1865.] 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
63 
TWENTIETH ANNUAL VOLUME. 
THE HORTICULTURIST, 
ISOS. 
A Monthly Magazine Dbtotkd to 
Grape Culture, 
Fruits, 
Flowers, 
Gardening, 
Rural Arcliitecturc, 
Liandscapc Adornment, 
and Rural Pnr.suits, 
Forming an Annual Volume of 400 Royal octavo pages, 
handsomely Illustrated. _ 
TWO dollars perannnm, TWENTY CENTS pernumher. 
All articles are from the best practical talent in the countrt;. 
Volumes 186J,'l8i):3.1S04, bound and post-paid, and numbers 
for 1865. SEVEN DOLLARS. 1700 pages, 500 Engravings. 
GEO- E. a. F- W. WOODWARD, 
Publisliers, 37 ParR Row, New Yoi-R. 
m EVERY COUNTY 
IN THE 
LOYAE, 8 TATES« 
SELL 3T SUBSCRIPTION a work intense!}’ 
interesting and very popular, entitled THE INDI.\N 
RACES OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA, including 
an acount of the Sioux Massacre in Minnesota, written by 
Hon. J. T. Headley. This work is well adapted to tlie wants 
of the masses, and is destined to meet with a large sale. For 
particulars apply to or address 
HURLBUT, SCRANTON & CO. 
No. 148 Asylum-st., 
Hartford, Conn. 
Agents will please state their address. 
Demorest’s Illustrated Monthly 
and Mme. Demorest’s Mirror 
of Fashions. 
A briliant, spicy, artistic, and valuable Magazine, with 
extraordinary attractions, and novelties for 
1865. Comprising original Stories, Poems, Music, 
Recipes, Splendid Engravings, and other enter¬ 
taining and useful literature, elegant aud reliable Fatsliioii 
Plates, and full size Patterns, Tiie Model Parlor 
Magazine of America, and a Magazine of utility and ar¬ 
tistic EXCELLENCE. Yearly only $3,00 with a large and 
Magnificent Parlor Steel Engraving or a package of two 
dclhirs’ worth of full-size patterns, sis a PRIiMILiM to each 
ubscriher. Splendid Premiums and I'ernis for Clubs. 
Single Copies 25 cents, mailed free on receipt of the price. 
TlieFeb. No. with rare, artistic, and spleiulicl novelties now 
i^adv. By a recent very liberal arrangement made wiili tlie 
Publisher of the Agriculturist, wc ])ropose to furnish our 
Illustrated Monthly and tlie Agriculturist one year at $3.7.5, 
either to commence with anv number, and to include the 
valuable premium we are orfering to each subscriber. 
Address W. JENNINGS DEMOIIEST, 
89 Beekman-st., New-York. 
The Evening Post, New-York. 
FRANK, FEARIiESS ami INDEPEWHEAT, 
lulls Eclitoi'i.al advocacy of the great principles of Univer- 
sal Freedom: 
iiiCCUR.ATE and EXPLICIT in its Financial and 
Market Reports: 
INSTRUCTIVE and INTERESTING in its Lit¬ 
erary Reviews and Selections, it invites comparison witli any 
newspaper publislied on tins Continent. 
TERMS s Daily, $12 a year; Semi-Weekly, $4 a ye<ar; 
Weekly. $2 a year. Specimen copies containing full Club 
ratei sent free. 
WM. C. BRYANT & CO., Publishers, New-York. 
THE 
.TOUR ML 
AND FAMILY VISITANT, 
Is a Movdhiy Magazine for Mothers and the Houseliold. With 
nothing light or traslty, it is practical in purpose, sul)Stantial 
In rnatU r, attractive in style. To aid Motliers in tlieir noble 
but diffi( ult work, and to make tlie liouseliold liealtliy, liap- 
py, usefil, and good, is tbe object of tlie .Journal. One 
Dollar a\ d a half a year. Five copies $7. Single N umbers, 
Fifteen i 'ents eacli. Sent free to Clergymen wlio circulate 
it'in tlieii congregations. Someare wanted in every Cliurch, 
Town, an-1 Village, to get up a Club. Direct to MOTHERS' 
JOURNA L, 335 Broadway, New-York. 
