408 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[November, 
A $5 PRESENT. 
A 
Beautiful Picture, 
Now Ready for Delivery, 
To Every Subscriber 
.TO THE 
American Agriculturist 
UP Of 
[Those subscribing now get the re6l of this year Free.] 
The exquisite Painting entitled “MISCHIEF 
BREWING,” by the celebrated American Painter, 
Mr. B. F. Reinhart, has been executed in Chromo 
by the noted firm of Beneke & Scott, and has al¬ 
ready been given to thousands of subscribers to the 
American Agriculturist , from whom large numbers 
of letters have come testifying their delight. The 
Publishers will present this beautiful §5 Chromo 
To Every Hew Subscriber 
to this paper for the year 1874 as detailed below, 
and in addition to this each subscriber whose sub¬ 
scription is received during November will get the 
December number of the current year 'vvitltourt 
extra charge. 
T1IE PICTURE IS NOW READY, 
and will be delivered at 245 Broadway free of 
charge. If to go by mail, 10 cents must be sent to 
cover cost of packing and postage. For 35 
cents it will be Ilounted, YarnisSi° 
ed, Packed, and sent Post-paid. 
IB.—The Chromo will he delivered : 
At the Office, Unmounted, Free. 
“ “ “ Mounted, 15 cents extra. 
Bent by Mail, Unmounted, 10 cents extra. 
“ “ “ Mounted, 25 cents extra. 
We advise all to have them mounted before leaving 
the office , as in the large quantities we put up we 
are able to mount them for a quarter of the cost of 
doing it singly, and better than it can usually be 
done elsewhere. 
The picture is desigued for every subscrib¬ 
er upon the terms stated above, which please read 
carefully; and on these terms all are alike entitled 
to it, whether their names come singly at $1.50 
each, or in Clubs of Four for $5, or Clubs of Ten at 
fl.20 each, or in Clubs of Twenty or more at $1 
each. Subscribers in Premium Clubs will also 
thus be entitled to it. 
(KiT 5 KciiieiBiiRiicr _^fl 
That every new subscription now received will be en 
tered at once in the mail-books, and will be furnished 
with the paper from the time the name comes in until the end 
of 1874, at ( single subscription price. (This applies to all 
new subscribers now received, whether singly at $t.fO 
each, or in clubs of four at $1.25.) 
351P ReKuembcr^g 
That Very Valuable Premiums are offered (see page 433) 
to those who take the trouble to gather up and forward 
clubs of subscribers. These Premiums are to pay for 
the time and trouble taken in gathering and forwarding 
the subscriptions (and good pay they are). The subscrib¬ 
ers themselves will each get the $5 picture, and new ones 
coming in now will get the extra number free. 
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WHY 
Bo Good 
And Make Money! 
WHY DAS TILE 
American 
Agriculturist 
ATTAINED SUCH AN 
ENORMOUS CIRCULATION ? 
BECAUSE : for all large or small cul¬ 
tivators of the soil, and all members of their 
families, old and young, it is 
The Best Paper in the World!! 
Whoever reads it will be Instructed, en¬ 
tertained, and amused. Whoever reads it 
will become wiser and better. Wherever it 
goes it is a welcome visitor to the household. 
Its pictures aso beautiful and refining. Its 
price, only $1.50 a year, places it within 
the reach of every man, woman, and youth 
of the country. Every one will make 
money by observing its hints and direc¬ 
tions, and ilo gooil by increasing its cir¬ 
culation. Now see 
Offer, why 
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WHY 
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TO EVERY SUBSCRIBER 
WHY 
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saKiaaiKawKWttaiiisKaESffiKaKswiutiiKaw! 
Our Extra 
A First-rate Paper. 
1 Month for Nothing. 
A Beautiful Picture Free. 
