400 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST 
TABLE OF CONTENTS, 
PUBLISHERS’ ANNOUNCEMENT! 
Agriculturist—About the next volume 
Asparagus, cultivation of. 
Alabama farming, Ac. 
Auction, behavior at. 
Beautiful. 
Box leaves, are they poisonous to poultry 
Books, Recipe. 
Correspondence from Wildwood, Miss.. 
Chemistry. 
Chalmers, Dr. 
Children, bathing in cold water. 
Consumptives, advice to. 
Dead Heads. 
Dogs, Crimean. 
Flax, improving the fiber. 
Farmers, should they be educated. 
Furrow, a deep. 
Geological Survey of New-Jersey.'. 
Gate, Balance, (Illustrated). 
Harrows, which is the best form. 
Horticultural Society, Brooklyn. 
Hill sides. 
Honor to whom honor. 
Horticulturist for February. 
Household Words for March. 
Incident, Beautiful. 
Letter, a dropped. 
Locomotive, private character of. 
Letter from the west. 
Manure, farmyard . 
Printing, value of. 
Poor, relief for. 
Poultry Vermin.. 
“ Red Caps, Shanghais, &c. 
Polite. 
Pip, calomel for the. 
Rabbits, Breeding. 
Subscribers, contributors, editors, &c. ... 
So-ciable affair'. 
Season, change of, etc. 
Wheat, cultivation of Spring. 
Yankee electioneer. 
Young Again (Poetry). 
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Special Notices to Subscribers, Correspondents, &c. 
Answer to Inquiries about Back Numbers, &c.— 
Back numbers from the beginning of the present volume 
can still be supplied at 4 cents per number. 
Volumes XI and XII can be supplied at $1 per volume 
unbound; or $1.50 per volume bound. 
The first ten volumes (new edition) can be furnished 
bound at $1 25 per volume, or the complete set of ten vol¬ 
umes for $10. Price of the first twelve volumes $13. 
No new edition of the volumes above the tenth will be 
issued, as the work is too large to admit of stereotyping. 
When sending a subscription always state what num¬ 
ber it shall commence with. The back numbers of this 
volume can still be supplied to new subscribers. Back 
volumes neatly bound can now be furnished from the 
commencement. Price of the first ten volumes $1 25 
each or $10 for the entire set of ten volumes. 
Volumes XI & XII $1 50 each. 
Prepared covers for the vols. XI, XII & XIII are ready, 
and can be bad for 25 cents each. They can not be sent 
through mail without danger of being spoiled. 
We can generally furnish back numbers. Where only 
on° or two may be wanting, no charge will be made to 
regular subscribers, and all numbers lost by mail we will 
cheerfully supply. 
Correspondents will please keep matters relating to 
subscriptions on a separate part of the letter lrom commu¬ 
nications forthe paper, so that they may be separ9ted. 
Letters in regard to seeds, implements, books, &c., 
should not be mingled up with matters relating to the 
American Agriculturist. In this office we have no con¬ 
nection with any business whatever which’does not relate 
directly to the affairs of the paper. When practical, we 
are glad to attend to any reasonable request made by any 
of our subscribers. 
Paper is cheap, so is postage, and we earnestly request 
correspondents to write only on one side of the sheet; 
and further, that they will place their lines as widely 
•itmvt as may be, so that in preparing articles for the prin¬ 
ter we can always have room between them to insert ad¬ 
ditions or corrections. 
Postage is no higher paid at the office of delivery than if paid 
T the office where mailed,and as the “ regulations ” at the New 
vnr’c Post-office preclude us from paying by the quarter or year, 
, is useless for subscribers to send money for the pre-payment 
f nosta^e, for we can not attend to paying postage fifty-two 
imes a year for each subscriber, 
when money is paid at the office, a receipt caneasily be given, 
v, it when Subscribers remit by mail this is less convenient 
t n ey may consider the arrival of the paper as an acknowl- 
a ?°,rient of the receipt of their funds, unless otherwise in¬ 
i'-rrinil by lotter. Any person particularly desiring a written 
r^iint can state the fact when remitting funds, and it will be 
sent rn the first number of the paper forwarded after the money 
I’s received. 
oticsprittions can begin with any number, but it is prefera- 
besrin with the 15th ot March or the 15th of September, as 
“wolf vearlv volume of 416 pages, with a complete index, begins 
of those dates, 
TISIS&TEEWTH VOLUME OF 
THE AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
THE LEADING WEEKLY AGRICULTURAL PAPER OF THE COUNTRY, 
The American Agriculturist, 
A weekly Periodical of ] 6 large quarto pages, making an annual volume of 832 pages oj 
nearly double the size of those in the first ten volumes of the Agriculturist. 
N. B.—The work is divided into two semi-annual volumes of 416 pages, each volume having a 
complete index. 
It is beautifully printed with type cast expressly for it, and on the best of clear white paper, with 
wide margin, so that the numbers can be easily stitched or bound together. 