Ali TED—Agents throughout the Loyal States 
tc sell by subscription our new and higlily popular 
book, “M 'itGAN ANi> His Captors,” by Rev. F. Senoiir, of 
iockford, 'll. Complete in one elegant octavo vol., with 
<-icel portir-it of Morgan. Price $1 7a. One agent reports 98 
subscriber« out of 100 people solicited to subscribe. An- 
otlier, 35 o.Jt of every 40 solicited, aud an average of-25 sub¬ 
scribers per dav. Two otliers obtained 60 snbscribei's in a 
li-ay and al alf. It is really one of the best agency-books ever 
ipnbllslied. No circumstances of tlie Rebellion liave develop¬ 
ed better n ateriai for an interesting and instructive volume 
than the gnat raids of Jolin .Morgan. Exclusive territory 
given, and\ sry liber<al terms oflered. C. F. VENT & CO.. 
Publishers, t-S West 4th-st., Cincinnati. O., and 12 Dearhorn- 
st.. Cliicago, 111. 
T he i'-HBUNE almanac for I 86 . 5 .—This 
Popul r Anniiulis now readv. and contains besides the 
nsur.l statisi -lal and miscellaneous matter, tlie full ofticial 
Presidential uid Congressional vote of all tlie States. Price 
—Single cop -s 20c.: 7 copies, sent by mail, free of postage, 
|l; iOO copi 5 . by exin-ess, $ 1 - 2 , Addres.s 
THE TRIBUNE New-York. 
w- 
T 
HE TRIBUNE FOR 1805. 
PROSPECTUS. 
The Military and Naval successes of 13r>4. with the auspi¬ 
cious result of our Presidential contest. Inive lifted a lieavy 
weight from the breasts of the Loyal Millions ot our coun¬ 
trymen. It is now felt even hy those who have been dis- 
trustAil and faint-hearted, that the Union is to emerj^e 
triumphant from the deadly strife whereinto she was so 
wickedly precipitated hy her assailants, and that Slavery, lier 
relentless foe, is to encounter the fate of Haman. The perils 
of foreip:n interventK''n and of'Western insurrection are safe¬ 
ly passed; Auraiiam Lincoln, no longer assailable as tl>e 
choice of a minoritv, holds tlie helm of State for four years 
louffer; the Rebellion, palpahlv weakened by its defeats and 
losses during the year now closins:—with its credit so re¬ 
duced that its purse-bearer oflicially declares that its Treas¬ 
ury Notes can only he excliamred forcoin atthe rate oftwen- 
ty-five for one, while its bonds command but six cents on 
the dollar—but awaits the blow which shall soon strike the 
sword from its parricidal hand, and remit its master spirit to 
the Justice, or it may he to the clemencv. of a sorely wronired 
and justly incensed but forbearin'? ami magnanimous Peo¬ 
ple. Such are the auspices wliich justifv oiir faith that the 
year soon to open will see the Stars and‘Strines float unchal¬ 
lenged from every battlement in the Repuhne, and the per¬ 
fect law of Liberty for All immovably imbedded In the Con¬ 
stitution of our Union. 
THE NEW-YORK TPJBUNE, founded in 1841, will enter 
upon its twenty-fourth rear with quickened hopes and en¬ 
larged means of usefulness. Its principles need no re-state- 
ment; its aims arc the diffusion of Intelligence and the in¬ 
culcation of a spirit of Freedom and Humanity. When this 
truth shall have been generally recognized and established 
as the basis of our instil ntions and polity, that injustice to the 
poorest, the weakest, the most despised, is a fearful mistake 
—that no community or State can afford to wrong even its 
hnmblevSt member—then will our land bask once more in the 
calm sunshine of peace and prosperity. 
