320 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
Contents for October, 1863. 
Animals, Diseased—Useful Society.298 
Apple Butter .311 
Apples Early—What to Plant.306 
Apples—Hints on Keeping.307 
Asparagus Bed—How to Make. 307 
Babies—Rocking Injurious.310 
Bee-hives, Straw—Cheap and Good..2 Illustrations ..301 
Bees—Apiary in October.291 
Bitters— Worse than a Humbug.309 
Boys and Girls’ Columns—A Ghost Story—Intelli¬ 
gence of Fishes—Not Quite a Meteor—Puzzles and 
Problems—Children Opening the Gate—True Po¬ 
liteness—Boys and Girls’ Garden, No. 7—Premiums 
Secured by Boys and Girls—Indian Fun, a Snake 
Story—Modest Request—Capital Story — Curious 
Letter—Taking it Coolly—Origin of the Name Can¬ 
ada—Curious Sign—Crooked Company..5 III.. 311, 313 
Clay Soil no Curse.303 
Corn, Drying—Good Method.311 
Corn—Pickled.311 
Corn—Securing the Harvest .. Illustrated ..304 
Corn—Shoc.king-IIorse. Illustrated .300 
Coughing—Remedy for.309 
Crinoline in the Garden.307 
Crosses and Hybrids .308 
Currants and How to Propagate Them.305 
Currants—Healthful ness of.306 
Draining—Benefits of.. Illustrated. .289 
Exhibitions—Agricultural, State and County in 1S63. .294 
Exhibition Tables at Agriculturist Office..296 
Farm Work for October.289 
Flower Garden and Lawn in October.291 
Fruit Bottles—Sealing.310 
Fruit—Directions for Marketing.304 
Fruit Garden in October.291 
Fruit-Growers’ Meetings—New-York.291 
Fruit in the Country—Hint to City Visitors.307 
Garden—Kitchen, in October.290 
Gift Enterprises and other Humbugs.302 
Gladiolus—Improved French Hybrids .. .Illustrated. .308 
Grain - How to Send to Market.298 
Grapes—Opinions on Quality.307 
Green and Hot Houses in October.291 
Horse-shoe—The Bar.298 
Horses—Glanders. .298 
Horses—Remedy for Scratches.298 
Horses—Suggestions on Management..297 
Labels—Leaden for Fruit-Trees. Illustrated ..305 
Lung Protector—Chamois Skin. Illustrated. .309 
Market Review, Weather Notes, etc.314 
Measurement—Useful Rules.303 
Melon—White Japanese.2 Illustrations ..305 
Onions—Small—Pickle for Soldiers.310 
Orchard and Nursery in October.290 
Pedigree in Plants...303 
Pickles—“ Iligdum”.311 
Piggery—Plan of.3 Illustrations. .297 
Pork—Curing without Brine.310 
Premiums—Descriptive List for 1864.313 
Pudding—Birds’-Nest Sago. 311 
Pumpkin Exhibition at Agriculturist Office.292-296 
Roses as Bedding Plants .308 
Sap Boiler—Miles’ Improved. Illustrated. .301 
Sheep—Sale of South-Down at Thorndale.299 
Soda and Mineral Waters—Portable Fountain. Ulus. .309 
Sore Throat Remedy.309 
Sorrel—Cure for.301 
Straw—Spreading or Composting. 299 
Strawberries and other Small Fruits at the West.305 
Suggestions and Notes for the Month... Illustrated. .289 
Swine—Care of. 297 
Thread, Cheap—One Cent a Spool.310 
Tim Bunker on Starting a Sugar-Mill.302 
Trees, Fruit—Manuring Injurious.306 
Trees, Fruit—Renovation of.306 
Trees—How to Raise Seedling Stocks.305 
Walks—Water-proof.310 
Water—Hard and Soft .310 
Weeds—Talks About.—No. V.—The'Bittersweet and 
the Nightshade .2 Illustrations.. 300 
Wheat on Clover Sod.300 
Zinc Vessels Poisonous .310 
INDEX TO “BASKET,” OR SHORTER ARTICLES. 
