tMABCH, 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
1874.] 
YOUNfi 
A MEN. 
BOYS, & MIDDLE-AGED MEN 
Trained for a Successful Start in Business Life, taught how 
to eet a Living, Make Money, and become Enterprising, Use¬ 
ful Citizens. Eastman Business College, Poughkeep¬ 
sie, N. Y., On-the-Mudson, the only Institution devoted to 
this especially. The oldest and only practical Commercial 
School, and only one providing situations for-Graduates. 
Refers to i atrons and Graduates in nearly every city and 
town. Applicants enter any day. Address for particulars 
and Catalogue of 3,000 graduates in business. 
H. G. EASTMAN, LL.D., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
WOOD, TABER & MORSE, 
Baton,, Madison Co., AT. T. 
MANUFACTURERS OF 
Steam-Engines, 
Portable, Stationary, and 
Agricultural. 
Hundreds in use Ip 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. 
Important to Farmers. 
THE BEST nr THE WORLD. 
Boswell’s Room Heater, Universal Dryer, and 
Cooking Apparatus Combined. 
Send stamp for description to the General Agent. 
D. C. MOORE, M.D., Youngstown, Ohio. 
UNION PACIFIC R.R. CO. 
HAVE .A. GRANT OB 
12,000,000 A. CUE©! 
OF THE BEST MINERAL AND FARMING LANDS OF AMERICA. 
4,250,000 ACRES IK THE STATE OF NEBRASKA. 
3,000,000 ACRES in Central and Eastern Nebraska, 
IANT THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY, 
THE GARDEN OF THE WEST, 
NOW FOR SALE AT PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION. 
Cheap Lands—The Best Investment. 
No fluctuations ! Always Improving in Value! The Wealth of the Country is made by the Advance in Real 
Estate ! These lauds are located on the 41st. Degree of North Latitude, in the 
Great Central Belt of Population, Commerce, and Wealth. 
Have a mild and healthy climate, and for Grain and Fruit Growing and Stock Raising are unsurpassed by any in the 
United States. _ 
The Best Market in the West, 
The great Mining Regions of Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Nevada being supplied by the farmers of the PLATTE 
VALLEY. ' ___ 
Cheaper In Brice and More Favorable Terms Given 
than can t>e Found Elsewhere. 
IF yon wish to get full, reliable, TIT HUTTl A 
and accurate information about IT JjUIIIDA 
its climate, soil, and capacities, and the profits of 
flR A TvT HP Pro wing, and the cultivation of Tropi- 
V/LbLlLi VTJ-I val Fruits, subscribe to the Florida 
Agriculturist, an 8 -page Weekly Paper, containing 32 
broad columns, devoted to the Agricultural Interests of 
Florida. Its home contributors include Solon Robinson 
formerly of the N. Y. Tribune ; ex-Gov. Bloxham ; Hon. 
C. H. Du Pont, and many of the largest, planters. $3 a 
year. Address- Walton & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. 
\\ T E WANT TO EM PLOY a large 
number of first-class business men to travel only in 
cities and large towns, and sell our United States Law Direc¬ 
tory. 
J. B. MAIiTINDALE & CO., Indianapolis, bid. 
1 I*0.,AHi 1 S. — Affected by tin 
late Panic in Prices only. See page 111 , and addles 
JOHN S. COLLINS. 
J290. Circulars free. U. S. Piano Co. 810 Broadway, N Y 
Five and Ten Years’ Credit Given, with Interest at Six per Cent, 
NO ADVANCE INTEREST REQUIRED. Colonists and Actual Settlers can buy on Ten Years’ Credit. Lands 
at same price to all Credit purchasers. Prices range from $ 2.00 to $ 10.00 per Acre. A Deduction of Ten per 
Cent for Cash. The Land Grant Bonds of the Company are taken at par in payment for the Lands. 
Free Homesteads l'or Actual Settlers. The Best Locations for Colonics. 
SOLDIERS OF THE LATE WAR are entitled to a FREE HOMESTEAD 
OF 160 ACRES within Railroad Limits, which is equal to a DIRECT 
BOUNTY of $400. DO NOT DELAY. NOW IS THE TIME TO SECURE 
A HOME. Free Passes to Purchasers of Railroad Lands. Buy Through 
Tickets Direct to Omaha, Nebraska. 
