1873 .] 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
77 
Agents Wanted 
TO CANVASS FOR 
THE 
We are prepared to offer Agents 
Great IsMtiaeeaaaesats 
AND THE 
Most Iiitoea*al Comiaaissioiaso 
This is a rare opportunity for clergymen, teachers, and 
students, or any other intelligent person, as a pair of beau¬ 
tiful chromos, 
GOOD-NIGHT FROLIC, and SO TIRED, 
■well worth 30, will he given to every new $3 subscriber 
to THE INDEPENDENT, thus making the canvassing not 
only a pleasing recreation, but a profitable business. 
If you wisli for good territory, send at once for circulars 
and terms. 
HENRY C. BOWEN, 
No. 3 Park Place, New York. 
Post-office Box 2787. 
You ask WHY tve can sell First 
Class 7 Octave Pianos for $290? 
We answer—It costs less than 
$300 to make any $600 Piano 
sold through Agents, all of whom 
make IO O per ct. profit. We 
have no Agents, but ship direct to 
families atFactory price, and war¬ 
rant 5 Years. Send for illustrated circular, in which we 
refer to over 500 Bankers, Merchants, &c. (some of 
whom you may know), using our Pianos, in 44 States and 
Territories, u. S. Piano Co., 365 Broadway, N.Y. 
A GREAT OFFER! 
will dispose of ONE HUNDRED PIANOS, MELODEONS, 
and ORGANS of six first-class makers, including Waters’s, 
at extremely low peices For. cash, or will take from $4 
to $lo monthly until paid ; the same to let, and rent applied 
if purchased. New 7-octave PIANOS, modern improve¬ 
ments, (or $275, cash. A new kind of PARLOR ORGAN, 
the most beautiful style and perfect tone ever made, now on 
exhibition at 481 Broadway, New York. 
dj 675 K New, full-size, rosewood, carved legs, 7- 
a octave, over-strung Pianos, for $275. These 
instruments are elegant in tone and finish, 
and are warranted as durable as any $600 piano. 
Superb solid-walnut, 5-octave, 6-stop, double¬ 
reed, beautifully paneled Organ, only $100. 
(ft'T'fT Elegant solid-walnut, 5octave Organ, paueled 
tjp 4 Ot case, only $75. 
WM. A. POND & CO., 
547 Broadway, and 39 Union Square, New York City. 
JOSEPH GILLOTT’S 
STEEL PENS, 
OF THE OLD STANDARD QUALITY. 
The well-known Original and Popular Nos., 
303.404 170.351, 
having been assumed by other makers, we desire to caution 
the public in respect to said imitations. ASK FOR 
GILLOTT’S. 
* JOS. CILLOTT & SONS, 
91 John Street, New York. 
In-anG General and special, urged to send for sample 
ItcIUN and circular of “ People’s Monthly." Pitts- 
° 7 burgh, Pa. They’ll astonish. Best, cheapest, 
and most beautiful illustrated 16-page paper 
for the home published anywhere. 
Popular irom Maine to Texas—takes on 
sight—quickest sales and biggest pay of any paper going. 
New type, new “ heads,” tinted paper, and superb illustra¬ 
tions. No mean, shabby humbug, but fine, elegant, and 
crowded with the freshest contributions. 
Wanted 
Only $1.50 per year. 
Three months’ trial, only 25 cents, including the splendid 
Christmas number (24 pages). 
Chromos, engravings, and premiums liberal as any. 
Agents, it costs nothing to sample it. 
“ The best magazine for children in the world.”—S. S. Times. 
CHILDREN'S HOUR: 
An illustrated magazine, edited by T. S. Arthur. This 
favorite of the children “ from five to fifteen” will, for 1873, 
he as pure and as full of attractive reading and beautiful 
pictures as ever. Price, $1 £5 a year ; 5 copies, *5. Sample 
numbers, lOcts. T. S. ARTHUR & SON, Philadelphia. 
W ANTED — Canvassers everywhere for Col. 
Conwell’s History of the Great fire, full and correct. 