The exquisite Painting entitled “ MIS¬ 
CHIEF BREWING” has been executed 
in Chromo in the best style, and has been 
given to thousands of subscribers to the 
American Agriculturist, who have testified 
their delight. The Publishers will present 
THIS S3 CHROMO 
for the year 1874, who subscribes ii» 
November, and besides this he will get 
the December number of Free. 
The Picture is now Ready, 
and will be delivered immediately, to sub¬ 
scribers in November,at 245 Broadway,free. 
TERMS: 
American Agriculturist, per year.$1.50 
“ with Chromo postpaid. 1.60 
“ with Chromo, mounted, postpaid 1.75 
Reader, please subscribe NOW. Take 
the Paper. Take the Picture. Take the 
December Number Free. Show this offer 
to your neighbors. Get them to subscribe. 
DO GOOD, MAZE MONEY. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
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To all Members 
OF THE 
American Agriculturist 
Family, 
The Publishers feel that they may regard 
every subscriber to the American Agriculturist 
as a fraemd. To thousands it has been a 
welcome visitor for many years. To tens of 
thousands its monthly appearance at their 
homes, with its beautiful pictures and interest¬ 
ing reading for all, both old and young, has 
made it one of the, most familiar objects in 
those homes; and were we to attempt to print 
the kind words that have been written and- 
spoken concerning this paper, many large- 
volumes would be needed. 
Mow,, 
Friends, we have a favor to ask of every one 
of you. The American Agriculturist has at¬ 
tained its enormous circulation, as we are sure 
you will be ready to testify, because fit Maas 
pr©ved itself wontlay. The publishers 
earnestly desire and are determined to largely 
increase that circulation. 
Will Yon Help? 
It would be pleasant, and profitable too, both 
to you and the publishers, could you take hold 
and raise a efiato ©f sistoserStoeffs ; but you 
will feel willing, we trust, to at least 
B© this one Thing. 
Please show this paper to your friend or 
neighbor, who is not now a subscriber (or send 
to us for a free specimen copy for that pur¬ 
pose), tell him how valuable the paper is, and 
ask him to read 
ora SPECIAL OFFER 
to all subscribers to the American Agriculturist 
whose subscription is received tiering tlaie 
imomflJi of Movemfecr. 
HERE IT IS! 
A Beantiftil Picture* 
A First-Mate Paper. 
One Mouth Free. 
The Engraviugs iu tlie American 
Agriculturist. 
$1©,©©© worth for $1.5©. 
If a subscriber to the American Agriculturist re¬ 
ceived the paper without illustrations, its forty-four 
pages filled with reading matter as interesting, in¬ 
structive, and valuable as that with which they are 
now crowded wherever the space is not taken by 
its costly engravings, he would get intrinsically 
the Cheapest Journal in the Coun¬ 
try. But in addition to all this reading matter, 
which is provided at great expense and is the work 
of the best minds, the publishers provide, at a cost 
of at least $10,00© ioi* each Annual 
Volume, a large number of beautiful illustra¬ 
tions most carefully drawn and engraved, which 
every subscriber receives in his paper. Ten thou¬ 
sand dollars’ worth of engravings in one Annual 
Volume for only $1.50; or in clubs of four, for 
only $1.25; or in clubs of ten for only $1.20; or, 
in clubs of twenty for only $11 
The Picture, which has already delighted so 
large a number of subscribers to the American 
Agriculturist, is described in another column. 
The Paper, for more than thirty years, has been 
winning “ golden opinions ” from those who 
have known it best, and new friends have eve¬ 
ry year been added to its large list of old ones. 
Its contents every month are the result of an 
immense amount of careful thought and inves¬ 
tigation. A large corps of earnest, intelligent, 
practical minds are constantly engaged in collec¬ 
ting and condensing into these pages infor¬ 
mation derived from experience, from wide ob¬ 
servation, from a large correspondence, from 
reading—in short, from all sources. And every 
subscriber will receive the benefit of all this 
labor and expense; and those who subscribe 
in this month of November will have a year 
of thiirteeiB inoiutliw, as they will receive 
• the December number of 1873 Free. 
