4 : 4,0 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[December, 
A M E ll l € A A A G III C'C L T C It I S T. 
Or.vnge .Term & Co., Publishers, 245 Broadway, 3ST. T. City. 
An’.vuat, Subscription Teems (always in advance): $1.50 
each for less than four copies: Four to nine copies, $1.25 
each: Ten to nineteen copies, $1.20 each: Twenty copies 
and upwards, $ieach. Papers are addressed to each name. 
HOW TO GET: 
A Gnosl Watch.— Free of ©osi—it gen¬ 
uine §40.00 American Waltham Watch, with heavy 
3-ounce Hunting-case—a capital time-piece tjiat 
Will stand you through life: Send 50 subscribers 
for the American Agriculturist at §1.50 each, or 
150 at §1.00 each, and you will get the watch free. 
©It—: A Lady’s Gold. Watch Free— 
a splendid article of Waltham make, sold usually 
for $100 or more, and beautiful as a present to 
your wife or any one else ; Send 110 subscribers at the 
regular price of §1.50 a year. Others have done so. 
©IS—t A Great Diclionary Free— 
(lie best in the world—containing 1854 great 3- 
eolunm pages, with many hundred engravings, and 
giving every word in our language, correctly divided 
and spelled, with very much information : Send 
only 18 subscribers at §1.50 each, or 58 at $1 each ! 
©08—s A Sewing Machine Free—a 
first-rate one, your .choice of three kinds ; the best 
wife-saver, health-saver, money-saver, board-saver 
—just what is wanted in every house: send 00 to 70 
subscribers (see table) at $1.50. each; or 240 to 275 
at$l each—easily obtained in most neighborhoods. 
©It —£ Good Seeds Free— forty varieties 
of first-rate garden seed, enough for almost any 
garden, (or, UO© kinds of beautiful flower seeds) 
delivered to you free: Only 13 subscribers at 
§1.50 each, or 37 at §1 each, will bring the seeds, j 
©It—s A "Washing’ Mnciiinc Free— 
the best one yet made : Send 21 subscribers at §1 50 
each, or 70 at §1 each. Multitudes have secured (his. 
©IS—s 8|»ien<li<l IBrccding Sheep 
F« ’cc —either Cotswold or Southdowns, thorough¬ 
bred, raised by the best breeders. These sheep will 
multiply and diffuse their excellent qualities very 
rapidly, and one or more of them should be intro¬ 
duced into every neighborhood raising sheep : A 
(dub of 100 to 210 subscribers will secure one of them 
free! (See Nos. 13 to 20 in Table of Premiums.) 
©02—£ The newest small !»est Potato 
Free.—two pounds of “Brosee’s King of the 
Earlies,” which is promised to eclipse even the 
Early Rose! Two pounds of these will soon multi¬ 
ply to a large stock. Only 5 subscribers will bring 
you a post-paid 2-lb. parcel of these new potatoes. 
© HE —; 'Fine hest Figs and Poullry 
Free— the best home-bred, and imported speci¬ 
mens ; warranted pure by the reliable breeders who 
supply them for these premiums. Clubs of sub¬ 
scribers, numbering 22 to 06 names, will secure 
these animals without charge, and they are worth 
securing! (See Nos. 21 to 28 in Premium Table.) 
©18. — % The Blest Clothes Wringer 
Free—one of the most valuable Housekeepers’ 
Helps ever invented—one which will repay its cost 
every few weeks, and keep ou doing so—both in 
saving labor and saving garments: Only 18 sub¬ 
scribers are needed to get this Clothes wringer free! 
©IS—£ A Melodeon Free—one of the 
best made in the world, one of long-proved excel¬ 
lence—a delightful thing to have in the house, in 
the school-room, and in the Church where an organ 
cau not be afforded: Send 78 or 138 subscribers. 
(See Nos. 00, 01, in Table of Premiums, next page.) 
©IS—£ A Superb Tea Set. Free—six 
pieces, of splendid pattern, real substantial, durable 
double silver-plated,—-not dressed up silver-washed 
stuff: Only 60 subscribers will secure this free! 
©St—£ Good Tools Free—not poor-tem¬ 
pered, iron things, but of the very best quality—a 
whole assortment of more than fifty pieces, just 
such as are really useful for yourself, and your sons, 
on the farm, aud everywhere else, all in a neat chest, 
the whole worth at the lowest rate §44.50: Send 
only 00 subscribers at §1.50 each, or 190 at §1 each ! 