3,000 sold the first ten days. Now is the time to make money. 
B. B. RUSSELL, Publisher, 55 Cornhill, Boston. 
$1 WAD Til DAD 1(7 PTO farmer and gardener, 
0)1 VVUlUfl rUlt ID bio. Lancaster, Fa. 16 Cents a year 
10 Ceuta in Clubs. Furnishes as much valuable reading matter as many $1 
books. Specimen numbers andj^mium list sent free. 
A GENTS Wanted. —Agents make more money at 
aI work for us than at anything else. Particulars free. 
G. STINSON & CO., Fine Art Publishers, Portland, Maine. 
I 
F yon want amusement, read the reliable advertisement 
on page 72, “ A CURIOSITY.” Send for one. 
GARDENING 
FOR THE SOUTH; 
OR, HOW TO GROW 
VEGETABLES AM) FRUITS. 
BY THE LATE 
WILLIAM N. WHITE, 
OF ATHENS, GA. 
WITH ADDITIONS BY MR. J. YAN BUREN AND 
DR, JAS. CAM AH. 
REVISED AND NEWLY STEREOTYPED. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
It supplies a place long vacant in Southern literature, and 
should be in the hands of every mail or woman who culti¬ 
vates a foot of ground. While it treats very freely of the 
vegetable garden, it devotes much space also to fruits, etc. 
—Tribune (Mobile, Ala.) 
It is illustrated by a portrait of the author, and numerous 
engravings of subjects treated. It is a work of 450 pages, 
and is a complete manual of kitchen gardening aud fruit 
culture.— Telegraph (Macon, Ga.) 
Mr. White was prime authority in his specialty, and this 
volume is a complete manual for gardening for Southern 
latitudes. Besides the usual fruits and vegetables of North¬ 
ern gardens, there are full instructions as to the culture of 
the almond, fig, orange, lemon, shaddock, olive, yam, 
ground-nut, Madeira nut, and pistachio. In view of the ris¬ 
ing importance of “truck farming” in the South to supply 
Northern markets with early vegetables and fruit, this hook 
is quite important to the gardeners of either section.— 
Register (Wheeling, W. Ya.) 
Coming from the pen of an experienced cultivator of 
Southern vegetables and fruits, the reader, whether of old 
or recent residence, is put in possession of facts relating to 
the soil, climate, and varieties of plants adapted to the 
South that would otherwise require much time and expense 
to acquire. The vineyard and orchard receive sufficient 
attention to furnish all the necessary information for the 
beginner. We regard the hook as especially adapted fortlie 
private garden, and if a copy could he placed in the hands 
of every farmer, we might expect, on our visits to the coun¬ 
try, to he regaled upon something else than “bacon and 
greens.”— Daily State Journal. 
The first edition of this work appeared in 1856, but the 
second, now just issued, is much enlarged, containing 444 
pages. It embraces a much larger range of topics than the 
title indicates, and is one of the most valuable compilations 
of facts that we have anywhere seen in a single volume, re¬ 
lating to different kinds of soil, and their adaptation to dif¬ 
ferent kinds of fruit and vegetables.— Journal of Agricul¬ 
ture (St. Louis, Mo.) 
The book itself we can commend to our farmers and gar¬ 
deners. Its author was formerly connected with the 
“ Southern Agriculturist,” a most excellent farmers’ paper, 
and was thoroughly acquainted with the wants of the 
Southern people in respect to their farming and gardening 
operations.— Gazette and Banner. 
A complete gardening book for the localities whicli it 
specifies. It is full and comprehensive, and written in a 
clear, perspicuous style. A volume of 414 pages, well 
printed and bound.— Republican (St. Louis, Mo.) 
It is very comprehensive, embracing all the improved 
kinds of fruits and vegetables, and the modern modes and 
implements of tillage. Its arrangement is systematic, and 
entirely convenient for prompt reference. It is illustrated 
by a large number of drawings relating to garden and fruit 
cultivation, such as trailing, grafting, draining, transplant¬ 
ing, together with pictures of novel fruits and vegetables.— 
Dispatch (Richmond, Va.) 
