1876 .] 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
889 
LIGHT RUNNING 
WITH 
PURCHASE GEAE. 
(Retail Price, S@.) 
POINTS OF SUPERIORITY. 
1 .-IMPROVED DOUBLE PURCHASE GEAR. 
2. —SPRINGS OK WOOD AND RUBBER. 
3. -ROWELL’S DOUBLE COG-WHEELS. 
4. —TWO INDEPENDENT PRESSURE SCREWS. 
5. —COGS BOTH ENDS OF EACH ROLL. 
6. —IMPROVED ADJUSTABLE CLAMP. 
7. —FOLDING APRON Oil CLOTHES GUIDE. 
8. —SUPERIOR ELASTIC DURABLE ROLL. 
SOLD BY DEALERS EVERYWHERE. 
METROPOLITAN WASHING MACHINE 00., 
32 Cortlandt St., N. Y. 
Fine Teas. 
This is a combination of capitalists to supply the con¬ 
sumers of Teas throughout the united States on the mutual 
principle. 
We expect every consumer of Teas to render us all the 
assistance they can in carrying out our enterprise, as we 
make a specialty of SUPPLYING CONSUMERS ONLY, 
(and allow no middlemen to make any profit on our im¬ 
portations,) which will enable us to supply them with Teas 
at prices lower than have ever been knowp, and of those 
fine qualities that seldom reach the interior, being sold only 
in large cities and among the very wealthy. 
SEND FOR PRICE LIST . 
CONSUMERS’ IMPORTING TEA CO., 
No. 8 Church Street, 
P. O. Box 5509. NEW YORE CITY. 
50,000 IRISH JUNIPERS. 
From one to five feet. We can sell them cheaper than any 
other establishment in the United States. Send for pricelist. 
TltUETT’S SONS <fc MORGAN, 
Rosebank Nurseries, Nashville, Tenn. 
INQUIRE FOR 
W. A. DROWN & m 
UMBRELLAS. 
PHILADELPHIA and NEW YORK.. 
The qualities marked with their name are confidently 
recommended. 
ATWOOD’S 
Country and Suburban Houses. 
By D. T. ATWOOD, Architect. 
PRICE, POSTPAID, $1.50. 
This work is finely illustrated with about one hundred 
and fitly engravings, and gives Instruction upon all points, 
from the selecting of a place to build to the perfect*com- 
pletion of the house. 
Contents : Hints to House Seekers; The Plan; Water 
Supply; Kitchen and Ventilation ; Proportion; The Style; 
'l'lie Foundations; Cisterns and Filterers; Superstructure 
Walls; Brick; Description of Ancient Methods; Concrete 
Walls; Proportions; Howto Lay a Wall; American Build¬ 
ing Block; EnPise; Wooden Walls; External Covering 
of Frames; the Roof; Timber—Its Properties and Preser¬ 
vation; Painting; Designs and Plans of Cottages, Country 
Houses, Churches. Stables, etc. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
BROOM-CORN and BROOMS. 
A TREATISE ON 
Raising Broom-Corn and Making 
Brooms 
On a Small or Large Scale. 
Written and Compiled by the Editors of the American 
Agriculturist. 
CONTENTS. 
Introduction. Broom-Corn and its Varieties. Description 
of the Plant. Introduction and Extent of Culture. Second¬ 
ary Products, Seed. Fodder and Stalks. Cultivation, The 
Land. Rotation. Manure. Hills or Drills. Quantity of Seed 
to the Acre. Time of Planting. Cultivating. Implements. 
Thinning. Time for Harvesting. Harvesting Dwarf Corn. 
Lopping, Bending or Breaking. Crooked Brush. Tabling. 
Cutting) Preparing for Market. Curing the Brush. Scrap¬ 
ing or Removal of the Seed. Assorting the Brush. Drying 
or Curing House. Racks for Drying. Curing. Curing and 
Handling the Crop on the Large Scale. Baling. The Press. 
Marketing. Commissions and Charges. Profits of the Crop. 
General Conclusions. Growing on the Large Scale. What 
a Retired Grower says. Making Brooms. Home-Made 
Brooms. Home-Made Brooms, Another Method. Making 
Brooms by Machinery. Extent of the Manufacture. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, Paper cover, 50 cts., cloth, 75 cts. 
Money in the Garden. 
A VEGETABLE MANUAL, 
PREPARED WITH A VIEW TO 
ECONOMY AND PROFIT, 
BY P. T. QUINN, 
PRACTICAL HORTICULTURIST. 
In tills work the author aims to give, in a plain, practical 
style, instructions on three distinct although closely con¬ 
nected brandies of gardening—the kitchen-garden, market- 
garden, and field culture; the only and sufficient credentials 
ior the fitness of his undertaking being a successful practical 
experience for a term of years. 
CONTENTS. 
Chapter I. Money in Chapter VIII. Melons. 
the Garden. “ IX. Onions. 
“ II. Ilot-beds. 
“ III. Artichoke. 
“ IV. Beans. 
“ V. Cabbages. 
“ VI. Egg-Plants. 
“ VII. Lettuce. 
Chapter XV. List of Seeds. 
PRICE, POST-PAID - - - --- 
X. Parsley. 
XI. Radishes. 
XII. Salsify. 
XIII. Tomatoes. 
XIV. Forcing 
Houses. 