Sectional Maps, showing Lands for sale, with the prices corrected up to the latest date, also Descriptive Pam¬ 
phlet with new maps published in English. German, Swedish, Danish. French, Dutch, and Bohemian, fur¬ 
nished gratuitously or. application to the Land Department, or mailed free to any address. “ THE PIONEER ” is 
also sent FREE to applicants IN ANY PART OF THE WORLD. Address 
O. F. DAVIS, Land Commissioner U. P. R.R., OMAHA, NEB. 
GET THE BEST. 
Gardening for Profit. 
A Guide to the Successful Cultivation of 
tlie Market and Family Garden. 
By PETER HENDERSON. 
Finely Illustrated. Price, Post-paid, $1.50. 
ins us noil-professionals what we have so long needed- 
some plain common-sense directions'for our assistance— 
and for having exploded some outrageous humbugs which 
have been perpetuated in all previous works on gardening 
and floriculture from time immemorial, tending to produce 
the conviction that nothing but professional skill could 
raise a vegetable or flower. Luther Newcomb,, 
May 4,1873. Montpelier, Vt. 
Money 
IN THE GARDEN. 
The success of this hook has probably not been equaled 
by that of any horticultural work of the present day. Its 
popularity is due to the fact that it tells just what people 
wish to know the way in which the author made money by 
gardening—and puts in a plain, striking light all the requi¬ 
sites to success. The writer was not afraid to have people 
know that he cultivated his land for profit, and, more than 
that, he was quite willing that all should know and practice. 
If they chose, the very processes which he lmd found most 
conducive to the desired end. The late Horace Greeley said 
of this book: “There are marvels of transformation and 
rapid reproduction recorded therein which might well 
shame the dull fancy of the author of Aladdin or of Kaloolah. 
There is no theory about it; a man who has made himself 
rich by market-gardening plainly tells our young men how 
they can get rich as easily as lie did, and without wandering 
to California or Montana for it either.” And tens of thou¬ 
sands who have read and profited by the work could give 
similar testimony. It is unquestionably the most thorough 
and tile best book of its kind that lias yet come from the 
band of an American author. 
The following is a specimen of hundreds of letters that 
have been received concerning this work. 
I was an early purchaser of “ Gardening for Profit,” a 
reading of which made the possession of “ Practical Flori¬ 
culture ” a necessity. I sincerely thank the writer lor giv- 
A VEGETABLE MANUAL, 
PREPARED WITH A VIEW TO 
ECONOMY AND PROFIT, 
BY P. T. QUINN, 
PRACTICAL HORTICULTURIST. 
In this work the author aims to give, in a plain, practical 
style, instructions on three distinct although closely con-’ 
nected branches of gardening—file kitchen-garden, market- 
garden, and field culture; the only and sufficient credentials 
for the fitness of his undertaking being a successful practical 
experience for a term of years. 
CONTENTS. 
Chapter I. Money in 
the Garden. 
II. Hot-beds. 
III. Artichoke. 
IV. Beans. 
V. Cabbages. 
VI. Egg-Plants. 
VII. Lettuce. 
Chapter XV. List of 
PRICE, POST-PAID - -- -- -- -- -- - $1.50 
Either of the above hooks sent post-paid “on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
Chapter VIII. Melons. 
IX. Onions. 
X. Parsley. 
XI. Radishes. 
XII. Salsify. 
XIII. Tomatoes. 
XIV. Forcing 
Houses. 
Seeds. 
PEAR, CEXTTOE 
FOR PROFIT. 
By P. T. QUINN, 
PRACTICAL HORTICULTURIST. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
If one wishes to raise pears intelligently, and with the 
best results, he must know first the character of his soil, the 
best mode of preparing it, the best varieties to select under 
existing conditions, the best mode of planting, pruning, 
fertilizing, grafting, and utilizing the ground before the 
trees come into hearing, and finally, of gathering and pack¬ 
ing for market. 
The hope of furnishing practical information on all these 
points has induced the author to endeavor to draw for 
others the same lessons which years of practical experience 
have afl'orded him. 
Contents: 
Chap. I. Varieties. 
“ II. Aspect. 
“ III. Preparation of 
the Soil. 
“ IV. Distance Apart 
in Planting. 
“ V. Dwarfs and 
Standards. 
" VI. Planting-Time. 
“ VII. Planting. 
“ VIII. Nursery Trees. 
Chap. IX. Varieties to Plant. 
“ X. Pruning. 
“ XI. Manuring and 
Mulching. 
“ XII. Gathering Fruit. 
“ XIII. Marketing Pears. 
“ XIV. Profits. 
“ XV. Propagation, etc. 
“ XVI. Practical Sugges¬ 
tions. 
“ XVII.. Orchard Record. 
PRICE, POST-PAID. 
$1.00 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