THE TRIBUNE has for the last year been published with hut 
small profit to its prop.dctors. compared with the vast outlay 
and labor devoted to its publication, solely because of the de¬ 
preciation of our CuiTcncv below the siiecie standard, com¬ 
pelling us to buy paper and other materials at a cost con¬ 
siderably above tlie full amount received from our subscri¬ 
bers. On our weekly edition, the net loss has amounted to 
many thousands of dollars; while our large receipts from 
Advertising have been absorbed by the extraordinory ex¬ 
penses for Correspondence, l i'legrapliing, &c., devolved on 
us by the War. As we do not suppose our patrons de.-ire we 
should work for them at our own cost, and prefer no* to be 
patronized by any who mdf/ desire it. we have somewhat 
advanced for the ensuing year the pric(‘s of our Semi-Weekly 
and Weekly, as we have alr«-adv done with those of our 
Haily editions, 'fids increase is purely nominal: there never 
before was a time wljcn the farmers of our country could 
buy THE TIHBUNE for so liitleof their own products or 
labor as they c^iu bv the folhr-ving 
TKUMS. 
DaVily tribune. 
Mail subscribers, 1 copy. 1 year—311 numbers.SIO 00 
SEMI- \V E E ELY TRl B U N E. 
Mail subscribers, 1 cop.v, 1 vear—104 numbers. 4 00 
do 2 co|iies,'do, do .... 7 00 
do 5 ('opies, or over, for each copy.. .. 3 00 
An extra copy will he sent to every club of fifteen. 
WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 
.Mail subscribers, .slmrle copy. I year—52 numbers. 3 .^O 
do Clubs of five. 10 00 
Persons remitting $20 for 10 copies, will receive one copy 
extra, gratis. 
Persons remitting $40 for 20 copies,'will receive one copy 
Semi-Weekly, gratis. 
Persons remitting $80 for 40 copies, ■will receive one copy 
Daily, gratis. 
To Advertisers. 
MeruUants, M:iinitjiftiirei's. Inventors, Real 
Estate Owjiers, Seliools, and all Otltci's 
wlio Desire to Kciieli Csistoincrs in 
all Parts of tlie Country, will 
Find it to tlieir Interest 
to Advertise in 
THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE. 
Tlie circulation of The Triudne is larger tliantliat of any 
Ollier Newspaper, and it is read by tlie most enterprising, 
tlirifty and industrious classes. Advertisements inserted in 
each of (lie editions of The Tribune—Daily, Semi-Weekly 
and Weekly— will be read liy nearly a million of people, 
and no investment pays a man so well as tlie money lie 
spends in judicious advertising. The investigation by tlie 
Mayor and Controller of tlie city resulted in naming The 
Daily Tribune as being one of the two papers having the 
largest daily circulation, and its weekly edition is acknowl¬ 
edged to be far greater tlian any otlier Newspaper. 
DAILY TRIBUNE. 
RATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE NEW-YOR.K DAILY TRIBUNE. 
Ordinary advertisements, classified under appropriate 
beads, 15 cents a line per eacli insertion. Nothing inserted 
for less tliau 50 cents eacli insertion. 
SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 
Ordinary Advertising—Twenty-five Cents a line 
each insertion. 
Item—[A dvertisement]—F ifty Cent.s a line each inser¬ 
tion. 
THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 
Ordinary Advertising—$ 1 a line eacli insertion. 
Item— In the News Column, prefixed by the word [Adver- 
tisemeHt]—$1 25 a line each insertion. Nothing inserted for 
less tlian $5. 
No less by the quarter or year. 
Address THE TRIBUNE, 
No. 154 Nassau-st., New-Yorlc, 
66 rf^HE HUMAN FACE ®BVINE.’>-.4 Neiw 
M. System of Physiot^nomy — Eyes, Ears, Nose. Lips, 
^fouth. Head, Hair, Hands, Feet, Skin, with, all “Signs 
OF (Character.” a?id How to Read Them, s^iven in 
THE PHR.ENOLOGICAL JOURNAL and LIFE ILLUS¬ 
TRATED for Jboo. S. R. WELLS. Editor. Portraits of Re¬ 
markable ^len, in every calling, illustrating difl'erent phases 
of Human Character, the sane and the insane, the virtuous 
and the vicious- Physiognomy. Ethnology, Phrenology, 
Psychology, etc., in each number. New Volume, 4lst, for 
18C5. Monthly. (>uly $2 a year. “ Kow is the time to sub¬ 
scribe.” Sample numbers bv first post. 20 cents. Please Ad¬ 
dress ^lessrs, FOWLER & 'WELLS. SS9 Broadway, New-York. 
