8173 .] 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
273 
THE REISINGER SASH FASTENER. - A 
Cheap, Durable, and Ornamental Lock, with no 
Spring to break, or Saeli to cut. It is very easily 
and quickly applied; holds iliesash at any place 
desired, ana a self-fastener when the sash is down. 
A hall-dozen Copper-Bronzed Locks sent to any 
address, post-paid, on receipt of 50 cts. Circulars 
sent on application. 
Over 200,000 of these Locks are already in use. 
THE ANCHOR LINE HOLDER is a neat, dur¬ 
able; universal tension device, to stretch and hold 
Rope, Wire, and Cords, for all purposes, in Yards, 
Houses, Stores, around Balconies, Awnings, etc., 
and no knots to tie or untie. Admits of spliced or 
knotted lines; releases easily, with a slight jerk, 
but. holds so that no under propping or wind-play 
will undo tlie fastening. A set of three, with 
screws, prepaid, to any address, by mail, for 40 cts. 
One Dozen Sash Fasteners and a Set of Three 
Line Holders sent, prepaid, to any address, on re¬ 
ceipt of $1.25. 
Agents Wanted. The Trade Supplied 
ItEISINGER MAN’F’G CO„ 
Box 412, Harrisburg, Pa. 
CMIAI 
APPLE - CORER 
SLICER 
practical Corel’ 
made, 
A bushel of Apples 
cau be cored and 
sliced with it in ten 
minutes, and the work 
done better than by 
any other means what¬ 
ever. Send $1.00 for 
sample. 
D, II, G00DELL, 
Sole Manufacturer, 
55 Chambers Street, 
New York. 
Also, sole manufac¬ 
turer of Turn-Table 
and Lightning Apple- 
Parers, Li ginning 
Peach-Parers, Family 
Clierry-Stoners, etc. 
BUY THE BEST, 
BONE ME A L—Prepared for Horses, Swine, Cows, and 
Poultry—5c. per pound. 
H, B. 
58 & 60 Cortlaiult St., New York, 
O R K a T, o 
J. CO g O £* 
•°° 0) OS" -eg 
M - S Baf ^ 5 § 
= 8 J? a & S 
SgPn c/ioSt 
•ji c. ” 
50e. TO $1 PER GALLON. 
COTTAG-E COLOR PAINTS. 
E. G. KELLEY’S Patent Metallic Paints, Ground in Oil 
and Mixed ready for use. Fifty cents to $t per gallon. 
Send for card of colors. 
NEW YORK CITY OIL CO, Sole Agents, 116 Maiden 
Lane, New York. 
Self - Projel- 
Tor Cripples 
For In and 
Can be EASILY 
one having the 
State your case, 
for illustrated eir- 
styles and prices. 
Please mention 
this paper. 
ling Chairs 
and Invalids 
Out-Door Use. 
propelled by any 
use of hands, 
and send stamp 
cular of different 
S, A, SMITH, 
90 William St., 
N. Y. City. 
8UILD1TC FELT= 
This water-proof material, resem¬ 
bling fine leather, is lor outside 
work (no tar substances used) and 
inside, instead of plaster. Felt 
carpetings, etc. Send two stamps 
for circular and samples. 
C. J. FAY. Camden, N. J. 
&-A in note, by dozen or hundred. For price-list address 
W. B. HOYT, West New Brighton, N. Y. 
npitE Superior ISAYT 
-B- can not he surpassed for Workmanship, Durability, 
_ - rp 
and Lightness of Draft. 
Tie Flowing Spriiii Poultry Fountain, 
One of the most convenient 
and best-paying articles ever 
offered for the money. Easily 
filled, will not get out of order, 
and lasts a lifetime. Send for 
circular. At wholesale by 
CRAGIN BROS & CO.. 
M3 Lake St., Chicago; 
SELLEW & CO.. Cincinnati • 
J. H. POCOCK, St. Louis. 
Manufactured only by the 
IRON-CLAD CAN CO., 
51 Dey St., New York. 
MADE ONLY BY 
Airies Plow Go. 
QUINCY HALL, 
Boston • 
And 53 Beekman St., Mew York. 
NEW AMERICAN EMM BOOK. 
Originally toy K5CHASSB I,. AJLL.EN. 
Revised and greatly enlarged 
By LEWIS F. ALLEN, 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $3.50. 
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 the times; and as its author, Mr.It.L. 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. The work is greatly enlarged, and full of suggestions 
from Hie rich experience of its editor and reviser, and is 
called the New 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 by every 
breeder of live-stock. The large experience of the author 
in improving the character of American herds adds to the 
weight of his observations, and lias 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 
lie is seeking light, without wasting liis time in turning over 
the leaves* 
REACH CULTURE. 
By JAMES ALESANBEU FXII/FON. 
ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
Among the fruits, the Peach, if not the most, is one of the 
most important of all. It is so easily raised, comes into 
bearing 60 soon, and is so delicious as well as beautiful, it 
is impossible that it-slibuld not he a favorite. Living in the 
very center of the peach-growing district; sharing the 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 alasting bene¬ 
fit could be done to both, the author lias been induced to 
prepare this work on peach culture 
Either of the above books sent. post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGH JUDD & CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
27 th Thousand. 
THE 
HOOSIER 
SCsdOL-MASTER. 
By EDWARD EGGLESTON. 
Finely Illustrated, with i2 Fuil-Page 
Engravings, and Numerous Other 
Cuts. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
It is full of quaint humor, a tender pathos, and vivid de¬ 
scriptions.— New York Standard. 
The “events” are stirring and dramatic, and the style is 
quiet, impersonal, and almost epigrammatic in its ability to 
..ay bare an entire situation or character in a sentence or 
ras e.—Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 
it is at once quaint and truthful, and illustrated ns it is by 
masterly cuts, it should he one of the most popular 
books.— Christian Standard (Cincinnati). 
For realistic conception and life-like delineation of char¬ 
acter, it is not excelled by any American story.— Methodist. 
Some passages in it, for life-like delineation and the sim¬ 
ple, artless beauty which constitute the highest, perfection 
of story-writing, are equal to some of the very best passages 
in Dickens.— Rellgious Telescope. 
PRICE; POST-PAID. . .. .$1.25. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
18th Thousand. 
The End of the 
World. 
A LOYE STORY. 
By EDWARD EGGLESTON, 
Author of “The Hoosier School-Master'' 
WITH 
Thirty-two Fine Illustrations. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS, 
The personages tvho 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, lie 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. Egglestsii 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 tlie 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. 
Price, Post-paid, $1.50. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New Yoek. 
