[March. 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
1873 .] 
To Investors. 
To those who wish to RKI^VKST 
COUPONS OR I)m»E\»S, and 
those who wisli to INCREASE 'I'lBEIES 
INCOME fi •olu means already invested in 
other less profitable securities, we recommend t lie 
Seven-Thirty Gold Bonds of the Northern Pacific 
Railroad Company as well secured and unusually 
productive. 
The Bonds are always convertible at Ten per 
cent premium (1.10) into the Company’s Lands 
at Market Prices. The rate of interest (seven and 
three-tenths per cent gold) is equal now to about 
8 1-4 currency—yielding an income more than one 
third greater than 1J. S. 5-20s. Gold Checks 
for the semi-annual interest on the Registered 
Bonds are mailed to the Post-Office address of the 
owner. All marketable stocks and bonds arc re¬ 
ceived in exchange for Northern Pacifies Ol 
MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. 
JAY COOKE & CO., 
New York, Philadelphia, & Washington, 
Financial Agents Northern Pacific R.R. Co. 
HOME 
INSURANCE COMPANY 
or 
NEW YORK. 
OFFIl'E, NO. 135 BROADWAY. 
Cash Capital - $2,500,000.00 
Assets, Jan. I, 1873 - 4,446,858.78 I 
Liabilities - - - - 590,914.19 
CHAS. J. MARTIN, Pres’t. 
J. H. WASHBURN, Sec’y. 
THE 
BABCOCK ENGINE. 
407 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 
jj ©ricBftt Safety Lamps, 
™~’ Entirely of metal, are the only 
lamps in use which can neither 
bieak, leak, nor explode. Are or¬ 
namental and cheap. Adapted to 
all household uses; also to stores, 
factories, churches, etc. 
Apits late $10 a Day 
Selling these Lamps. 
For an aironc.y address 
WALLACE &. SONS. 
81) Chambers St., New York. 
Double Harpoon, 
THE BEST 
HOUSE HAY FORK. 
Descriptive Catalogue Sent. Free. 
PEVNOCK MANUFACTURING CO., 
ICennett Square, Chester Co., Pa. 
LIGHTNING SAWS. 
Descriptive Pamphlets mailed free. 
E. M. BOYNTON, 80 Beekman St., N. Y„ Sole Proprietor. 
16 tli Thousand. 
The End of the 
World. 
A LOYE .STORY. 
By EDWARD EGG-LESTON 
Autho?' of "The Hoosier School-Master." 
WITH 
Thirty-two Fine Illustrations. 
“ I WANT TO BUY YOUR PLACE.” 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
The personages who figure in this story are, with one 
exception, country people—such men and women as 
Wordsworth loved to study. It is not every man, what¬ 
ever may be his talents, that can safely enter this sphere 
of literary labor. To he successful in it, he must possess 
exceptional qualities; but for those who know howto 
find it, here there is gold of the purest, richest kind. In 
such a work, however, there is no convenient place 
where mediocrity can rest; there is nothing but absolute 
failure or absolute success. And Mr. Eggleston has suc¬ 
ceeded. His power lies in the delineation of character. 
The plot is ingenious and natural, the incidents are man¬ 
aged with great skill, and there are many descriptive 
passages of singular force and beauty. But the strongest 
impression left on the reader’s mind as he closes the 
volume is that he has been in the company of very inter¬ 
esting men and women, and has made a number of new 
and valuable acquaintances. — The Albion , New York. 
Br. Eggleston’s new story is the best he has written. 
'• The Iloosier School-Master” was good, but The End 
of the World shows a better plot, better character-draw¬ 
ing, and more firm and consistent treatment throughout, 
.The book is exceedingly wholesome. The sen¬ 
timent throughout is pure. It contains not one morbid 
or cynical page. It exhibits the passion of love under 
its healthiest manifestation, and treats the relations of 
the sexes in a perfectly normal way. When a 
book like this—so full of nature and reality, so cheer¬ 
ful and yet so reverent, so free from mawkish senti¬ 
ment and poisonous theories — starts out witli a first 
edition of ten thousand copies, it is a good sign for 
our popular literature. It is one of the books that the 
people will he sure to read, and they will find in it a 
perfectly innocent and healthy enjoyment. — The Inde¬ 
pendent. 
Price. Post-paid, $1.50. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY. 
