156 
AMERICAN AG RIOli.LT U RIST. 
[March, 
Kissena Nurseries. 
Trees and Plants. 
Parsons & Sons Co., 
LIMITED. 
Flushing, N. Y. 
"all the year round 
IV 
m 
■iili 
'□□□ 1 
|H 
THE FERGUSON 
BUREAU CREAMERY. 
Makes the Best Butter. 
It develops the finest flavor and color. The butter 
has t he bes t grain, and ‘keeping quality . 
It makes the most Gutter, uses the least ice, and 
saves the most labor. 
Hundreds have discarded deep setters and adopted 
tht? Rureau._ 
DON’T BUY ANY CANS, PANS OR CREAMER, 
or send your milk to the factory, until you have sent 
for our larpe illustrated circulars and price lists. 
T1IE FERGUSON M’F’G. CO., Burlington, Vt. 
JOHN S. CARTER, 
Manufacturer and Dealer in 
Apparatus and Supplies for Cheese and 
Butler Factories, Creameries, and Dairies. 
Everything pertaining to the manufacture of Butter and 
Cheese furnished at low^rices. Outfits^ a^speelalty. Send 
for circular. 
S. CARTER, Syracuse, N. Y. 
r^AQi PLYMOUTH ROGK & LiOHT 
LUyOi BR&HMAS for hatching. 
Prize stock, $2 for 13, S3 for 26. Carefully packed for 
express. Having long bred these varieties only, introduc¬ 
ing fresh blood from best strains obtainable, regardless of 
cost, nave superior stock. F. C. Biddle, Cliadd’s Ford, Pa. 
Times Building, Chicago, will supply able Superintendent », 
Oracle Teachers and Specialists with good positions in the 
Central, Western and Southern States for the ensuing year, 
In public or private schools. Great demand for lady teach¬ 
ers of music, art and languages. Apply early. 
(MREENWICH SEMINARY. — Usual Literary 
VJT Courses, with Musical Institute and Commercial Col¬ 
lege. Founded 1802. Both sexes. Home care and com¬ 
forts. Influences decidedly Religious. Charmingly located 
on Narragansett Bav. Winter term opens Dec. 5. Cata¬ 
logue free. REV. F. D. BLAKESLEE, A.M., 
Principal, East Greenwich, R. I. 
Farm and Home 
Published at Springfield, Mass., 
FOR 
50 Cents a Year, 
Is a paper that any progressive farmer cannot afford 
to be without. Although low in price It is excellent In qual¬ 
ity, and gives for 50 cents a year, more reading of practical 
•worth than many papers of four times the cost. 
Its Farm Features are UNSURPASSED in any paper 
of its class. Farm and Home has over 300 practical 
farmers who contribute regularly to Its columns. These 
are men who have been successful in their lines and who 
give their experience , not theory. 
Its Family Features are as suggestive and useful to 
the wife and children as the farming pages are to the 
husband. 
Send 50 cents in stamps for a year’s subscription. Speci¬ 
men copy free. 
Our Illustrated Premium List, describing over 80 choice 
articles, with agents' instructions and terms, giving cash 
commission when preferred, sent for a 3-cent stamp. 
( 25^7 pr distributed to agents sending the largest clubB 
i »J ' f previous to June 1, '83. Full particulars sent 
on application. 
Large clubs can be raised in every town. Go to work 
now. 
Address FARM & HOME, Springfield, Mass. 
Mention this paper. 
GRAND OFFER 
For One New Subscriber to the American Agriculturist. 
To any new subscriber whose name is received before the thirty-first of March, we will 
present the beautiful Magic Pencil shown in the engraving, and retailing at $1.50. It is of 
the finest gold plate, and the barrel is of imported imitation onyx. It has the patent 
magic movement that is so very popular and desirable in a pencil. The engravings show 
length and size, closed and open. It is suitable for a lady or gentleman, and very con¬ 
venient to carry in the pocket, as well as on the chain. In fact it is one of the most com¬ 
plete Pencils of its kind, and something that 
Everybody Wants—Man, Woman, and Child. 
