438 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
[November, 
ARE YOU GOING TO PAINT? 
tiie 
Averill Chemical Paint, 
WHITE AND ALL COLORS, 
Is read}' for use, and sold only by the gallon. Costs less 
than pure lead, and wears twice as long. Sample card and 
book of recommendations sent free by applying to the 
Averill Chemical faint Co., New York. 
Averill Chemical Paint Co., Cleveland, Ohio. 
Averill Chemical Paint Co., Boston, Mass. 
It. Shoemaker & Co., Philadelphia. Pa. 
R. & W. H. Cathcart, Baltimore, Md. 
Geo. Partridge & Co., St. Louis, Mo. 
Lawrence & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. 
G. W. Pitkin, 10 Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill. 
Dimmitt, Hale & Co., St. Louis, -Mo. 
Don’t Buy 
until you have seen our new bed and platen printing press, 
styled The Yos«ng America, warranted the best cheap 
printing press in the world for the amateur and the general 
job printer. Address, tor circular, ADAMS PRESS CO., 
53 Murray St., New lmrk, and 8 Province St., Boston. 
MAKE HOME HAPPY. 
THE CELEBRATED 
Lozo Pendulum Board. 
Send stamp for Circular. 
E. I. HORSMAN, 
100 William St., New York. 
npfilE SAIF JETTY ia©F,I>BSACB£ FOR 
CAIIKIA.GES.— Prevents runaway accidents. Cir¬ 
culars free, if ordered at once of N. W. SIMONS & CO., 
Williamslield, Ohio. 
Easily made with our Stencil and Key- 
Check Outfit. Circulars Free. 
STAFFORD M'F’G CO., 
06 Fulton St., New York. 
FOR SAI.53 AT 
FLEETWOOD STOCK FARM, 
Near Frankfort, Ky., 
Tlioroiigh-torccl Horses, Trotting Stock, Im¬ 
ported AUlcrneys. 
,1. W. HUNT REYNOLDS. 
I MP©U'S’EI> S«TT1W)©WM RAM 
for sale, “ Millbrook,’’ 3 years old. bred by Henry Webb, 
Strectly Hall, England. Winner of first prize at New York 
State Fair, 1870. GEORGE II. BROWN, 
Millbrook, Dutchess Co., N. Y. 
JERSEY CATTLE. First premium stock. 
ESSEX PIGS, blood of recent importations. 
WHITE LEGHORN FOWLS, carefully bred for 8 
years. G. W. FARLEE, Cresskill, N. J. 
WEBB for sale, 
v w from imported stock, by 
GEORG 10 H. BROWN, Millbrook, Dutchess Co., N. Y. 
B LOODED Cattle and Calves, Cotswold and 
South Down Sheep, Chester and Berkshire Pigs, Fancy 
Fowls and Pigeons, Toulouse. Ilong Kong, and Bremen 
Geese. Rouen, Aylesbury, and Musk Ducks, Newfoundland 
and other Dogs, Maltese Cats, etc., choice and cheap, for 
sale by N. GUlLBERT, Evergreen Farm, Gwynedd, Pa. 
Premium Chester Whites; Berkshire 
and Essex Pigs, 
Bred and for sale by GEO. B. HICKMAN, 
West Chester, Chester Co., Pa. 
03?” Send for Circular and Price-list. 
Chester White and Berkshire Swine, 
South-Down Lambs, Fine Bred Fowls, etc., etc. Bred and 
for sale by FRANCIS MORRIS, 
IS N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
P REMIUM CHESTER WHITE PIGS for sale, 
superior to any other breed of swine in America. 
Also some very superior Light Brahma Fowls. Address 
JAS. YOUNG, Jr., & CO„ Marsliallton, Pa. 
PURE-BRED POULTRY 
FOR SALE. BRED FROM MY 
PRIZE STOCK. 
Send stamp for Descriptive Circular and Price-list. 
G. II. WARNER, New York Mills, Oneida Co., N. A". 
Choice Fowls, 
From all the leading varieties, for sale cheap. Warranted 
perfect and pure, and to give satisfaction. Send for 
Price-list. 
Address CHARLES FLODING, Box 132, Lectonia, O. 
pi 1 R JE-RREfl> FANCY POULTRY 
U. for sale. Send Stamp for Illustrated Circular. 
A. II. HOWARD, Omro, Wis. 
E xperiments in magnetism, illustrated, 
a Trap to Catch a Sunbeam, Sketches, Puzzles. Tricks, 
etc., will be found in the November number of HAPPY 
HOURS, the most popular periodical of iIs class published. 
Each number contains something of interest, to everybody. 
Only TWENTY-FIVE CENTS until the end of 1872. TRY 
IT. Address HAPPY HOURS COMPANY. 
22 Ann Street, New York. 
The Little Corporal, 
"From the far West comes regularly to our sanctum one 
of the best juvenile publications issued in the country, of 
which we are cognizant; a magazine that at once will in¬ 
terest, amuse, instruct, elevate, and refine its readers. Old 
and young can find that in its pages calculated to make the 
hours pass agreeably, and leave behind an impression that 
good lias been received.”— The Press, Peabody, Mass. 
