304 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[OCTOBKB, 
NEW OFFICE OF THE AMERICAN 
AGRICULTURIST, NO. 41 PARK-ROW, NEW-YORK CITY—-SEPTEMBER, 1860. 
The friends of this journal will be pleased to 
learn that we have secured, and removed into 
large and beautiful rooms in one of the most 
eligible positions in this City. Our office has been 
located for many years at 189 Water-st., where 
it was near a majority of the agricultural ware¬ 
houses to which farmers largely resort, but the 
rooms were comparatively limited, inconvenient 
for the amount of business done, and they were 
out of the newspaper center of the city. Our 
present office is all that could be desired in point 
of size, convenience, and central location. The 
principal business office of the Agriculturist is on 
the first floor of the “Times Building,” one of 
the largest and most beautiful structures in the 
city. It is constructed almost wholly of stone 
and iron, even to the rafters, beams, flooring, etc., 
so that it is absolutely impossible for any part of 
it to be burned down. The furniture and mate¬ 
rials in any room might be burned without at all 
disturbing the occupants of an adjoining room. 
Our main business office extends from No. 41 
Park Row, through to 151 Nassau-st. (Stran¬ 
gers often confound Park-Row, with Park-Place, 
The park is a triangular open space, contain¬ 
ing about 11 acres, [see diagram on next page,] 
bounded on the west or northwest side by Broad- 
