44.-0 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
[November. 
ANOTHER GREAT 
REDUCTION 
IN 
TEAS. 
QSSAT SAVING TO CONSUMERS 
BY GETTING TIP CLUBS. 
And remunerative to Club Organizers. 
THE 
Great American Tea 
COMPANY 
Have received a full assortment of 
N E W-C ROP 
TEAS 
and many more arriving, with which to supply their cus¬ 
tomers in all cases, and have again 
REDUCED THli PRICES OF ALL THEIR TEAS 
to the lowest point. GOODS WARRANTED TO GIVE 
SATISFACTION in all cases at the following 
LIST OF PRICES : 
OOLONG, (Black) 50, 00, TO, bestSOc. per lb. 
MIXED, (Green and Black) 50, 00, TO, best 80c. per lb. 
JAPAN, (IJncolored) 80,00, $1.00, best $! .10 per lb. 
IMPERIAL. (Green) TO, 80, 00, $1.00, $1.10, best $1.20 per lb. 
YOUNG HYSON, (Green) TO, 80, 00, $1.00, best $1.15 per lb. 
GUNPOWDER. (Green) $1.20. best $1.40 per lb. 
ENGLISH BREAKFAST, (Black) TO, 80, 00, $1.00, best $1.10 
per lb. 
ROASTED AND GROUND DAILY, always under our own 
supervision and upon our own premises. 
GROUND COFFEE, 15, 20, 25, 30, best 35c. per lb. 
Hotels, Saloons, Boarding-House Keepers and Families 
who use large quantities of Coffee, can economize in that 
article by using our FRENCH BREAKFAST AND DIN¬ 
NER COFFEE, which we sell at. the low price of 25 cts. per 
pound, and warrant to give perfect satisfaction. 
ROASTED (Unground), 20, 25, 30, best 35c.. per lb. 
GREEN (Unroasted), 20,25, best 30c. per lb. 
GETTING UP CLUBS. 
Let each person wishing to join in a club, say how much 
Tea or Coffee he wants, and select the kind and price from 
our Price-List, as published. Write the names, kinds, and 
amounts plainly on a list, and when the club is complete 
send it to us by mail, and we will put each party’s goods in 
separate packages, and mark the name upon them, with the 
cost, so there need be no confusion in their distribution— 
eacli party getting exactly what lie orders, and no more. 
The cost of transportation, the members of the club can di¬ 
vide equitably among themselves. 
The funds to pay for the goods ordered can be sent by 
drafts on New York, by Post-Office money orders, or by Ex¬ 
press, as may suit the convenience of the club. Or, if the 
amount ordered exceeds thirty dollars, we will, if desired, 
send the goods by Express, to “ collect on delivery." 
Consumers can save 5 to 8 profits by purchasing of 
THE 
Great American Tea Comp’y, 
31 & 33 Vesey Street, 
P. O. Box, 5,643. NEW YORK CITY. 
SEND FOR FREE SAMPLE. 
Unequaled for making light and nutritious Bread, Bis¬ 
cuits, Pastry,etc., and is used and approved by Orange -Judd, 
Esq., Editor of this Journal; Drs. M. 1 i. Henry and 11. O. Dore- 
mus ; Professors Ott and Chandler, New York City; Proles¬ 
sors James V. Z. Blauey and It. L. Rea,Chicago’; Dr. Win. S. 
Merrill, Cincinnati. 
WILSON, LOCKWOOD, EVERETT & CO.. Gen’l Agents, 
51 Murray Street, New York. 
1j \ NT>SC A PE GATHDTHINT X O .—'Robert Morris Cope¬ 
land, Boston, lias 20 years’ experience, and directs all kinds 
of Rural Improvements. Send for Circular. 
Thea-Nectar 
is a 
BLACK 
with 
GREEN TEA 
EL AVGE, 
and will 
Suit nil tastes. 
Warranted Satisfactory. 
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 
And for sale Wholesale only by the 
miM ATLANTIC & Pi\0SFi0 TEA CO., 
P. O. Box 5,500. No. 8 Cliurcli St., N. Y. 
Send for Tliea-Nectar Circular. 
GOD, TABEK & MORSE, 
Eaton, Madison Co,, JY. Y. 
MANUFACTURERS OF 
Steam-Engines, 
Portable, Stationary ^and 
Agricult ural. 
Hundreds in use in Shops, Print¬ 
ing Rooms, Mills, Mines, and on 
Farms and Plantations for Grain 
Threshing, Food Cooking for 
Stock,Cotton Ginning, Sawing, etc. 
Circulars sent on application. 
Dadd’s American Cattle-Doctor. $1.50. 
To Help Every Man to be his own Cattle-Doctor. A 
work by Geo. H. Dadd, M. D., Veterinary Practitioner, 
'giving the necessary information for preserving the 
Health and Curing, the Diseases of OXEN, COWS, 
SHEEP, and SWINE, with a great variety of original 
Recipes, and valuable information on Farm and Dairy 
Management. 12mo, 359 pp. 