Grand Special Offer. 
12 NUMBERS 
Of the American Agriculturist, at the exceedingly low price it is offered, are doubly worth 
the price of subscription. Indeed, when we take into consideration the fact that other 
illustrated magazines charge $4 per year, it is no wonder that other publishers are unable to 
understand how th e American Agriculturist is published at so low a price. Notwithstanding 
this low price, however, which has no parallel in magazine literature, we propose to make 
a still better offer to subscribers. To every bona fide new subscriber, whose name is received 
between now and March 20th, we will send the January and February numbers of the paper 
free. Every such new subscriber will thus be receiving 14 numbers for a year’s subscription. 
Every such subscriber will likewise be entitled to the beautiful Premium Picture, en¬ 
titled In tlie Meadow, by sending 10 cents for packing, postage, etc. We make this 
special offer to new subscribers, and to new subscribers only, as an inducement to those who 
have not hitherto taken the paper to do so in the future, confident that, once subscribers, 
they will continue to subscribe all their lives. 
Bixi i x isrow. 
OFFER EXTRAORDINARY. 
A Beautiful Volume for One New Subscriber. 
To every person who will send us one new subscriber to the American Agriculturist, 
before March 30th, we will forward immediately, post-paid, any one of the following 
volumes i 
Mrs. Browning, 
Chaucer, 
Edgar A. l?oe, 
Goethe’s Poems, 
Goethe’s Faust, 
Lucille, 
Macaulay, 
Owen Meredith, 
Pilgrim’s Progress, 
Pope, 
Schiller, 
Spenser. 
These volumes are elegantly hound in cloth and gold, with the name of the author upon 
the back. They are printed upon gilt-edged, tinted paper, new type, new plates, and illus¬ 
trated. They are complete and unabridged. They likewise have red lines around the type, 
which adds to the attractiveness and beauty of the volumes. We do not hesitate to pro¬ 
nounce and recommend them to our readers as the most elegant copies of the British Poets 
yet published. Each one of these volumes sells at $1.50, both in New York and elsewhere. 
THE FLORAL KINGDOM, 
PRICE $6.50. 
See page 88 of the February American Agriculturist for this magnificent Premium, 
9 by 11 inches in size. Gilt-edged, and weighing nearly five pounds, sent, post-paid, to any 
person who will forward us five new subscribers to the American Agriculturist. 
THE APEX HARROW 
is the right one. It crushes, pulverizes, levels, Iron and 
Steel. Adjusts and Folds. Manufactured only by 
THE NEW YORK PLOW CO., 55 Beekman St.,N. Y. 
Report Proceedings 2d Ensilage Congress, 30 cts. 
CAYUGA LAKE N URSERIES 
pemrr .... ii i mi i (Established 1855) ■BHUBsm 
fillOjM STRAWBERRIES 
E1EW RASPBERRIES, BLACK- 
RCDOICC CURRANTS AND 
BEEliUEd GOOSEBERRIES. 
GRAPE VINES. 
TDCCC Ornamental Trees, Shrubs Vines, 
I nliCOa Hoses, &c. Hundreds of varieties. 
All the new as well astbe Best 
old sorts. Prices Low. Stock 
Pure, Quality Guaranteed. SI, 
S3, $3, S5 and S10 Collec¬ 
tions. New 36-page Illustrated Catalogue it Price List 
rpCC TO ALL) Address H.S.ANDERSON 
r n C, L app l icants; Union Springs, N. Y. 
I II kbwl noses 
SEEDS 
"IT 1 A T? WX7 1 ^ P a y8 to send anv distance for my 
I xVXYlTl Jth i-l). adjustable Iron-clad Harrow. It 
can be sent anywhere 7 In a box, at small cost. Everybody 
likes it. S. HUTCHINSON, Griggsville, Pike Co., Ill. 