©I§—s Ast Alderney or Slevosa Bull 
Free—very fine thorough bred animals, profitable 
to the owners, and they will add many times their 
cost to the value of the stock where they are used. 
A Club of 120 to 365 subscribers will bring one of 
these animals. (See Nos. 7 to 12in Premium Table.) 
©St—£ Aery Flue Table Furniture 
Free—Castors, Fruit Baskets, the best plated 
large and small Spoons, Knives and Forks, etc.,— 
all of extra make and quality, useful, ornamental, 
and durable. The Premium Table, Nos. 43 to 55, 
will show how few subscribers will secure these 
valuable articles. Any Lady can get these subscrib¬ 
ers almost anywhere! Or Gentlemen, or Boys can 
get the premiums to give as presents to others. 
©as.—s A. $50© to $7©© 8hort!a©m 
BBull Free—a superb, thoroughbred animal,from 
Jas. O. Sheldon’s Herd, the finest one in the world 
—an animal that will soon increase the value of the 
stock in a neighborhood to the amount of many 
thousands of dollars. Let the farmers of any neigh¬ 
borhood combine and raise 425 to 580 subscribers, 
and own the’bull in common: Or one person may 
raise the Club and be will soon derive a line in¬ 
come from the animal. (See Premiums 1 to 3.) 
©fl6— : An Ayrshire Hull Free—a tine 
thorough-bred animal raised by Win. Birnie, which 
will soon show marked results in the improvement 
of the stock in a ncighbood: Send 120 to 210 sub¬ 
scribers at §1.50, all of which may be easily gathered. 
OR-: A Magnificent Cyclopedia, 
Free— of sixteen great volumes, giving compre¬ 
hensive descriptions of over 35,0©0 subjects, in¬ 
cluding every topic, person, place, and thing, you 
can think of, past and present—in short, a most 
complete and extensive Library in itself: All this 
will be presented in return for 96 subscribers! 
©K—s 89© worth of Nursery Sloclc 
Free—whatever you may choose to select from 
Eastern and Western growers of positive relia¬ 
bility : Send 30 subscribers at §1.50, or 97at §1 each. 
©B8—s Valuable Volumes of the 
American Agriculturist Free —for any 
year from 1857 to 1869. Each of these contain a 
great amount of information for the Farm, Garden, 
and Household. 13 or 16 subscribers secure 3 vol¬ 
umes in numbers, or bound, sent post-paid. (See 
Nos. 88 to 99 iu Premium Table.) 
©IS —: Excellent Books Free —those 
for the Farm, Garden, and Household, your choice 
out of more than a hundred. A very little time in 
gathering subscribers will bring you several of 
these volumes delivered free. (See Nos. 100 to 112.) 
©It.—; The Flan© that Heats ihc 
World—(Steinway’s of course.) One Lady se¬ 
cured Five of these, worth $3,250.00, between 
Sept., 1868, aud July last, bj’ sending subscribers 
to the American Agriculturist. Hundreds of other 
ladies may easily, secure at least one. Hundreds of 
others may secure the lower-priced but excellent 
Colibri Piano. (See Nos. 62, 63 in Premium Table.) 
©It—: A Free Pocket Knife- just the 
one you want, or your Boy, or your Girl wants— 
not a wrought or cast-iron affair, but a tip-top steel 
blade and beautiful handle “better than the 
‘Best.!’”—Only 4-5, or 6 subscribers will secure 
one ! (See Nos. 56-7-8 in Premium Table.) 
©St— s First-rate Family Scales— 
(Fairbanks’ of course,) delicate enough to weigh 
half an ounce, and large enough to weigh yourself 
if you don’t exceed 240 lbs ! “ A very handy thing 
about the house” is such a pair of scales. Only 21 
subscribers will secure the scales! (Premium 83.) 
©St —: A Free Gold Pen —that will write 
beautifully for years—a genuine one in a real coin- 
silver ease for the pocket, with ever-pointed pencil. 
Only 11 to 14 subscribers needed to get one of these 
fine pens. (See Nos. 72, 73 in Premium Table.) 
©It—: ©It—: ©It-: A ©resit. Many 
Other Good Things Free —“too numer¬ 
ous to mention,” such as are named in the Premi¬ 
um Table, Nos. 30, 85, 39, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82; and 
last, not least, No. 85, to light your way! 
SEE “Special Notes” on Next Page, 