BOOKS FOR FARMERS and OTHERS 
[Any of the following books can be obtained afr the Of 
fice ot the Agriculturist at the prices named, or they will be 
forwarded by mail, post-paid, on receipt of the price. Ail of 
these books maybe procured in making up a library. We 
Indicate our opinion of their value by one or mort Stars.] 
These prices are only good for orders sent previously to 
March 1st. 
Allen’s (L. P.; Rural Architecture....*.$ i 50 
Allen’s (R. L.) American Farm Book*. 
Allen's Diseases of Domestic Animals. 
American Farmer’s Encyclopedia. 
American Rose Culturist. 
Art of Saw Filing_(Holly). 
Barry’s Fruit Garden_***. 
Beecher’s (Hy Ward) Fruit Flowers and Farming 
1 50 
1 00 
6 on 
30 
60 
1 50 
1 25 
Bement’s Poulterer’s Companion... .**. 2 oo 
Bement’s Rabbit Fancier. 30 
. 30 
Blake’s Farmer’s Encvclopedia. 1 50 
Y. --VY..-, r.- ^ 
75 
2 00 
75 
75 
50 
Bonssingault’s Rural Economy.. 
Bridgeman’s Fruit Cultivator’s Manuai. 
Bridgeman’s Young Gardener’s Assistant. 
Bridgeman’s Kitchen Garden Instructor. 
Bridgeman’s Florist’s Guide. 
Brandt’s Age of Horses (English and (German).. 
Breck’s Book of Flowers_*. l 50 
Browne’s Field Book of Manures. 1 .50 
Burr’s Vegetables of America_*. 450 
Carpenters and Joiners' Hand Book..(Holly). 60 
Ciiorlton’s Graue-Growei 's Guide. 75 
Cole’s (S. W.) American Fruit Book....*. 60 
Cole’s Veterinarian. 60 
Colman’s Agriculture. 5 00 
Copeland’s Countiy Life. 3 .50 
Cottage Bee-Keeper . 75 
Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor. 1 50 
Dadd’s (Geo. H.) American Cattle Doctor,.. .*. l 50 
Dadd’s Anatomy of the Horse....(colored). 5 00 
“ “ ” _(plain). 3 50 
Domestic Poultry . 30 
Downing s Cottage Residences.** . 2 50 
Downing’s Fruits and Fruit Trees of America....***..,. 3 00 
Emplovment of Women—By Virginia Penny....*. 1 50 
Every Lady her own Flower Gardener. 30 
Farm Record for 3 years. 3 00 
Fessenden’s Complete Farmer and Gardener. 1 .50 
French’s Farm Drainage . ...*. 1 50 
Field’s (Thomas W.) Pear Culture. 1 25 
Fish Culture.. l 50 
Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses....**. 2 00 
Flint’s Milch Cows and Dairy Farming_***..,. 2 00 
Fuller’s Grape Culturist.***. 1 50 
Fuller’s Strawberry Culturist.*... . 20 
Goodale’s Principles of Breeding.. .**. ... 100 
Gray’s>ianual of Botany and Lessons in one Vol..***.. 4 00 
Gray’s How Plants Grow. 1 00 
Guenon on Wliich Cows. 75 
Hall's (Miss) American Cookery. l 25 
Haraszthy Grape Culture, &c.. .5 00 
Harris’ Insects Injurious to Vegetation, plain.**_ 3 .'^O 
do. do. do. do. colored plates.** 4 50 
Herbert’s Ilinis to Ilorsekeepers....***. i 
Hints to Riflemen, hy Cleveland. . 1 50 
How to Buy a Farm and Wiicre to Find One. 1 75 
Jennings on Cattle, Sheep, ifcc. .. 150 
Johnston's ('atechism of Agricultural Chemistry. 80 
