[July, 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
1875.] 
FUN FOR THE MILLION. 
For little folks and great folks ; for boys and girls, for young men and young wo¬ 
men, for fathers and mothers, for grandfathers and grandmothers ; here it is, fun for 
all 1 Crandall’s Great Show—The Acrobats. Have.you had a box of them ? For 
a Toy it is one of the greatest inventions of the age. The central figure on this sheet 
gives the exact size of one of these Acrobats, when put together. The small figures, 
all about it, are simply suggestions of the almost numberless forms, that an ingenious 
boy or girl may make up with a single box of the Acrobats. It will be seen that the 
central figure is in seven different pieces. A box of these Acrobats contains four 
bodies, four heads, eight arms, eight legs, one flag, and six pieces of wood, or thirty- 
one pieces in all, and yet from these few elements you can not only make pictures 
similar to those before yon, but many thousands of others. The pieces are variously 
colored , which can not be shown in our ink engravings. Tiiey are so grooved and 
jointed and fitted, that they fasten strongly together in all conceivable positions. 
These amusing new toys are for sale by the toy dealers generally. They have delight¬ 
ed everybody, young or old, who has seen them. The Orange Judd Company are 
selling them at $1 a box, at 246 Broadway, New York, or $1.80, if sent by mail, pre-paid. 
