬ 
times every plant on an acre will set a marketable head I 
hereby offer $5.00 for one ounce of seed of any variety of 
Drumhead, that shall excel these in hardness, tender¬ 
ness, AND SWEETNESS, AND RELIABILITY FOR HEADING. 
Circulars containing facts from farmers who raise them by 
the acre, gratis. 
Mammoth Cabbage, per package 25 cents? 5 packs. for$l.— 
Mason and Stone Mason 33 cts. per oz.; 4 oz. $1.—Seed war¬ 
ranted to reach every purchaser. 
JAMES J. H. GREGORY, Marblehead, Mass. 
iOiNE PACKAGE of dwarf broom corn seed sent 
V post-paid on receipt of 15 cts. A. CHANDLEE 
Sandy Spring P. 0„ Montgomery Co., Md. 
D 
WARE BROOM CORN SEED FOR SALE. 
1 oz. of the above seed sent post-paid on receipt of 15 cts. 
J. D. VAIL, Southold, Long Island, N. Y. 
