4:7© 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[December. 
ANOTHER GREAT 
REDUCTION 
IN 
TEAS. 
GREAT SAVING TO CONSUMERS 
BY GETTING UP 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 THE PRICES OF ALL THEIR TEAS 
to the lowest point. GOODS WARRANTED TO GIVE 
SATISFACTION in all cases at the following 
LIST OF PRICES s 
OOLONG, (Black) 50, 00, 70, best 80c. per lb. 
MIXED, (Green and Black) 50, 00,-70, best 80c. per lb. 
JAPAN, (Uncolored) 80,90, $1.00, best $1.10 per lb. 
IMPERIAL. (Green) 70, 80, 90,.$1.00, $1.10, best . $1.00 per lb. 
YOUNG HYSON, (Green) 70, 80, 90, $1,00, best $1.15 per lb. 
GUNPOWDER,-(Green) $1.00. best $1.40 per lb. 
ENGLISH BREAKFAST, (Black) 70, 80,90, $1.00, best $1.10 
per lb. 
jt COFFEES 
ROASTED AND GROUND -DAILY, always under our own 
supervision and upon our own premises. . 
. 'GROUND COFFEE, 15, 30,'25,30, best 35c. peril). 
Hotels, Saloons, Boarding-House Keepers -and Families 
who use large quantities of Coffee, can-economize'in that 
article-by using our FRENCH BREAKFAST AND DlN- 
'tER'COFF”" ’ ' ■ . •- • 
NER COFFEE, which we sell at the low price of 25__cts. per 
pound, and warrant to give perfect satisfaction. 
* ROASTED (Uhground), 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 liow 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- 
each party getting exactly what he orders, and no more. 
'1’hq.cost of transportation, tire members of the club can di¬ 
vide equitably among themselves. 
TJiel 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 S profits by purchasing of 
• THE 
Great American Tea Comp’y, 
31 & 33 Vesey Street, 
P. O. Box, 5,043. NEW YORK CITY. 
SEND FOR FREE SAMPLE. 
H0RSF0RDS SELFRAISING 
BREAD PREPARATION: 
TTnequaled for making light and nutritious Bread, Bis¬ 
cuits, Pastry,etc.,m\<\ is used and approved by Orange Judd, 
Esq., Editor of this Journal; Drs. M. II. Henry and It. O. Dore- 
mus ; Professors Ott and Chandler, New York City; Proles¬ 
sors James V. Z. Illaney and It. L. Rea,Chicago ; Dr. Wm. S. 
Merrill, Cincinnati. 
WILSON, LOCKWOOD, EVERETT & CO.. Gen’l Agents, 
_ _ 51 Murray Street, New York. 
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.—Robert Morris Uope- 
Iunff. Boston, lias 20 years' experience, and directs ail kinds 
of Rural Improvements. Send for Circular. 
tsr All New Subscribers to THE CULTIVATOR AND 
COUNTRY GENTLEMAN for 1872, paying in advance, 
previous to the close of 1871, will receive the paper 
WEEKLY, from receipt of remittance to January 1st, 1S72, 
WITHOUT CHARGE. 
SW Any person wishing to try the paper before subscrib¬ 
ing, will be supplied with copies regularly from date of ap¬ 
plication to Jan. 1st, 1872, for the nominal price of a 3 -cent 
stamp for each intervening iveek. 
The Country Gentleman. 
Volume for 187.2. 
The CuLTivATor. and Country Gentleman, for nearly 
two score years, has ranked, both in this country and abroad, 
as the Standard Journal of American Agriculture. 
The Editors and Proprietors, in addition to their own per¬ 
sonal labors, are regularly assisted by a very large number 
of Special Correspondents and Regular Contributors, 
among whom are included many Leading Agriculturists, in 
all parts of the country, East and West—and by over Five 
Hundred Occasional and Voluntary Writers, 
directly in the ranks of the Best Farmers and Horticulturists 
of nearly every State in the Union. With the co-operation 
of so large a corps of practical men, this Journal is intended 
to possess exceptional value as the chosen medium of 
Intercommunication among all classes interested in 
the Produets and Fertility of the Land—those who Cultivate 
and those who Consume—the Buyer and Shipper, as well as 
the first owner of the Crop—Breeders of Improved Animals 
and their Customers—Manufacturers of Improved Machinery 
and those who purchase and employ it—Nurserymen and 
Fruit Raisers—and, especially, to supply duller and better 
data as to the progress, prospects, and returns’of each suc¬ 
cessive season, as throwing-light upon one of the most im¬ 
portant of all questions— Wien to Buy and when to Sell. 
TERMS—The Country Gentleman is published weekly, 
on the following terms,' when paid strictly in advance f One 
Copy, one year, §2.50; Four. Copies, $10, and an addi¬ 
tional copy for the year free to the sender of the Club; Ten 
Copies, $20, and an additional copy for the: year free to 
the sender of the Club. 
BST* Specimen Copies Free. Address 
I-UTHEK, TUCKER & 'SON, Publishers, 
ALBANY, W. V. ' 
Sit TEea-Uectar 
BLACK TEA 
with 
GREEN TEA 
FLAVOR,, 
and will 
IfiJ Suit all tastes. 
W arrant'ed - Satisfactory. 
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 
And for sale Wholesale only by the 
GREAT ATLAMTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO., 
P. O. Box 5,506. No. 8 Church St., N. Y. 
Send for Thea-Nectar Circular. 