Agriculturist at 58 cents..292 
Apples, Crab..293 
Bees, Overswarming....294 
Big Things.296 
Blackberry, Cut-leaved. .293 
Black Knot.294 
Book, Farm.293 
Broom Corn, Dwarf.295 
California Fair.295 
Caterpillars.295 
Cereus, Night-blooming..296 
Cheese, Keeping.294 
Clover, Plastering.294 
Cotton-Growing.296 
Currycomb Substitute.. .294 
Eggs, Keeping. 29o 
Egg-Plants, Cooking... .294 
Egg-Plants, Large.293 
Fair, New-Jersey.295 
Fair, N. Y. State.292 
Flax Investigations.296; 
Flax-Seed, White.296 
Flowers, Splendid.295 
Frost and Cotton.292 
Fruit-Bottles, Cleansing .293 
Fruits, Small .293 
Garget in Cows.294 
Generation Spontaneous.296 
Glass Shades . 295 
Grape Show.292 
Grapes, Training.295 
Grapes, Unripe.293 
Grape-Vines, Pruning.. .293 
Grass for Sheep.294 
Grass, Orchard .294 
Grass, Quack.293 
Heat, Work on.293 
Honey, Northern.294 
Paint—Cheap.293 
Pear, Beurre Clairgeau..295 
Pear Trees in Michigan.296 
Pears, Profitable.293 
Plant, Variegated.293 
Plants Named.296 
Pork, Packing.293 
Portrait Monthly.295 
Potatoes, Deep Plowing.293 
Potatoes, Large Yield.. .296 
Poultry, Greasing.293 
Poultry, Stuffing.295 
Poultry, Vermin.294 
Prairie Breaking.294 
Pumpkin Show.292 
Questions, Practical_294 
Raspberries, Planting.. .293 
Rats, Expelling.293 
Ready Reckoner.295 
Seed, Ailanlhus, etc.295 
Seeds by Mail.295 
Seeds Received.293 
Shawls, Cleansing.293 
Sheep, China.293 
Smut, Preventing.294 
Soldier’s Widow.292 
Sorghum Hints.293 
Spinach, Cover.294 
Strawberries from Seed.293 
Strawberries Mixing.296 
Strawberry Plants sent..292 
Strawberries, Productive 293 
Subsoiling ..294 
Sugar Evaporators.293 
Sulphuric Acid .295 
Sumach for Dyeing.293 
Tea, New-Jersey .. ....294 
Tobacco for Ants.296 
Horses, Feed for. 
..294 
Tobacco, Native... 
296 
Humbug. 
...294 
Tomato, Good. 
296 
Husbandry, Laws.... 
Husking Aids. 
.293 
Tomatoes, Ripening ... 
Udder, Caked. 
293 
...293 
.293 
Insects Named. 
Veronica and the Rural 
Ivy, English. 
,..294 
New-Yorker. 
295 
Lilies, Japan. 
Wine-Plant Humbug... 
294 
Milk, Drying Up. 
Wine-Souring. 
294 
Names Pronounced.. 
..294 
Wines, California. 
.293 
A Pleasurable Announcement. 
Our readers will doubtless be greatly pleased to learn 
of the return of Mr. Mason C. Weld, to resume his labors 
in the Agriculturist Office. A year ago he was tempora¬ 
rily called away, on short notice, to an important place 
in the country’s service, and, as Lieut. Colonel of the 
A GREAT 
** Baker’s 
Fourteen for Twelve. 
We want a large number of new readers to see, and get 
acquainted with the Agriculturist before January, for 
those who do so, will generally bring along other new 
readers to begin with the next volume. For this reason, 
and as a special bounty, we make the following offer: 
Every mew name arriving on and after October 
1st, will be at once entered on our books to the end of 
1864, and receive not only volume 23 complete, but also 
the remaining numbers published this year—all for 
a single year's subscription —if the nam.e is distinctly 
stated to be a new one, as noted below.*) — Thus: 
New Subscribers for 1864, received during October, 
will get the paper for November and December, of 
this year, free. —(14 months for the price of 12.) 
Those received during Nov. will get December free. 
N. B.—The above offers extend to all new subscribers, 
whether they are received singly, or in clubs, or on pre¬ 
mium lists, or from Agricultural Societies, or otherwise. 
*N. 13.—Since many old subscribers are renewing in 
advance, it is important that new subscribers’ names be 
marked as “new” when sent in, if the extra numbers are 
desired, for we shall not serel these extra numbers unless 
they are specially and definitely asked for. 
G4>©3> PAY is offered to those who collect Clubs 
of Subscribers. See page 313. This is a good time to 
get them; the above “ Baker’s Dozen,” and the Straw¬ 
berry Premium, will aid canvassing now. See next item. 
THE GREAT STRAWBERRY is for all 
Subscribers for 1864, who apply in accordance with 
terms. Read the terms carefully through, on page 259. 
The substance of these terms, is, that the great “ Agri¬ 
culturist Strawberry ” is being multiplied as rapidly as 
possible, and the plants produced will be distributed free 
next year, as far as they go, beginning with the names in 
the order of application and entry on our books for 1864. 
Those to receive the plants by mail will need to send, in 
addition to the subscription, 5 cents to pay for oil-cloth 
and postage on the plants. We hope to have plants for 
all who receive the Agriculturist for 1S64. No distinc¬ 
tion will be made between old and new subscribers. 
--o———->-«- 
IPostage on tSie Agricsilftaii-Ist is only 
3 cents per quarter, if paid in advance by the recipient. 
The old dispute about the weight, is settled by the new 
law which allows 4 ounces instead of 3 ; no copy weighs 
4 ounces in any case. Any postmaster who insists upon 
charging more than 1 cent per number, when paid quar¬ 
terly or yearly in advance, is either too ignorant to hold 
office, or is guilty of extortion. We ask the name of 
any one who hereafter exacts more than the above 
amount of postage, as has been illegally done hitherto, in 
some cases. The new law is too plain to admit of doubt. 