Johnston’s Elements of Agricultural Chemistry. 1 23 
Kemp’s Landscape Gardening. 2 00 
Lani'stroth on the Honev Bee ...■**. 2 00 
Loudon’s (Downing’s) Ladies’Flower Garden_\... 1 75 
l.enchar’s Howto Build Hot-houscs. 1 50 
Liebig's Familiar J.etters on Chemistry. 50 
Liebig’s Modern Agriculture. 125 
Linslcy’s (I). C.) Morgan Horses . l 50 
Manual of Agriculture hy G. Emerson and C. L. Flint. 1 ()0 
Mayliew’s Illnatrated Horse Doctor . ***. 3 50 
Mavhew’s Illustrated Horse Management.***. .. 3 50 
McNiahon’s American (Jardener ,.. .*. 2 50 
Mistakes of Educared Men... .**. ^ 
Morrell’s American Shepherd. 1 75 
My Farm of Edgewood_**.2 00 
National Almanac and Annual Record_**. 1 50 
Neill's Practical Gardener....(Pardee). 150 
Norton’s Scientific Asriculture. 75 
Olcott’s Sorgho ana Imphee.. 1 25 
Onion Culture ...***. 20 
Om Farm of Four Acres (bound) COc....*.(papea*) 90 
Our Hardy Grapes. 25 
Pardee oh Strawberry Culture. 75 
Parsons on the Rose.. 1 50 
Phantom Bouquet, or Skeleton Leaves. 1 50 
Qniuby’s Mysteries of Bee keeping_*•. 1 50 
f)uincy on Soiling Cattle.(paper). 33 
Rabbit Fancier. 30 
Randall’s Fine Wool Sheep Husbandry. 1 00 
Rand’s Flowers for Parlor and Garden_**. 3 00 
Rich’s American Architect... 6 00 
Rural Atlairs_(bound)_3 Vols_each. 1 50 
Saxton’s Farmers’ Library, .set of 3 Vols. .morocco. 9 50 
do do do do 3 Vols..cloth. 8 50 
Schenck’s Gardener’s Text Book. 60 
Skillful Housewife . 50 
Smith’s Landscape Gardening ... 1 50 
Spencer’s Education of Cliildren**. 3 25 
Stephens’ Book of the Farm. . .2 Vols. 6 00 
Stewart’s (John) Stable Book. 1 50 
Ten Acres Enough. 1 50 
Thaer’s (A. D.) Principles of Agriculture. 2 50 
Tobacco Culture ...***. 25 
Todd’s (S. E.) Young Farmer’s Manual_**. 1 50 
Tucker’s Register Rural Affairs_* . 30 
Vaux’s Villas and Cottages. 8 00 
Walden’s Complete Soil Culture.. 1 50 
Warder’s Hedges and Evergreens. 1 ,50 
Waring’s Elements of Agriculture.. 1 00 
Watson's American Home Garden_***. 2 00 
Wax Flowers (Art of Making). 1 50 
Wheat Plant (John Klippart’s).. 1 50 
Yale College Agricultural Lectures. 60 
Youatt and Snooner on the Horse. 1 50 
Youatt and Martin on Cattle. 1 50 
Youatt on the Hog....*. 100 
Youatt on Sheep. 1 00 
Tollmans’ Household Science . ..*** . l 75 
Youmans’ New Chemistry_*.. 1 75 
W 
»ASHFULNESS, Diffidence, Sensitiveness.— 
^C.auses and Cure. Why .are you timid and embarrassed ? 
How to acquire confidence. See Jan.—double—No, Ulus, 
trated rHRENOLOGTCADJour.NAU, only 20 cents, liy first iiosk 
Address FOWLER * WELLS. 389 Broadway, New York. 
Krfli Cash will be paid for an Original Puzzle 
MEIIRYMAN’S MONTHLY. For description 
^wbat is wanted see present number at all N^vsdealert 
Terms $1 a vear, until April 1. after that $1.25. J. C. HANES? 
& CO.. 109 Nassau-st., New-Tork. 