1872 .. 
HOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. 
Harper’s Periodicals 
FOR 1872. 
Harper’s Magazine, 
The great design of Harper's is to give correct informa¬ 
tion and rational amusement to the great masses of the 
people. There is no monthly Magazine an intelligent read¬ 
ing lamily can less afford to be without. Many .Magazines 
are accumulated. Harper's is edited. There is not a Maga¬ 
zine that is printed which shows more intelligent pains ex¬ 
pended on its articles and mechanical execution. There is 
not a cheaper Magazine published. There is not, confess¬ 
edly, a more popular Magazine in the world —New Eng¬ 
land Homestead. 
At once the most popular, and, in its scheme, the most 
original of our Magazines. * * * Ail the periodicals which 
the Harpers publish are almost ideally well edited.— Nation. 
Harper’s Weekly. 
The best publication of its class in America, and so far 
ahead of all other weekly journals as not to permit of any 
comparison between it and any of their number. Its col¬ 
umns contain the finest collections of reading matter that 
are printed. * *-* Its illustrations are numerous and beau¬ 
tiful, being furnished by the chief artists of the country.— 
Boston Traveler. ■ ...... 
Harper’s Weekly is the best and most interesting illustrated 
newspaper. Nor does its value depend on its illustration* 
alone. Its reading matter is of a high order of literary 
merit—varied, instructive, 'entertaining, and unexception¬ 
able.— H. Y. Sun. 
Harper’s Bazar. 
Free from all political and sectarian discussion, devoted 
to fashion, pleasure, and instruction, it is just the agreeable, 
companionable, and interesting domestic paper which everv 
mother and wife and sweetheart will require every soil, 
husband, and lover to bring home with him every Saturday 
eveniBg .—Philadelphia Ledger. . 
By all means buy Harper's Bazar. Not for yourself, but 
for your with or daughter or sister or'sweetheart.' There 
never was any paper published that so delighted the heart 
of woman. Never mind if it does cost you a new bonnet; it 
will save you ten times the price in the household economy 
it teaches .—Providence Journal. 
. TERMS FOR 1872. 
Harper’s Magazine, One Year.$4 00 
Harper’s Weekly, One Year. 4 00 
Harper’s Bazar, One Year. 4 00 
Harper's Magazine, Harper’s Weekly, and Harper’s 
Bazar, to one address, for one year, $10.00; or any two 
for $7.00. 
An Extra Copy of either the Magazine, Weekly, or 
Bazar will be supplied gratis for every Club o/'Five Sub¬ 
scribers at $4.00 each, in one remittance; or Six Copies 
for $20.00, without extra copy. 
GREAT VALUE OF PATENTS. 
ROB ABLY no investment of a small sum of money brings a greater return than the expense incurred in obtain 
ing a patent, even when the invention is but a small one. Lhi-ger inventions” * ’ ' ” 
are found to pay correspondingly well. 
OBTAIN 
this information, prepare a sketch and description of the invention, or send a model to M ora & Go. and ask advice. 
TT/YUST mn ’ More than Fifty Thousand inventors have availed tljpmsclyes of the- 
liUVV 1U •#— service "’ ■■ . 
— ,u, „ — - acted i 
standi__ , |__ _ _ - 
of assistants, mostly selected from the ranks of the Patent Office; men 
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the Patent Office, enables McknA Co. to do every thing appertaining topatentsqoiCKF.il, better and cheaper than any 
other reliable agency.'MoNN &Co. examine drawings, models and descriptions of new inventions of every kind, and 
give opinion as to their patentability, by mail, free of charge. They also make special examinations at the Patent 
Office, and furnish a more elaborate opinion for a fee of $5.00. 
Muhn & Co. prepare specifications and drawings for Patents, 
ments, conduct Interferences, obtain Extensions, and solicit Pate” 
receives special notice in the Scientific American, which is read 1 
and full particulars sent free. 
“HINTS TO INVEN'_ 
the U. S. Patent Laws, government fees, 
Caveats, Re-issues, Designs, Trade-Marks...... ——---„ -,-,---- 
new census, by counties and principal cities, important to every seller of patents, price 25 cents. Advice free. Everything 
confidential. Address all communications to MUNN «fc CO., Publishers 
Office in Washington, 
Cor. F and 7th Sts. 
PARK ROW, 
NEW YORK. 
TZKIEl IBZBST PAPBB I TBY IT I 
The Scientific American has been published twenty-five years and stands at the head of nil Industrial papers. _ 
It contains Engravings of New Inventions, patented Machines of all kinds, including the most improved Agricultural Imple¬ 
ments and Household utensils, Bridges, Architecture and Engineering. Everything new in Chemistry, Science,.Inyejuion and 
Discovery abroad, is republished in the Scientific American. It also contains axi;official record ol all patents granted in the 
United States, and a description of the most important inventions. An able corns of writers on Engineering, Mechanics, Chem¬ 
istry are employed on this paper. It has a larger circulation than any paper of its class ever published. It is indispensable to 
every Inventor, Manufacturer, Mechanic, Engineer, Chemist and Jeweler, Specimen copies sent free. Published weekly. 
Terms, $3,00 a year in advance; $1.50 for six months. Address 
MUNN & CO. } Patent Solicitors, 37 Park Row, New York, 