Price, post-paid, $3.00. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
A Good Book for Farmers. 
Farm - Gardening 
AND 
SEED - ffltOWIim 
BY FRANCIS BRILL. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
Orange Judd & Co.have added to their splendid catalogue 
of agricultural books “Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow¬ 
ing," by Francis Brill; it is practical, plain, complete, and 
satisfactory, so that for a small amount of money a great 
deal of desirable information can he obtained. If there is 
any firm anywhere which is to-day disseminating so much 
knowledge in regard to tilling of the soil as this same said 
firm of Orange Judd & Co., we will present a medal to our 
informer.— Watchman and Reflector (Boston). 
The want occasionally expressed to us of a. work on the 
cognate subjects above named (Farm-Gardening and Seed- 
Growing), is now met in a book under this title from the 
pen of Mr. Francis Brill, formerly a market-gardener and 
seed-grower at Newark, N. J., and at present engaged in 
raising seeds at Mattituck, L. I. Its directions are concise 
and practical, covering those points on which a beginner is 
most likely to require information.— Country Gentleman. 
Mr. Brill lias had large experience, and derived his knowl¬ 
edge wholly from the school of actual tests.— Chicago 
Evening Journal. 
We have in this volume the results of a practical man’s 
experience in raising root crops and other vegetables in the 
market-garden. Not only the professional seed-grower and 
trucker, hut the amateur gardener who has a little patch in 
his suburban home, will find many a valuable hint and di¬ 
rection in tliis full and comprehensive manual.—.Sunday- 
School Times. 
It seems to be a very sensible, practical work by a practi¬ 
cal man. Mr. Brill’s father was a gardener; and lie himself 
has had an extensive experience, and lie talks about what 
he knows, which is more than can he said of many authors of 
industrial works.— Moore's Rural New Yorker. 
There can be no question that this farm-gardening can be 
made in many districts of the Southern Atlantic States, es¬ 
pecially near the coast, far more profitable than growing the 
ordinary staple crops. In connection with producing the 
vegetables, the growing and saving their seeds receive 
minute attention.— American Farmer (Baltimore). 
A very useful hand-book, not merely for farmers and 
growers of seed on an extensive scale, but for all who, whe¬ 
ther for recreation or for the purpose of supplying their own 
families with garden products, desire to know something 
about the adaptation of seed to soil and the mode of culture. 
—Church Journal (New York). 
This industry is now occupying the attention of many per¬ 
sons who sell their products to the great seed-houses, and 
novices who have tiie facilities, and wish to enter upon the 
business, will find in this book just the hints needed.— 
Springfield Republican. 
Mr. Brill has been a successful farm-gardener and seed- 
grower for a number of years, and gives in a clear and con¬ 
cise form the knowledge lie lias gained.It gives the 
best method of manuring, planting, and cultivating every 
vegetable sold in markets—in short, everything required to 
he known, plainly and fully—and should be in the hands of 
every one who cultivates so much as a rod of land, for 
family use, pleasure, or profit.— Suffolk (L. I.) Times. 
The seal of Orange ludd & Co. upon an agricultural pub¬ 
lication is sufficient guarantee of its worth. Francis Brill’s 
book, published by thim, is a very complete work, giving 
plain, minute instructions as to raising, taking care of, and 
bringing to market thosa vegetables which are most in de¬ 
mand in the large cities, and those seeds which are being 
called for throughout the country.— N. Y. Evening Mail. 
The work of showing how this can be accomplished has 
fallen in good hands, and it has been done well. The book 
will well repay perusal, and we hope soon to see its good 
effects in a more intelligent direction of farm industry, and 
accompanied by more satisfactory pecuniary results.— The 
Signal (L. I.) 
To the market-gardener, or even the owner of a small 
piece of tillable land, this book will be of great value. 
Qualities of soil required for the growth of different vegeta¬ 
bles, how to plant, how to cultivate, to harvest, and preserve 
during winter.— N. Y, Citizen and Round Table. 
Price, Post-paid,.$1.00. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
