360 
AMEIi LOAN AGRICULTURIST. 
GREAT DEDUCTION. 
D U T Y O F F 
TEAS AND COFFEES. 
Increased Facilities to Club Organizers* 
Send for New Price-EIst. 
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA COMPANY, 
(P. O. Box 5643.) 
31 and S3 Vesey St., New York. 
'W 7 00D, TABEE & MORSE, 
Eaton, Madison Co., N. Y. 
MANUFACTURERS OF 
Steam-Engines, 
Portable, Stationary, and 
Agricultural. 
Hundreds in use in Shops, Print¬ 
ing Rooms, Mills, Mines, and on 
Farms and Plantations for Grain 
Threshing. Food Cooking for 
Stock,Cotton Ginning, Sawing, etc. 
Circulars sent on application. 
Broken National Bank-Notes 
bought at Four (4) per Cent Premium. Full printed lists 
furnished free. HAVEIV BRO., 
No. 40 S. 3d St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
Self-Propel- 
Dor Cripples 
For In and 
Can be EASILY 
one having the 
State your case, 
for illustrated cir- 
styles and prices. 
Please mention 
this paper. 
Una Clairs 
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. 
Ask your PLUMBER 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. 
O’CONNOR & CO., 
San Franciseo, Cal., 
Agents for States and Territories west of Rocky Mountains. 
For sale by SCOTT, DUNHAM & CO., 
Salt Lake City, Utah. 
CONROY, 
Halladay’s Improved 
"W iiicL-MIlL 
P ERFECTLY Self-Regulating. The 
Best, Cheapest, most Durable and 
Popular Mill made. Manufactured 
under the immediate supervision of 
Inventor 18 years. Two million dol¬ 
lars’ worth new in use. Send for Catn- 
ogue._ 
U, S. WIND ENGINE & PUMP C0„ 
Batavia, III. 
IMPROVED FOOT LATHES, 
Slide Rests, Hand Pinners for metal, Small 
Gear Cutters, etc. The very best, selling every¬ 
where. Catalogues free. 
N. II. BALDWIN, Laconia, N. II. 
CORN HUSKIER, 
S. C. IIILLS, 51 Cortlandt St. 
per hour. 
t., New 
York. 
Monckton’s National Stair-Builder. 
A complete work on Stair-Building and ITand-Railing. 
Fnlly explained and illustrated by large scale diagrams, In 
two colors, with designs for Staircases, Newels, Balusters, 
and Hand-Rails. 
Royal Quarto. Six Dollars, post-paid. 
loncMon’s National Carpenter anil Joiner, 
A complete work, covering the whole science of Carpen¬ 
try, Joinery, Roofing, Framing, etc., fully explained and 
illustrated by large scale diagrams in two colors. 
Royal Quarto. Six Dollars, post-paid. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishers, 
245 Bkoadway, New York. 
September,] j- 
THE 
WASHINGTON 
LIFE INSURANCE CO,, 
155 Broadway, New York. 
ASSETS, 
!jj*3,o00,000. 
CYRUS CURTISS, President. 
17. A. BREWER, Jr., Vice-Pres’t and Actuary. 
IV. HAXTUN, Secretary. 
Dividends paid annually from date of policy, and are non- 
foneitable by Charter. 
Premiums are required in Cash. Dividends are paid in Cash. 
■ - in C'-.c 1. 
Assets are licit! in Cash. 
All profits divided among the Policy-holders. 
Window Gardening. 
By HENRY T. WILLIAMS, 
EDITOR OF TIIE HORTICULTURIST, AND HORTICULTURAL 
EDITOR OF THE NEW YORK INDEPENDENT. 
FINELY ILLUSTRATED. 
There can he no more attractive ornaments about the 
house than beautiful flowers, and Mr. Williams's book tells 
exactly liow they may he arranged,- and what flowers to 
plant. It is seldom that a book is. published ou such sub¬ 
jects containing so much practical information. 
-The World (New York). 
Chap. L—Window Gardening 
—Its Pleasures—Increase in 
Popular Taste — Helming 
Influences. 
Chap. 2.—Location and De¬ 
signs for Window Gardens. 
Chap. 3. — General Manage¬ 
ment of Window Gardens. 
Chap. 4.—Special Care of 
Window Gardens. 
Chap. 5—Insects, and howto 
Kill them. 
Chap. 6.—Propagation from 
Seeds, Cuttings, etc. 
Chap. 7.—Propagating Boxes, 
Heating Cases, etc. 
Chap. 8.—Window Pots, Box¬ 
es, Plant Stands. 
Chap. 9.—Conservatories and 
Greenhouses. 
Chap. 10.—Hanging Baskets. 
Chap. 11.—Tiie ivy for Deco¬ 
rative Purposes. 
CONTENTS: 
Chap. 12. —Climbing' Vines, 
Balcony Gardening, 
Chap. 13.—Bulbs. 
