24r0 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[JUNE. 
GREAT REDUCTION 
IN TEA.S. 
GESAT SAVING- TO CONSUMERS 
BY GETTING BP CLUBS. 
And remunerative to Club Organizers. 
Consumers can save 5 to 8 profits by purchasing of the 
Great American Tea Comp’y, 
31 & 33 Vesey Street, 
F. O. Box, 5,643. _ KEW YORK CITY. 
W 00D ) TABER & MORSE, 
Eaton, Madison Co., JST. 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. 
No More Tough, Meat. 
Warren’s Patent Cooker, 
Represented in the following cut, is the most economical, the 
most useful, and the most satisfactory kitchen utensil ever 
Invented. 
It Saves Two ©races in the Pound 
over ordinary methods of baking and boiling, and so saves 
its cost in a few weeks. 
A child can manage it, and a French cook 
can not surpass it. 
It is within the reach of all—costing from $5 to $15. 
Circulars on application. Address 
NEWPORT JLEA3> W©5SK@, 
Newport, 1£. I. 
Geo. E. “Waking, Jb., of Ogden Farm, says of it: 
“ 1 have used the Warren Cooker almost daily for the past 
two years, and would no more think of returning to the old 
system of boiling and roasting in the oven than I would of 
going back to hand mowing in the hay harvest. It is the 
rarest exc ption to have a.joint of meat, any sort of poul¬ 
try, or a ham, served in any hut the most perfectly cooked 
condition. The amount or fuel and attention required are 
very much less than under the old system. 
“We have never had a cook who did not like it from the 
first, and recommend It to her friends. It is as great a 
favorite in tile farm-house kitchen as in our own.” 
The Evening Post says: 
‘‘We are, therefore, doing a real service to our readers in 
bringing Captain Warren’s system to their notice. The 
principle on which he works is to bake liis joints at a low 
temperature in a tightly-closed vessel, from which the escape 
of the volatile flavoring ingredients of the meat is impossi¬ 
ble; where tlie heat will never lie sufficient (as the heat of 
boiling water is) to harden the tissue of the meat, making it 
tough to chew and difficult to digest; and where the juices, 
that are dried away and destroyed or lost in an ordinary 
oven, are retained to keep the meat palatable, nutritious, 
and easily digestible." 
The following is from the Atlantic Monthly for May, 1872: 
“ WARREN’S COOKER is an invention which has ap¬ 
proved itself to all who have used it, aud is, beyond doubt, 
the best tiling of its kind. Experience enables us to give it 
the highest praise as an apparatus of such virtue, that it is 
no longer a question of cooks, but simply of time, about a 
dinner fit for the most exacting taste. The cook, in fact, is 
superseded, and the Cooker reigns. You have your meats 
and vegetables put into it, and you have them taken out— 
there human interference ceases; and the magical little 
agent lias produced you a dinner of most perfect doneness, 
of most delicate and separate flavors, of most tempting ap¬ 
pearance—a flattery to the eye, a joy to the palate. We can 
not all have a French chef, hut most of us can afford War¬ 
ren’s Cooker, which lias rill the inspiration of such an artist, 
without his tempers and extravagance. It Is convenient, 
economical, and most efficient,” 
STATE OF NEW YORK, 
T Per Cent 
FISST MORTGAGE 
GOLD BONDS, 
Thirty Years to Run, and Issued for 
$20,000 Per Mile, 
At 80 and Accrued Interest in Currency. 
This road forms the shortest and most direct route from 
the great anthracite and semi-bituminous coal fields of 
Pennsylvania into the central part of this State, and will 
run iu connection with the New York Central Road, 
which it crosses at Cayuga Bridge. Traversing, as it 
does, the finest and most populous agricultural district, 
generally known as the “ Garden op the State,” its 
local traffic will be large, hut its greatest source of reve¬ 
nue will be from its coal business. The road is being 
rapidly built. Iron is now being laid on a section cover¬ 
ing more than one quarter of the distance, and work on 
the whole line being pushed with great vigor, so that it 
is expected to have coal trains running by the 1st of 
November next. From our knowledge of this enterprise, 
aud after the most thorough investigation, we most con¬ 
fidently recommend the Bonds as a safe investment. 
We offer, for the present, the Bonds at 90 and accrued 
interest in currency. 
Leonard, Sheldon & Foster, 
Mo. 10 WALL ST., NEW YORK. 