$1.50 
The Thomery System of 
GRAPE CULTURE. 
From the French, by M. Du Breuil. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
Cultivation of the Vine upon Trellises in Northern and 
Central France, according to the New Methods in use at 
Thomery. etc. 
This is the system under which the splendid Chasselas de 
Fontainebleau Crapes are produced ; it is the method ad¬ 
vocated by Dr. Grant. The account is literally translated 
from Du Breuil'sCours d'Arboriculture, and is the onlv com¬ 
plete account which can lie found—at least so says Hie 
Frenchman Rendu, in his “ Ampelographie Francaise,” and 
he ought to know. 
Price, Post-paid, flexible cloth covers,^) cts. 
Hussey’s National Cottage 
Architecture. 
New and Original Designs, Working 
Scale Drawings, and Details for all 
Styles of low-priced Houses, with 
Specifications and Cost. Just pub¬ 
lished. Royal quarto. Post-paid, $6. 
WOODWARD’S 
NATIONAL 
ARCHITECT. 
1.000 Working Drawings, 
Plans, Details, Specifica¬ 
tions. and Estimates. Twelve 
Dollars, post-paid. 
STAIR BUILDER. 
post-paid. 
M0NCKT0NS NATIONAL) Six Dollars, 
CARPENTER and JOINER, f 
THE BRAHMA FOWL. 
By LEWIS WRIGHT, 
Author of '■'■The Practical Poultry Keeper ,” and “The 
Illustrated Book of Poultry." 
CONTENTS.—Chapter I. The Origin of Brahmas.—Chap¬ 
ter II. Economic Qualities and Management of the Brahma 
as n Stock Fowl.—Chapter III. Characteristics of Dark and 
Light Brahmas as Bred for Exhibition.—Chapter IV. The 
Practical Breeding, Rearing, and Management of Brahmas 
for Exhibition.—Chapter V. The Judging of Brahmas. 
Elegantly Illustrated with numerous colored lithographs 
and wood cuts. PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.50. 
DISEASES OF THE HORSE, 
AND HOW TO TREAT THEM. 
By ROBERT CHAWNER, Veterinary Surgeon. 
A concise Manual of Special Pathology, for the use of 
Horsemen, Farmers. Stock-Raisers, and Students in Agricul¬ 
tural Colleges in the United States. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.25. 
Either of the above .books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price, hy 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
BARRY’S 
FEtXIT GAEDEH. 
By P. BARRY. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
“Barry’s Fruit Garden’’ is one of those practical, pro¬ 
fusely illustrated, and comprehensive manuals which Orange 
Judd & Co. delight to publish. It seems to tell almost 
everything which one book can tell about the ins and outs 
and ways and means of fruit culture. — The Advance 
(Chicago). 
This volume of 490 pages, as its title implies, is devoted to 
the culture of fruits of every variety in orchards and gar¬ 
dens. It describes the diseases incident to the various fruit 
trees, the kinds of insects that prey upon them, and the 
remedies for ridding trees of the evil.— Scientific American. 
Barry’s Fruit Garden strikes us as about as complete a 
manual of the kind as could be desired. Nearly everything, 
in fine, needed seems to be provided in this compact volume, 
and its abundant illustrations render everything intelligible 
to even the uninitiated.— The Methodist (N. Y.). 
The author writes from his own practical experience ; and 
that experience is of no ordinary character, being the result 
of more than thirty years’ work at the head of the largest 
nursery in America, where every operation is conducted 
with eminent skill.— The Country Gentleman. 
It explains all the minutiae of fruit-gardening, even to the 
implements, copiously illustrated by engravings, so that the 
merest novice need not err; gives descriptions of all the 
different kinds of fruit that can he raised in our climate in 
every stage of their lives, from the germ to the fruit-bearing 
period, with instructions in pruning and grafting, in a most 
satisfactory manner. The chapter on grapes alone is worth 
more than the price of the book.— Jersey City Times. 
Mr. Barry has long been known as an authority upon fruit 
culture, and this volume of 490 pages, with a full and care¬ 
fully prepared index, gives the latest results of his study 
and experience.— Spring-field Republican. 
PKI€E, POST-PAID, $2.50* 
DOWNING’S 
LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 
A TREATISE ON THE 
Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening 
ADARTED TO 
NORTH AMERICA; 
WITH A VIEW TO THE 
Improvement of Country Residences. 
Comprising- historical notices and general principles of the 
art, directions for laying out grounds and arranging planta¬ 
tions, tiie description and cultivation of hardy trees, decora¬ 
tive accompaniments of the house and grounds, the forma¬ 
tion of pieces of artificial water, flower gardens, etc.,—with 
Remarks on Rural Architecture. 
By the late A. J. DOWNING, Esq. 
WITH A SUPPLEMENT, 
containing some remarks about country places, and the best 
methods of making them ; also an account, of the newer de¬ 
ciduous and evergreen plants, lately introduced into culti¬ 
vation, both hardy and half-hardy, 
AND A SECOND SUPPLEMENT, 
bringing down to the present time some, brief account oftlie 
various trees and shiubs which have been introduced since 
the former Supplement was published, (in 1859), 
By HENRY WINTHROP SARGENT. 
BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED, 
with thirty-nine engravings on wood, six on stone, and six 
on steel, one of which is a fine portrait of the author. 
Price, Post-Paid, - - - $6.50 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