The Little Corporal. 
“ It is a bright, wide-awake magazine for the children, 
following in none of the old ruts, hut always presenting 
something fresh and attractive, such as the children are sure 
to approve.”— American, Lawrence, Mass. 
The Little Corporal. 
“ What child should be without it? ‘ Not mine,’ should he 
your response, good mother. It will teach him so many 
noble and generous lessons, which will be. of such value in 
building him up into a glorious manhood. Let the child 
have it ."—Home Guardian, Boston. 
The Little Corporal. 
All New Subscribers for 1872, whose names and money 
($1.50) are received before December first, will receive the 
last two numbers of this year Free. 
Elegant Premiums for links! 
Agents wanted to raise clubs. Send stamp for a Specimen 
Number with New Premium List. 
Terms, SI.50 a Year. Address 
JOHN E. MILLER, Publisher, 
G Custom House Place, CHICAGO, ILL. 
GET THE BEST. 
feMer’s UiiaMpi Dictionary. 
10,000 Words and Meanings not in other Dictionaries . 
3,000 Engravings, 1840 Pages Quarto. Price $12, 
A necessity to every intelligent family, student, teacher, 
and professional man. What Library is complete without 
the best English Dictionary? 
“ CrET THE BEST.” 
“ All young persons should have a standard 
DICTIONARY 
at their elbows. And while you are about it, get the best; 
that Dictionary is 
IMOAH WEBSTER’S, 
the great work unabridged. If you are too poor, save the 
amount from off your hack, to put it into your head.”— 
Phrenological Journal. 
Webster’s Quarto Dictionary.— Everybody knows 
about Webster’s Dictionary, and every man, woman, and 
child ought to have access to it. 
It will tell yon everything in regard to your mother tongue 
which you want to know. It shows you the words in all 
their aspects—giving you a sort of history of each individual 
that is iu any way worthy of attention—developing then- 
powers and delineating tlieir features and general appear¬ 
ance so precisely, that the unlearned will remember them, 
after the first sight, and know who they are, and what they 
are, whenever he meets them. A MAN WHO WOULD 
KNOW EVERYTHING, OR ANYTHING, AS HE OUGHT 
TO KNOW, MUST OWN WEBSl’Elt’S LARGE DICTION¬ 
ARY. It is a great light, and he that will not avail himself 
of it must walk in darkness. Every young housekeeper 
should lay it in, to occupy the place which was formerly 
filled with decanters and wine-glasses. 
Every farmer should give liis sons two or three square 
rods of ground, well prepared, with the avails of which they 
may buy it. Every mechanic should put a receiving box in 
6ome conspicuous place in the house, to catch the stray pen¬ 
nies, for the like purpose. 
Lay it upon your table by the side of the Bible—it is a bet¬ 
ter expounder than many which claim to he expounders. 
It Is a great labor-saver—it has saved us time enough in 
one year’s use to pay for itself; and that must he deemed 
good property which will clear itself once a year. If you 
have any doubt about the precise meaning of the word 
clear, in the last sentence, look at Webster’s nine definitions 
of the v. t.— Massachusetts Life-Boat. 
ALSO 
Webster’s National Pictorial Dictionary. 
1040 Pages Octavo. GOO Engravings. Price $5. 
The work is really a gem of a Dictionary, just the thing 
for the million.— American Educational Monthly. 
Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Springfield, Mass. 
Sold by all Booksellers. 
(FHara’s 12 Oz, 
CORN SHELLKR 
fibush. per hour. 
Price $1.50. ’ 
Sample $ 1.00 
Agents Wanted. 
C. M. OHARA, 
Hillsboro, O., 
Refers to this Paper. 
O’Hara’s victory 
Shoe Tie 
Never becomes untied 
Very pretty. 
3 Samples 25 c. 
NEW 
American Farm Book, 
ORIGINALLY BY 
R. L. ALLEN, 
Author of “ Diseases of Domestic Animals," and formerly 
editor of the “American Agriculturist." 
REVISED AND ENLARGED BY 
LEWIS F. ALLEN, 
Author' of “American Cattle," editor of the *■American 
Shorthorn 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 ail who faithfully follow 
its counsels iu the spirit in which they are given. 
Congregation alist & 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, hut without a train¬ 
ing at the plow-handles, who asks for a general guide and 
instructor that shall he to agriculture what the map of 
the world is to geograpiiy, it is the host 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 oue might expect some show 
of patch-work, the original statement of the author of 
1S46, 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. F. Allen, as time could not change, has been* 
adopted by the reviser. New York Tiibune. 
It is a volume of over five hundred pages, and in its 
present shape comprises all that can well he condensed 
into an available volume of its kind. 
Hartford Daily Times. 
It is almost as comprehensive as iTcyclopiedia. 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 better encyclopedia of farming. 
New York Independent. 
In its 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 purposes, 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. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO. 
245 Broadway, New York* 