FENCES 
FARMERS! make no new fence without sending for 
descriptive circular of Combination Fence, illustrated in 
Agriculturist for March. It combines advantages of both 
wood and wire, and saves 33 to 50 per cent in cost. Persons 
wanted everywhere to introduce it. All inquiries receive 
prompt attention addressed to inventor, 
THOS. H. SPEAK.IV!AN, 
Wo. 26 N. 7th st., Philadelphia Pa. 
INVALIDS’ 
TRAVELOG CHAIRS, 
FROM $15 to $50. 
FOR IN AND OUT-DOOR USE. 
Any one having use of the hands 
can propel and guide one. Having 
no use of the hands, any child of five 
years can push a grown person about. 
Patent Sedan Carrying Chairs. 
State your case and eend stamp for 
circular. 
S. A.. Successor to 
STEPHEN W. SMITH, 
90 William St., New York. 
ADYEE.TISIMG HATES. 
CASH BEFORE INSERTION. 
American Agriculturist. 
EiK€iLISH EDITION. 
Ordinary Pages, SI .50 per line (agate), each insertion. 
Open Pages (open without cutting), S'Aper line. 
Last Page, and 2d andSd Cover Pages— $8.50 per line. 
Page next to Reading and Last Cover Page— $3.00 per line. 
No advertisement inserted for less than $5.00. 
CSEKMAN EDSTION. 
Ordinary Pages, 25 cents per line, each insertion. 
Business Notices and Last Page, 40 cents per line. 
No advertisement inserted for less than $1.00. 
Hearth and Home. 
Ordinary Pages, per line (agate), each insertion 50 cents. 
Business Notices, 7th Page, and Last Page.75 cents. 
Cuts.25 cents per line extra. 
No Advertisement inserted for less than $2.00. 
&2TN0 Advertisement of Medicines or Humbugs received. 
Address all orders to 
ORANGE JUDD Si CO., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
Safe and Profitable. 
THE 
Canada Southern 
FIRST MORTGAGE SINKING FUND 
THIRTY YEARS 
1 PER CENT COLD BONDS 
AT 
90 and ACCRUED INTEREST. 
The Road runs from Buffalo to the 
Detroit River, and is the Eastern link 
in the new AIR LIWE FROM BUFFALO 
TO CHICAGO, and has been under 
construction for about two years past 
by railroad men who have seen the 
necessity for a STEEL-RAIL, LOW- 
GRADE SHORT ROUTE between the 
great railroad systems which diverge 
from Chicago, Toledo, and Buffalo. 
Among the builders of the Road, by whose cash sub¬ 
scriptions 220 miles (out of 290) have already been graded, 
bridged, and made ready for the superstructure, a large 
part of the steel rails bought, all of the materials for the 
stations, and a part of the equipment purchased, are : 
MILTON COURTRIGHT, JOHN F. TRACY, DAVID 
DOWS, WM. L. SCOTT, HENRY FARNHAM, R. A. 
FORSYTH, HENRY H. PORTER, JOHN M. BURKE, 
M. L. SYKES, Jr., B. F. ALLEN, all directors, either 
in the Chicago and North-west, or the Chicago, Rock 
Island, and Pacific; GEORGE OPDYKE, of the Midland 
Road; JOHN B. ALLEN, SIDNEY DILLON, DANIEL 
DREW, J. S. CASEMENT, J. & J. STEWART, and 
F. H. WINSTON. 
THE ROAD will be 
33 MILES SHORTER 
THAN ANY OTHER ROAD, 
either BUILT or in contemplation be¬ 
tween Buffalo and Chicago, and will 
also shorten the distance between 
Toledo and Buffalo 23 miles. 
THE MAXIMUM CRADEon the entire 
line does not exceed FIFTEEN FEET 
to the mile, and Ninety-six per cent 
of the Road IS STRAIGHT. 
The ROAD WILL BE COMPLETED 
and in running order on or before 
December 31st, of this year. 
The principal and interest of the Bonds are payable 
either in New York, London, or Frankfort. 
We confidently recommend the Bonds to ail classes of 
investors. 
Leonard, Sheldon & Foster, 
Wo. 10 WALL ST., HEW YORK. 
CRANBERRY CULTURE. 
Illustrated. By Joscpli J. Wliite. Price, $1.25, 
The author of tills work has aimed to embody, in a plain 
and concise manner, all the useful and practical facta which 
study and experience have yielded to the inquiring cran¬ 
berry grower of the present time. The business has in¬ 
creased enormously within the last ten years, and knowledge 
and experience have kept pace with that increase. 
The endeavor has been to make tills work as comprehen¬ 
sive as possible; and it is believed that it wil! prove an ef¬ 
ficient guide to all who may have cause to consult its pages. 
Sent post-paid on receipt of price by 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New Yore. 
