1873 .] 
311 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
THE HAKES IMPROVED 
SWIVEL PLOW. 
FOR SIDE HILL AND LEVEL LAND. 
WM'jV' 1 ' In,',,/ 0 .'//^ 
Leaves no dead furrow in the center, or ridges on the 
sides, securing an even surface for the working of the 
Mower, Tedder, and Rake. 
This Plow effects ttie complete inversion and pulveriza¬ 
tion of tlie soil on level as well as uneven surfaces. 
In perfection of shape, beauty of outline, finish, and dura¬ 
bility we challenge comparison with any other Plow made. 
Examine the Hakes Plow before purchasing. 
Made only by 
AMES PLOW COMPANY, 
53 Beckman St., New York, 
and Quincy Hall, Boston. 
|} 3 ?~ Send for Circular. 
Ask your PLOIBER for the 
People’s Pumps, 
and send for a Circular. 
The best Force-Pumps in the 
market, and for sale every¬ 
where. Prices from $10 to $30. 
For Stock-yards, Farms, 
House, and Greenhouses. 
The Out-Door Pumps are 
Non-Freezing, and are ad¬ 
justable to wells from 6 to 100 
feet deep. 
W. S. BLUNT, 
Sole agent of the American Pump 
Co., 77 Beekman St, 
New York. 
CONROY, O’CONNOR & CO., 
San Francisco, Cal., 
Agents for States and Territories west of Rocky Mountains. 
For sale hy SCOTT, DUNHAM & CO., 
Salt Bake City, Utah. 
" ~nonpareii7 " 
Farm Feed, Bone, Drug, and Hand MILLS— ten sizes. 
Also Cotton-Seed Hullers. Illustrated Pamphlets free. 
Address J. SEDGEBEER, Painesville, Ohio. 
GILLOTT’S 
JOSEPH 
STEEL 
FEISTS, 
OF THE OLD STANDARD QUALITY. 
The well-known Original and Popular Nos., 
303 404 (70.35 1 , 
having been assumed by other makers, we desire to caution 
the public in respect to said imitations. 
JOS. C1LLOTT & SONS, 
91 *101111 Street, New York. 
PAPOMA 
Is made from choice roasted wheat, using the entire kernel. 
It contains nothing -but the pure wheat. It has the indorse¬ 
ment of some of the best physicians as the best food for in¬ 
fants. It will not sour, and is retained oil the stomach 
when all else fails. 
Sample package sent free on receipt of 25 cents 
Manufactured only by 
NUTRIO MANUFACTURING CO., 
1520 S. 9tli Si., Pliilsidcl phia.* 
CAMELLIAS. 
R. B. PARSONS & CO. offer these 
in quantity, and of very fine form and health. The atten¬ 
tion of large buyers is invited. Access by Bridge Street 
Station of Flushing Railroad. For Catalogues, address 
us at Broadway, Flushing Village, N Y. 
C ^HEAP AURSERY STOCK. — I 
J grow the fruit for market and plants for sale , conse¬ 
quently, can sell low and leave a margin. Small fruits a 
specialty. Send for Price-List. Address 
THOS. LESLIE, Ipava, Ill 
D ye-house cheery Buds, cions, 
and Trees in limited snpplv. A full line of Nursery 
Stock. Address FairView Nursery, Freeland. Balto. Co., Md. 
A FTER OYE HAY’S USE of the 
■cA SUPERIOR HAY SPREADER no farmer 
will ever part with it. 
A youue eiee portrayed. 
New and Enlakoed Edition of HORACE GKEE- 
LEV’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, with Appendix containing 
Memoir of his later years and Death, and the best of his 
famous Campaign Speeches. 
The Last and Best Portrait of Him Ever Pub¬ 
lished, Representing Him as He Appeared in the 
Summer of 1872 
The great call for Mr Greeley's Autobiography, and also 
for some more permanent record of the wonderlul intellec¬ 
tual display which he made during his Eastern and Western 
tours in the Presidential Campaign of 1872, have led to the 
issue of a new edition of the Autobiography, with a very 
large Appendix continuing the story of his life to the-end, 
reproducing the more striking and Suggestive of his many- 
admirable and brilliant Campaign speeches, and concluding 
witli an exhaustive and admirable analysis of the campaign, 
originally prepared by the Hon. James S. Pike, ex-United 
States Minister to the Hague. There is, besides, a pretty 
complete collection of Mr. Greeley's Miscellaneous Writ¬ 
ings, including among others his famous controversy with 
Robert Dale Owen on Marriage and Divorce. 