A copious Index is weekly added, which will be fully amplified at the end of each half yearly 
volume, for the bound work. 
COMPREHENSIVE IN ITS CHARACTER. 
Each volume will contain all matter worth recording, which transpires either at home or abroad, 
and which can serve to instruct or interest the Farmer, the Planter, the Fruit-Grower, the Gar¬ 
dener, and the Stock-Breeder ; thus making it the most complete and useful Agricultural Publica¬ 
tion of the day. 
CORRECT AND VALUABLE MARKET REPORTS. 
The Markets will be carefully reported, giving the actual transactions which take place from week 
to week, in Grain, Provisions, Cattle, &c., thus keeping our readers constantly and reliably advised as 
to their interests. During the past year the knowledge obtained from these Market Reports alone, 
has saved our readers thousands of dollars, by informing them of the best time to sell or purchase. 
SUCH A PAPER IS DEMANDED BY THE FARMING COMMUNITY. 
The Publishers confidently believe that the Agriculturists of this country are becoming too much 
awake to the demands of their own calling, to be longer satisfied with the slow monthly issues of a 
paper professedly devoted to their interests, or to trust alone to the irresponsible extracts in a “ Far¬ 
mer’s column,” so popular just now in papers chiefly devoted to business, polities, or literature , 
and they look for the united support of all the intelligent Farmers of this country in their continued 
effort to furnish a weekly paper of high and reliable character, which shall be progressive, and at the 
same time cautious and conservative in all its teachings. 
ESSENTIALLY AN AGRICULTURAL PAPER. 
The Agriculturist will not depart from its legitimate sphere to catch popular favor, by lumbering 
up its pages with the silly, fictitious literature, and light, miscellaneous matter of the day ; it has a 
higher aim ; and a small part only of its space will be devoted to matters not immediately pertain¬ 
ing to the great business of Agriculture. The household as well as the out-door work of the farm 
will receive a due share of attention. The humbugs and nostrums afloat in the community will be 
tried by reliable scientific rules, and their worthlessness exposed. It is the aim of the publishers 
to keep this paper under the guidance of those who will make it a standard work, which shall com¬ 
municate to its readers only that which is safe and reliable. 
AN INDEPENDENT JOURNAL. 
The American Agriculturist stands upon its own merits; and the truthfulness, zeal and ability 
which it brings to the support of the interests of the farmer. It is untrammeled by any collateral 
business connections whatever ; nor is it the organ of any clique, or the puffing machine of any man 
or thing. Thoroughly independent in all points, its ample pages are studiously given alone to the 
support and improvement of the great Agricultural class. 
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT. 
The American Agriculturist is under the joint Editorial supervision of Mr. A. B. Allen —its 
principal editor for the first ten years—and Mr. Orange Judd, A. M., a thoroughly practical farmer 
and agricultural chemist. 
They will be assisted by Mr. Lewis F. Allen, an eminent practical farmer, stock breeder, and 
fruit grower; Rev. Wm. Clift, and Mr. R. G. Pardee, both widely known as pleasing and instructive 
writers on gardening and other departments of practical Agriculture, and, in addition to these, 
number of other eminent Agricultural and Horticultural writers. 
THE CHEAPEST PAPER IN THE COUNTRY OF ITS CHARACTER. 
The A.merican Agriculturist is supplied to regular subscribers at a cost of less than four cents a 
number, of sixteen large pages; and to large clubs tor less than two and a half cents. Each 
number will contain suggestions for the treatment of soils, manures, crops, stock, &c., which will 
often be worth to the reader more than the cost of the paper for a year. 
SPECIMEN COPIES. 
Specimen copies will be forwarded gratis to any one sending their name and Post-office address 
to the publishers. 
TERMS, &c.—The paper will be promptly issued on Wednesday of each week, and mailed to 
subscribers on the following liberal terms : 
To single Subscribers. $2 00 a year, $2 00 
“ Clubs of 3 do. 1 67 “ 5 00 
“ “ 5 do. 1 60 “ 8 00 
“ “ 10 do.*. 1 50 “ 15 00 
The money always to accompany the names for which the paper is ordered. 
The Postmaster, or other person sending a club of ten, will be entitled to one extra copy gratis. 
The Postmaster, or other person sending a club of twenty or more, will be presented with an 
extra copy, and also a copy of the National Magazine, Scientific American, Weekly Tribune, or 
Weekly Times, or any other paper or periodical in this City, the cost not exceeding two dollars 
per annum. The above are not given where book premiums are paid. 
Subscriptions may be forwarded by mail at the risk of the Publishers, if inclosed and mailed in 
the presence of the Postmaster. 
Communications for the paper should be addressed to the Editors ; Subscriptions, Advertise 
ments, and all matters relating to the business department, should be addressed to the Publishers, 
AULEN & CO., No. 189 Water-st., Hew-York. 
