360 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST 
[September. 
&BEAT DEDUCTION. 
DUTY OFF 
TEAS AND COFFEES. 
Increased Facilities to Club Organizers. 
Send for New Price-List. 
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA COMPANY, 
(P. O. Box 5643.) 31 and S3 Vesey St., New York. 
\|TOOD, TABER & MORSE, 
Eaton, Madison Co., A. T. 
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 lin¬ 
stock,Cotton Ginning, Sawing, etc. 
Circulars sent on application. 
THE 
PERCH HORSE. 
TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH OF 
CHARLES DU HAYS, 
Author of the “ Dictionary of the Pure Race; ” “ Trotters; " 
“ The Horse-Breeder’s Guide ; ” etc. 
FINELY ILLPSTRATEB. 
TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
Production, Rearing, and Improvement of the Percheron 
Horse. 
Part First. 
Greatness and Decline of the Percherons. Glance at 
Perche. Sketch of the Percheron Race. Origin of the Per¬ 
cheron. Modifications of the Percheron Race. His First. 
Modification due to Contact with the Brittany Race. Con¬ 
ditions under which they are Bred. Causes of the Degener¬ 
acy of the Percheron Horse. Starting Point of tills 
Degeneration. 
Part Second. 
Of the Means of Regenerating the Percheron Horse. Re¬ 
generation of the Percheron Breed. Regeneration of the 
Breed through itself or by Selection. Consanguinity. Ought 
the Gray Coat of the Percheron to be Inflexibly Maintained? 
Preserve Pure, and without Intermixture, the Three Types 
of the Percheron Race—the Light Horse, the Draft-Horse, 
the Intermediate Horse. Improvement of the Breed by 
Means of Foreign Crossings. The Arab Cross. The English 
Cross. Improvement liy Means of the Stud-Book. Re¬ 
capitulation. 
Part Tiiied. 
Information to Strangers Wishing to Buy Percheron 
Horses. Food and Breeding. Trade. Glance at the most 
Celebrated Breeding Districts. Speed and Bottom of the 
Percheron Horse. Tests of Speed of the Percheron Horse. 
Tests of Endurance of the Percheron Horse. 
SENT POST-PAID.PRICE $1.00. 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
ADVERTISING RATES. 
CASH BEFORE INSERTION. 
American Agriculturist. 
E:\'C4s.asna kditioy. 
Ordinary Pages, SI .50 per line (agate), each insertion. 
Open Pages (open without cutting), Super line. 
Past Page, and 2d amlod Cover Pages— S3..10 per line. 
Page next to Peading and Last Cover Page— 83.00 per line. 
No advertisement inserted for less titan $5.00. 
Ordinary Pages, 23 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. 
23?*No Advertisement of Medicines or Humbugs received. 
Address all orders to 
ORANGE .TIJniJ & CO., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
THE 
WASHINGTON 
LIFE INSURANCE CO, 
155 Broadway, I'Tew York. 
ASSETS, . . . 1^3,000,000. ! 
CYRUS CURTISS, President. 
W. A. BREWER, Jr.,Vice-Pres’t.and Actuary. : 
W. IIAXTUN, Secretary. 
Dividends paid annually from date of policy, and are non¬ 
forfeitable by Charter. 
Premiums are required in Cash. Dividends are paid in Cash. 
Assets are held iu Cash. 
All profits divided among the Policy-holders. 
American Pomology.—Apples.$3.00 
This volume has 144 pages, the first. 315 of which arc 
devoted to the discussion of the general subjects of 
propagation, nursery culture, selection and planting, 
cultivation of orchards, care of fruit, insects, and the 
like; the remainder is occupied with descriptiOnsof 
apples. With the richness of material at hand, the 
trouble was to decide what to leave out. It contains 
293 Illustrations. Contents : I. Introductory.—II. 
History of the Apple. — ni. Propagation. Buds and 
Cuttings— Grafting — Budding — The Nursery. — IV. 
Dwarfing.—Y. Diseases.—VI. The Site for an Orchard. 
VII. Preparation of Soil for an Orchard.—VIII. Se¬ 
lection and Planting.—IX. Culture, etc.—X. Philoso¬ 
phy of Pruning.—XI. Thinning.—XII. Ripening and 
Preserving Fruits. — XIH and XIY. Insects. — XV. 