Chap. 14.—Ferneries,Wardian 
Cases, Fern Decorations. 
Chap. —The Camellia. 
Chap. 16.—The Rose. 
Chap. 17.—Tiie Fuchsia, Myr¬ 
tle. 
Cliap. 18.—Tlte Heliotrope. 
1 hap. 19. — Tiie Geranium. 
Chap. 20.—Tiie Oleander,Bou- 
vardia. 
Chap. 21. —Verbenas, Petu¬ 
nias, etc. 
Chap. 22.—Tiie Mignonette, 
Cinerarias. 
Chap. 23.—Carnations. 
Chap. 24.—Alpine Plants. 
Chap. 25.—M iscellaueous 
Plants. 
Chap. 26.— Parlor Decora¬ 
tions. 
Price, post-paid, 
Address ORANGE 
61.50 
JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
PRACTICAL 
TROUT CULTURE. 
By J. II. SLACK, M.D., 
Commissioner of Fisheries, N. J. ; Natural History Editor 
of Turf Field, and Farm, N. Y.: Proprietor of 
Troutdale Ponds, near Bloomsbury, JS[. J. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
Introduction. 
CONTENTS: 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter 
Chapter VIII. 
Chapter IX. 
Chapter X. 
Chapter XI. 
Chapter XII. 
I 
Tl. 
III. 
IV. 
V. 
VI. 
VII. 
—History of Fish Culture. 
-Choosing a Location. 
-Planning and Construction of Ponds. 
-Hatching-Houses aud Apparatus. 
-Spawning Races. 
-Artificial Impregnation. 
-Incubation. 
-Care of Young in Nursery. 
-First Year. 
-Second and Third Years. 
-Transportation. 
-Bibliography of Fish Culture. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 245 Broadway, N. Y. 
WAKING’S 
books for farmers 
DRAINING FOR PROFIT 
AND 
DRAINING FOR HEALTH. 
By GEO. E. WARING, Jr., 
Engineer of the Drainage of Central Park, New York. 
CONTENTS. 
Land to be Drained ; How Drains Act ; How to 
Make Drains; IIow to Take Care of Drains: 
What Draining Costs; Will It Pay? How to Maks 
Tiles ; Reclaiming Salt Marshes ; House and Town 
Drainage. 
EXTRACTS FROM NOTICES JJY THE PRESS. 
He (the author) describes the action of draining upon 
the soil, the construction of single drains and systems of 
drains, the cost and the profit of thorough drainage, the 
making of tiles, and the reclaiming of salt marshes, 
treats sensibly of malarial diseases, and closes with a 
chapter which should be widely read, on house drainage 
and town sewerage in their relations to the public health. 
[Portland (Me.) Pi-ess. 
Nowhere does this book merit a wider circulation than 
in the West. Every year adds to the thousands of dollars 
lost to this State from want of proper surface drainage, 
to say nothing of the added gain to result from & corn 
plete system of under-drainage. This hook will prove 
an aid to any farmer who may consult it. 
[Chicago (111.) Republican. . j 
A Book that ought to be in the hands of every Farmer. 
SENT POST-PAID, - - - PRICE, $1.50. 
EARTH-CLOSETS 
AND 
EARTH-SEWAGE. 
By GEO. E. WARING, Jr. (of Ogden Farm). 
INCLUDING: 
The Earth System (Details). 
The Manure Question. 
Sewage and Cess-pool Diseases. 
The Dry-Earth System for Cities and Towns. 
The Details of Eartii Sewage. 
The Philosophy of The Earth System. 
With Seventeen Illustrations, 
Paper Covers, JPrlce, Post-paid, 50 ets. 
ELEMENTS OF AGRICULTURE 
A BOOK FOR YOUNG FARMERS, 
By GEO. E. WARING, Jr., 
Formerly Agricultural Engineer of the Central Park, iu 
Now York. 
c A R F U I, I. Y II E V I S E D 
CONTENTS. 
The Plant ; The Soil ; Manures ; Mechanical Cul¬ 
tivation ; Analysis. 
The foregoing subjects are all discussed in plain and 
simple language, that any farmer’s hoy may understand. 
The book is written by a s.uc<®ssful practical farmer, and 
is full of information, good advice, and sound doctrine. 
HORACE GREELEY says of it: “Though dealing 
with facts unfamiliar to many, there is no obscure sen¬ 
tence, and scarcely a hard word in the book ; its 251 fair, 
open pages may be read in the course of two evenings 
and thoroughly studied iu the leisure hours of a week; 
and we pily the man or hoy, however old or young, who 
can find it dull reading. Hardly any one is so wise that 
he will not learn something of value from its perusal; no 
one is so ignorant or undeveloped that he cannot generally 
nnderstand it; and no farmer or farmer’s son can study it 
thoughtfully without being a better and more successful 
cultivator than before.” 
SENT POST-PAID, 
Address 
PRICE, $1.00. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Bkoadway, New Yoke. 