Breck’s New Book of Flowers, or Flower 
Garden. $1.75 
In which are described the various Hardy Herbaceous 
Flowers, Annuals, Shrubby Plants, and Evergreen 
Trees, with Directions for their Cultivation. New 
edition,-revised and corrected. By JosErn Breck, 
Seedsman and Florist, former editor of New England 
Farmer , and Horticultural Register. Cloth, 12mo, 
395 pp. 
Hop Culture.. ...40 
Practical Details fully given, from the Selection and 
Preparation of the Son., Setting ar d Cultivation of 
the Plants, to Picking, Drting, Pressing and Mar¬ 
keting the Crop. Plain Directions by Ten Experi¬ 
enced Cultivators. Illustrated with over forty engrav¬ 
ings. Edited by Prop. George Thurber, Editor of 
the American Agriculturist. 8vo.., paper. 
Tobacco Culture; Full Practical Details.25 
This is by far the most useful and valuable work ever 
issued on this subject. It contains full details of every 
process from the Selection and Preparation of the Seed 
and Soil, to the Harvesting, Curing, and Marketing the 
Crop, with Illustrative Engravings of the operations. 
The work was prepared by Fourteen Experienced To¬ 
bacco Growers, residing in different parts of the coun¬ 
try. It also contains Notes on the Tobacco Worm, 
with Illustrations. Octavo, 48 pp., in neat paper covers. 
Boussingault’s Rural Economy.$1.60 
Rural Economy in its relations with Chemistry, Phys¬ 
ics, and Meteorology; or Chemistry Aitlted to 
Agriculture in the Principles of Farm Management, 
the Preservation and Use of Manures, the Nutrition 
and Food of Animals, and the General Economy of 
Agriculture.VBy J. B. Boussingault, Member of In¬ 
stitute of France, etc. Translated, with Introduction 
and Notes, by George Law, Agriculturist. Cloth, 
12 mo, 607 pp. 
F.itlier of the above hooks sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
845 Broadway, New York. 
TEA 
THE BEST BOOR ON GARDENING, 
Gardening for Profit 
In the Market and Family G-arden. 
By Peter Henderson. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
notices by me tress. 
All the vegetables that thrive in the open air in onr 
latitude are described, together with the best methods 
for growing them. The author also imparts practical 
instructions on the subjects of drainage, and the forma¬ 
tion and management of liot-beds. Numerous well-exe¬ 
cuted wood cuts tend to make clearer tlic instructions of 
the author.— Philadelphia Inquirer. 
The author of this treatise is one of the best known 
and most successful of’those gardeners who supply New 
York with green vegetables ; and as lie writes from long 
and dear-bought experience, the positive, dogmatic tone 
lie often assumes is by no means unbecoming. The book 
itself is intended to he a guide for beginners embarking 
in the author’s business, and gives full and explicit direc¬ 
tions about all the operations connected with market¬ 
gardening, lists of varieties of the most profitable vege¬ 
tables, and much sound advice on kindred topics. Though 
designed for a special class, it cannot fail to he valuable 
to the amateur and private gardener, and unlucky experi¬ 
ence lias taught us'that the information contained in a 
single chapter would have been worth to us the price of 
the hook.— Daily Mercury (New Bedford). 
It is unquestionably the most thorough and the best 
work of its kind we have yet had from the pen of an 
American author. It is written in a clear, concise style, 
and tints made more comprehensive than works which 
smack more of the office than the farm or garden. 
[Daily Evening Times (Bangor, Me.). 
Mr. Henderson writes from knowledge, and is not one 
of those amateur cultivators whose potatoes cost them 
ten dollars a bushel, and whose eggs ought to he as 
valuable as those of that other member of their family— 
the goose of golden-egg-laying memory—for they are all 
hut priceless. No; he is a practical man, and he has the 
art of imparting the knowledge he possesses in a Very 
agreeable manner ; and, lie has brought together an ex¬ 
traordinary amount of useful matter in a small volume, 
which those who would “garden for profit” ought to 
study carefully.— Evening Traveller (Boston). 
There are marvels of transformation and rapid repro¬ 
duction recorded therein, which might well shame the 
dull fancy of the author ©f Aladdin or of Kaloolah, 
There is no theory about it; a man. who lias made him¬ 
self rich by market-gardening plainly tells our young 
men how they can got rich as easily as lie did, and with¬ 
out wandering to California or Montana for it cither. 
[Hoeace Greeley' in the N. Y. Tribune. 
We have devoted more space to this little work than 
wo usually do t® tomes much more pretentions. We have 
done so because of the rare merits of the hook in its 
fund of information, useful to the farmer and market- 
gardener, and because of the dearth of that kind of 
knowledge. Wc earnestly advise that fraternity, for 
whom tiffs work was written, to buy it and study it. If 
any among them have never yet read a hook, lot this he 
their primer, and wc will vouch for the excellence and 
endurance of Ihc priming. The work is profusely illus¬ 
trated with wood cuts.— Louisville Daily Journal. 
Sent post-paid, Price, $1.50. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