Price, handsomely hound in cloth, with two Portraits, $3. 
Sent by mail on receipt of price. Address 
THE TRIBUNE, New York. 
A LIRRARY FOR FIFTY (50) 
CENTS. — With Illustrations — Literature, Art, 
Science, and History.—The Tribune Extra Sheets, con¬ 
taining : 
Lecture Extra, No. 1.—Illustrated.—Tyndall’s Six Lectures 
on Light. 
Lecture Extra, No. 2.—Beecher’s Compulsory Education ; 
Fields's Masters of the Situation ; Phillips’s Lost Arts , 
Bellows’s Is there a God ? Mark Twain's Sandwich Island 
Letters. 
Lecture Extra, No. 3.—Illustrated.—Prof. Wilder’s Brain 
and Mind, Prof. Barker's Chemical Discoveries of the Spec¬ 
troscope , Prof Young’s Astronomical Conquests; Prof. 
Young’s Present Knowledge of the Sun. 
Lecture Extra, No. 4.—Six Shakespearean Studies, by John 
Weiss; Seven Art Studies, National Academy Course ; Par- 
ton’s Pilgrim Fathers as Men of Business; Bret Harte's 
Argonauts of ’49 
Lecture Extra, No. 5.—Illustrated.—Three Lectures by 
Prof. Louis Elsberg, on Sound and Hearing, Voice and 
Speech, and The Explanation of Musical Harmony; Prof. 
Benj. Silliman’s Deep Placer Mining in California; Dr.R.W 
Raymond on The Seven Senses ; Parke Godwin on True 
and False Science; Prof. E. L. Youmans on The Limits of 
Science. 
Lecture Extra, No. 6.—Beecher’s Seven Lectures for Min¬ 
isters: Thoughts for Ministers—Thoughts upon Prayer— 
Prayer-Meeting as it is—'The Ideal Prayer-Meeting—Music 
in Churches—Society iu the Church—The Fingers of the 
Church. 
Lecture Extra, No. 7.—Beecher’s Concluding Lectures; 
Revivals in tiie Church—Religious Awakenings—Thoughts 
on Revivals—A Religious Experience. Also, ’’The Moravian 
Church,” by de Schweinitz ; “Creed Statements,” hy Thomas 
Starr King, “ The Death Menace,” by Bovee; and a “His¬ 
tory of Sectarian Appropriations. 
Lecture Extra, No. 8.—The Method of Creation. Twelve 
Lectures hy Prof. Agassiz concerning Animal Life. Also, a 
description of the wonderful Fossils discovered in the 
Rocky Mountains—The Fossil Mail of Mentone, Prehistoric 
Remains, by le Plongeon—The Art of Dyeing, by Prof. 
Chandler. 
Nine Extra Sheets, containingover 50 Lectures and 130 
Engravings, and Credit Mobllier Report, for 50 cents. 
Address THE TRIBUNE, New York. 
“ TO HAVE A CRICKET 
ON the hearth is the luckiest thing in the world.” 
—Chas. Dickens. The large illustrated family paper—” The 
Cricket on the Hearth”— only $1 a year. A $5.00 
CHKOMO FREE. Already a great success. 16 pages, 
crowded with freshest stories, etc. Will pay one General 
Agent in each county a monthly cash salary. Send $1 for 
Agent's Outfit ichromos, samples, terms, etc.) Apply now 
for territory. We send this paper 3 months for 
35c. Object, to introduce. Try it. 
JONES & HADLEY, Pub'rs. 176 Broadway, N. Y. 
Practical Floriculture. 
A Guide to the Successful Propagation and 
Cultivation of Florists’ Plants. 
Y5y PETER HEjVTAEjRSOjNT, 
Author of “ Gardening for Profit.” 
~ ■tautifutty Illustrated. Price , Post-paid , $1.50. 
in this work, which has everywhere become so deservedly 
popular, not only is the whole “ art and mystery ” of propa¬ 
gation explained, but the reader is taught how to plant and 
grow the plants after they have been propagated. The work 
is not one for florists and gardeners only, but the amateur’s 
wants are constantly kept in mind, and we have a very com¬ 
plete treatise on the cultivation of flowers under glass, or 
in the open air, suited to those who grow flowers for plea¬ 
sure as well as those who make them a matter of trade. 