245 Broadway, New York. 
NEW AMERICAN FARM BOOK. 
Originally by RICHARD L. ALLEN. 
Revised and greatly enlarged 
By LEWIS F. ALLEN. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.50. 
Allen’s American Farm Book has been one of the standard 
farmers’ hand-books for twenty years; it is still a valuable 
book,but. not up to tlie times; and as its author, Mr. ILL. Allen, 
could not give time to its revision, tins was undertaken by 
his brother, Hon. Lewis F. Allen, the distinguished farmer 
of Erie county, editor of the American Shorthorn Herd- 
Book. Tlie work is greatly enlarged, and full of suggestions 
from the rich experience of its editor and reviser, and is 
called tlie Nero American Farm Book. 
AMERICAN CATTLE. 
Their History, Breeding, and Management. 
By LEWIS F. ALLEN. 
ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.50. 
This book will be considered indispensable bj' every 
breeder of live-stock. Tlie large experience of tlie author 
| in improving the character of American herds adds to the 
| weight of his observations, and has enabled him to produce 
a work which will at once make good its claims as a stand¬ 
ard authority on the subject. An excellent feature of the 
volume is its orderly, methodical arrangement, condensing 
a great variety of information into a comparatively small 
compass, and enabling the reader to find the point on which 
he is seeking light, without wasting his time in turning over 
the leaves. 
Herbert’s Hints to Horse-Keepers. 
By the late HENRY WILLIAM HERBERT, 
(frank forester.) 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.75. 
A complete manual for Horsemen, embracing: How to 
Breed a Horse; How to Buy a Horse; How to Break a 
Horse; How to Use a Horse; How to Feed a Horse; How 
to Physic a Horse; How to Drive a Horse; l’onies— Different. 
Breeds; Farriery; How to Shoe a Horse; Baucher’s 
Method of Training; How to Ride a Horse ; Ladies Riding; 
Rarey’s System of Horse-Taming; etc.; and a chapter on 
Mules and Ponies, etc. Beautifully illustrated. 
HARRIS ON THE PIG. 
Breeding , Bearing , Management , and Improvement. 
With numerous Illustrations. 
By JOSEPH HARRIS. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
This is tlie only American treatise upon tlie breeding, 
rearing, and management of swine, and is by one thorough¬ 
ly familiar with tlie whole subject. Tlie points of tlie various 
English and American breeds are thoroughly discussed, and 
tlie great advantage of using thorough-bred males clearly 
shown. Tlie work is equally valuable to tlie farmer who 
keeps hut few pigs, and to the breeder on an extensive scale. 
Farm Implements and Machinery. 
The principles of their construction and use; with 
simple and practical explanations of the laws of 
motion and force as applied on the farm. 
By JOHN J. THOMAS. 
237 ILLUSTRATIONS. PRICE, POST-PAID. $1.50. 
The basis of this admirable work was an essay published 
in ISiiO, in the Transactions of the N. Y. State Agricultural 
Society, which was enlarged, and in 1854 published by tlie 
Harpers. It lias been, and remains, the only work in which 
tlie principles of Natural Philosophy, namely, tlie mechan¬ 
ical powers, and tlie powers of water, wind, and heat, are 
systematically discussed as applied to tlie operations of the 
farm. This work lias now been most carefully revised by 
the author. It is much enlarged, and a great part lias been 
re-written, while tlie illustrations, before abundant, now 
number two hundred and eighty-seven. There is not an agri¬ 
cultural writer that could he named more respected than 
John J. Thomas, or one whose judgment and freedom from 
personal bias in discussing new implements could he more 
implicitly relied upon. 
PEACH CULTURE. 
By JAMES ALEXANDER FELTON. 
ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, POST-PAID. $1.50. 
Among tlie fruits, the Peach, if not tlie most, is one of the 
most important of all. It is so easily raised, conies into 
hearing so soon, and is so delicious as well as beautiful, it 
is impossible that it should not he a favorite. Living in the 
very center of tlie peach-growing district; sharing tlie com¬ 
mon interest felt in the subject; deeply impressed with its 
importance to the individual planters themselves, and also 
to the community at large; and believing that a lasting bene¬ 
fit could he done to both, tlie author 1ms been induced to 
prepare this work on peach culture. 
Either of the above hooks sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
| ORANGE JUDD <& CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