Characters of Fruits and their Value—Terms used.— 
XVX Classification. Necessity for — Basis of— Char¬ 
acters— Shape—Its Regularity—Flavor—Color— Their 
several Values, etc., Description of Apples.—XVII. 
Fruit Lists—Catalogue aud Index of Fruits. By Doct. 
John A. Warder, President Ohio Pomological Socie 
ty; j Vice-President American Pomological Society 
Cloth, 12mo., 144 pp. 
HOW CROPS GROW, 
A Treatise ou the Chemical Composition, structure, and 
Life Of the Plant. With numerous illustrations and tables 
of analyses. By Prof. Samuel W . Johnson, of 
Yale College. Price $2.00, 
This book is a guide to the knowledge of agricultural 
plants, their composition, their structure, and modes of de¬ 
velopment and growth; of the complex organization of 
plants, and the uses of the parts; the germination of seeds, 
and the food of plants obtained both from the air and the 
soil. Very full and accurate tables of analyses are given, 
and tables of the proportions existing between different 
principles, oily, starchy, or nitrogenous, iu the same and 
different plants. The hook is an invaluable one to all real 
students of agriculture. 
HOW CROPS FEEB. 
A Treatise on the Atmosphere, aud the Soil as related to 
the Nutrition of Agricultural Plants. Illustrated. By Prof. 
Samul W. Johnson, of Yale College. Price, $2.00. 
The work entitled ” How Crops Grow” lias been received 
with very great favor, not only in America, but in Europe. 
It has been republished in England under the joint Editor¬ 
ship of Professors Church and Dyer, of the Royal Agricul¬ 
tural College, at Cirencester, and a translation into German 
has been published, at the instigation of Professor von Liebig. 
The author, therefore, puts forth this volume—tile com¬ 
panion and complement to the former—with the hope that it 
also will he welcomed by those who appreciate the scientific 
aspects of Agriculture, and are persuaded that a true 
Theory is the surest guide to a successful Practice. 
Either of the above books sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
PARSONS ON THE ROSE. 
A Treatise on the Propagation, Culture, and History of 
the Rose. Revised and newly electrotyped. Illustrated. 
By Samuel B. Parsons. Price $ 1 .50. 
The Rose is the only flower that can be said to have a his¬ 
tory. It is popular now and was so centuries ago. In his 
work upon the Rose, Mr. Parsons has gathered up the curi¬ 
ous legends concerning the flower, and gives us an idea of 
the esteem iu which it was held in former times. A simple 
garden classification lias been adopted, and the leading vari¬ 
eties under eacli class enumerated and briefly described. 
The chapters on multiplication, cultivation, and training, 
are very full, aud the work is altogether the most complete 
of any before the public. 
Sent post-paid on receipt of price by 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
ADVERTISERS 
desiring to he found m 
Good Company, 
and of being favorably introduced to 
FIRST-CLASS CUSTOMERS 
throughout the city and country, will And 
Hearth and Home 
the cheapest weekly paper for their use, because it pays the 
best;, and costs the least in proportion to circulation. 
The value of advertising good articles largely in the best 
■mediums is indicated by the following facts: 
HEARTH AND HOME, which- has been prominently ad¬ 
vertised in the leading papers throughout the country dur¬ 
ing the past few months, has added very largely to its cir¬ 
culation. 
The intelligent, thrifty, buying classes fin'd’it just what 
they want. It is adapted to the whole family, and is READ 
ALL THROUGH. 
Advertisements of patent and quack medicines, deceptive 
schemes, swindling agencies, and unreliable parties, are 
more rigorously excluded than from any other journal ex¬ 
cept The American Agriculturist. The readers know this, 
and therefore readily patronize those who are admitted. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO.. Publishers, 
No. 243 Broadway, New York. 
issued Weekly. 
A Large, Beautiful, Highly Illustrated 
and very Valuable Journal—full of Reli¬ 
able, Instructive, and Interesting Read¬ 
ing Matter: just suited to the Wants 
and Wishes of every Family—every 
Man, Woman, arid Child in America — 
whether living in City or Country. 
Terms: 
One Copy, One Year, - - $3.00 
Four Copies, One Year, - $2.75 each. 
Ten or More Copies, - - - $2.50 each. 
One copy each of Hearth and Home 
and American Agriculturist will be sent 
one year for $4. 
ORANGE JUDD & (’0., Publishers, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