The work is characterized by the same radical common- 
sense that marked the author’s “Gardening for Profit," and 
it holds a high place in the estimation of lovers of 
floriculture. 
NEW AMERICAN FARM BOOK. 
Originally by RICHARD I,. 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 the times; and as its author,Mr.R.L.Allen, 
could not give time to its revision, this was undertaken by 
his brother, Hon. Lewis F. Allen, the distinguished farmer 
of Erie county, editor of the American Shorthorn Herd- 
Book. The wojk is greatly enlarged, and full of suggestions 
from the rich experience of its editor and reviser, and is 
called the New American Farm Book. 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
845 Broadway, New York, 
T he CORNELL UNIVERSITY 
Ithaca, A. Y., ofl'ers liberal and practical courses fee 
agriculturists, architects, civil engineers, master mechanics 
mechanical engineers, agricultural and manufacturing 
chemists, printers, veterinary surgeons, etc., witli labora¬ 
tories, draughting rooms, farms, and work-shops In agri¬ 
culture and mechanic arts various courses are provldecf to 
| meet warns of all students; also general courses in arts, 
literature, and science preparatory to the other professions. 
Over five hundred free scholarships. Next year begins 
September 8th For Registers, with full information, ad¬ 
dress as above. 
Claverack College and Hudson River Institute. 
For both sexes, fine grounds; 167furnished rooms; 20instruc¬ 
tors; 11 departments ; 120 classical pupils ; large gymnasium 
and drill hall. Special advantages in all departments. Term 
opensSept.8. Rev.Alonzo Flack.,A M.,Pres.,Claverack,N.Y 
IVERVIEW ACADEMY, 
Pouglilteepsic, IV® Y. 
Work recommences September 11th. Boys, “Fall in.“ 
DEPOSIT TO-DAY. 
The Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, 
Chartered by the United States. 
No. 185 Bleecker Street, New' York. 
ASSETS OVER $4,000,000. 
J. W. ALVORD. President. 
G. W. STICKSEY, Actuary. 
A. M SPERRY, Genl. Inspector. 
SAM L. HARRIS. Manager 
E W~ Send for Circular JOHN J. ZUILLE, Cashier 
N. B.—The usual semi-annnal dividend at the rate of six 
per cent per annum on all sums entitled thereto will be. 
payable on and after July 21st, and if not withdrawn will 
be compounded. 
$100. One Hundred Hollars. $100. 
For new 5-oct., double set of reeds, 6 stops, beautifully 
paneled, warranted Organs, for CHURCH, CHAPEL 
and PARLOR. 
The best Organs in the world lor the price, and we 
guarantee them equal to any reed instrument retailing lot 
double the money. WM. A POND & CO.. 
547 Broadway, New York. 
Magic Lanterns 
Stereopttcons, etc., etc. New slides at greatly reduced 
prices. A very profitable business for a man with small 
capital. Send stamp for Catalogue. 
W. MITCHELL MCALLISTER, 
1,314 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. 
UURST Premiums awarded by Arner. Inst., 1870. 
MICROSCOPES. 
Illustrated Price-List sent free on application. 
MAGIC LANTERNS. 
Catalogue, priced and illustrated, sent free. 
T. H. McALLISTER, Optician, 49 Nassau-st., N. Y, 
THE Superior IIAY SDREADER 
saved me Two Hundred Dollars on my hay last season. 
AMERICAN CATTLE. 
Their History, Breeding, and Management, 
By LEWIS F. ALLEN. 
ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.50. 
This book will be considered indispensable hy 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 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 enabliug the reader to find the point ou 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, 
(PRANK 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; Ponies—Different 
Breeds; Farriery; How to Shoe a Horse; Baucher’s 
Method of Training; How to Hide a Horse ; Ladies Riding; 
Rarey’s System of Horse-Taming; etc.; and a chapter on 
Mules and Ponies, etc. Beautifully illustrated. 
PEACH CULTURE. 
By JAMES ALEXANDER FELTON. 
ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
Among the fruits, the Peach, it' not the most, is one of the 
most Important of all. It is so easily raised, comes into 
bearing so soon, and is so delicious as well as beautiful, it 
is impossible that it should not be a favorite. Living in the 
very center of ttie 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 a lasting bene¬ 
fit could be done to both, the author has been induced to 
prepare^his work on peach culture. 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 245 Broadway, N Y 