Specimens or Extra Numbers are 
costly, and each copy requires two cents postage paid in 
advance. So they cannot be scattered around very freely. 
When needed for canvassing, the judgment of the appli¬ 
cant will in each case decide whether both the paper and 
the postage should be at the expense of the Publisher. 
Except when to be used solely for our benefit, the postage 
at least should be provided for. 
CLUBS can at any time be increased, by remitting 
for each addition the price paid by the original members, 
if the subscriptions all date at the same starting point. 
The back numbers will of course be sent to added names. 
renowned 25th Regiment Connecticut Volunteers, he has 
taken an active part in the restoration of Louisiana, and 
In the reopening of the Mississippi by the capture of Port 
Hudson. His regiment having served out their time and 
received their honorable discharge, Mr. Weld will imme¬ 
diately enter upon the more peaceful labor of gathering 
and spreading information through the columns of this 
journal.—Our good Agricultural Ship has never before 
been so well “manned” as it is now to be. With the 
constant and earnest editorial labors of Prof. Thurber 
and Lieut. Col. Weld, both of whom have had the most 
thorough practical and scientific training for their pro¬ 
fession, also of Messrs. Fitch and Taber, who have long 
been engaged in the office, and with the efficient editorial 
aid of Mr. Clift, Mr. Gridley, and several other practical 
and intelligent observers in different parts of the country, 
in addition to a widely extended circle of voluntary cor¬ 
respondence, we feel justified in promising a still further 
large advance in the intrinsic value of the Agriculturist. 
Our aim is, to condense into these -pages the largest pos¬ 
sible amount of useful and reliable information upon all 
topics relating to the labors of the Farm, Garden and 
Household. To this end we shall continue to enlarge 
the working force. The more thought and labor vve can 
concentrate upon the paper, the more valuable will 
every line become to the reader. It is not too much to 
say, that now here else can one obtain in the sa/ne space, 
or for so little money, so much of really valuable infor¬ 
mation. We take no little pride and pleasure in con¬ 
trasting the present facilities of this journal, with what 
they were ten years ago when the writer was almost 
literally “captain, mate, and all hands.” 
Our thanks are due to an appreciating circle of readers, 
now close on to eighty thousand, and soon to be a hun¬ 
dred thousand, we hope.—As the circulation enlarges, 
we are able to make further improvements, without in¬ 
creasing the cost to the reader. 
We bespeak a continuance of the favor so generously 
bestowed, and promise to spare no expense or effort to 
rnerit it in a still greater degree. ' Will our present read¬ 
ers each gratify us, at this time, by a word to friends and 
neighbors, informing them of wdiat are the plans and 
aims of the publisher, and how useful and interesting the 
paper may be to them. We would like to begin the next 
year with the round One Hundred Thousand. Will the 
reader of this supply at least one name towards this re 
suit? Every new name received this month will come 
in for an extra allowance of two months’ papers, as 
noted in another column. The Great Strawberry to be 
distributed, will, we hope, prove a valuable gift; but aside 
from these extra inducements, the Agriculturist shall 
be made a treasure to every household—a valuable guide 
for the Farm, the Garden, and Hie Household—and a 
source of pleasure and profit to the Young. O. J. 
^meruiut SUnnilturbi 
For tJie Farm, Garden, and Household. 
A- thorough-going, RELIABLE, and PRACTICAL 
Journal, devoted to the different departments of SOIL 
CULTURE—such as growing field CROPS ^orchard 
and garden FRUITS; garden VEGETABLES and 
FLOWERS; trees, plants, and flowers for the 
LAWN or YARD; care of DOMESTIC ANIMALS, 
etc., and to HOUSEHOLD LABORS, with an interesting, 
instructive department for CHILDREN and YOUTH. 
The Editors are all practical WORKING MEN. 
The teachings of the Agriculturist are confined to no 
State or Territory, but are adapted to all sections of the 
country—it is for the whole American Continent. 
A German edition is published, of the same size 
and price as the English, and containing all of its reading 
matter, and also its numerous illustrative engravings. 
TERMS-INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE, _ 
(For either the English or German Edition.) 
One copy, one year.$1 00 
Six copies, one year. 5 00 
Ten or more copies one year.80 cents each. 
IJ^Add to the above rates: Postage to Canada, 12 cents; 
to England and France, 24 cents ; to Germany, 36 cents. 
Postage anywhere in the United States and Territories 
must be paid by the subscriber, and is only three cents a 
quarter, if paid in advance at the office where it is received. 
All business and other communications should be ad¬ 
dressed to the Editor and Proprietor, 
ORANGE JUDD, 41 Park-Row, NewYork City. 
STEAM PRESSES OF JOHN A. GRAF A GREEN, 16 A IS JACOB FREET, N. V 
