[September, 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
1875.] 
The Cheapest and Best Lands in Market. 
FOR SALE BY THE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY. 
RICH LAND! BIG CROPS! GOOD MARKETS! 
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'^RibhmurfdX^-^' a 
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H'and.’McUalj/af Co.-,LrigraVersi Chicago. 
CENTRALLY LOCATED. Sold on long time at low rates of interest. Now is the time to buy. Descriptive Pamphlets, 
Illustrated Papers, Maps with prices, mailed free to all parts of the world. 
Address O. F. DAVIS, Land Commissioner, IJ. P. R. IS. Co., Omaha, Neb. 
Are you going to California? Are you going West,North, 
or North-West? The shortest, safest, quickest, and most 
comfortable Routes are owned by the Chicago and North- 
Western Railway. It owns over two thousand miles of the 
best road there is in the country. Buy your tickets by the 
Chicago and North-Western Railway for SAN FRANCISCO, 
Sacramento, Salt Lake, Cheyenne, Denver, Omaha. Lincoln, 
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PULLMAN PALACE CARS are run on all trains of this 
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W. H. STENNETT, Gen. Pass. Ag., Chicago. 
FOREST TREES 
FOR 
SHELTER, ORNAMENT AND PROFIT. 
A PRACTICAL MANUAL FOR TIIE1R CUL¬ 
TURE AND PROPAGATION. 
By ARTHUR BRYANT, Sit., 
President Illinois State Horticultural Society, 1871. 
The Descriptive List of Trees and Evergreens is believed 
to be the most full aud accurate yet written for Amer¬ 
ican use. 
Finely Illustrated with 12 Full-Page Engravings. 
Price post-paid, . . . . $1.50 
Money in the Garden. 
A VEGETABLE MANUAL, 
PREPARED WITH A VIEW TO 
ECONOMY AND PISOFIT, 
BY P. T. QUINN, 
PRACTICAL HORTICULTURIST. 
In this work the author aims to give, in a plain, practical 
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garden, and field culture; the only and sufficient credentials 
lor the fitness of his undertaking being a successful practical 
experience for a term of years. 
CONTENTS. 
Chapter I. Money in 
the Garden. 
“ II. Hot-beds. 
“ III. Artichoke. 
“ IV. Beans. 
“ V. Cabbages. 
“ VI. Egg-Plants. 
“ VII. Lettuce. 
Chapter XV, 
PRICE, POST-PAID - - - 
Chapter VIII. Melons. 
“ IX. Onions. 
“ X. Parsley. 
“ XI. Radishes. 
“ XII. Salsify. 
“ XIII. Tomatoes. 
“ XIV. Forcing 
Houses. 
List of Seeds. 
---- $1.50 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
Window Gardening. 
By HENRY T. WILLIAMS, 
EDITOR OF TnE LADIES’ FLORAL CA11TNET, NEW TORE, AND 
HORTICULTURAL EDITOR NEW YORK INDEPENDENT. 
A New Book, with 250 Fine Engravings, and 300 Pages, 
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Price, post-paid, .... SI.50 
EVERY WOMAN HER OWN 
FLOWER GARDENER. 
By “ DAISY EYEBRIGHT,” (Mrs. S. O. Johnson). 
A delightful little treatise on Out-Door Gardening for 
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UNIVERSALLY LIKED BY THE LADIES. Valuable 
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Price, 50c., post-paid. Bound in cloth, $1.00. 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
FRUIT GARDEN. 
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 hook 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 he desired. Nearly everything, 
in flue, needed seems to be provided in tin's 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 Ihe 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 (lie 
implements, copiously illustrated by engravings, so that, the 
merest novice need not err; gives descriptions of all flic 
different kinds of fruit that can he raised in our climate in 
every stage of their lives, from the germ to the fruit-hearing 
period, with instructions in pruning and grading, in a most 
satisfactory manner. The chapter on grapes alone is worth 
more than the price of the hook .—Jersey City Times. 
It is a rich mine of information upon fruits of all kinds 
and their proper culture .—Providence Press. 
Mr. Barry lias long been known ns an authority upon fruit 
oulture, and this volume of 100 pages, with a full and care¬ 
fully prepared index, gives the latest results of his study 
and experience .—Springfield Republican. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.5 0. 
245 Broadway, New York. 
ORANGE JUDD CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
ORANGE JUDD CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
