43 4 = 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[November, 
■-sued in separate English and German Editions, 
■each containing similar illustrations and read¬ 
ing matter, and supplied at tlie same price. It 
Exactly Meets 
THE 
People’s Wants. 
It gathers, sifts, and condenses a vast | 
amount of reliable information for the g 
u Farm,” the “ Garden,” and the “House- * 
hold,” both for Village and City people. | 
Its Suggestions have set tens of thou- | 
sands of people on the road to profit. | 
it has saved the people at large from g 
millions of dollars of loss by explaining I 
the tricks and wiles of specious swindlers. | 
It gives every year at least 500 beau- | 
tiful and instructive ENGRAV- | 
INGS, costing $ 8,000 to $ 12 , 000 , f 
and every reader has perfect copies. | 
More than $ 25,000 are expended % 
every year in collecting and preparing I 
the best and most useful information, f 
hints, and suggestions, supplied by the * 
experience and observation of practical | 
men and women. ( Indeed, it is hardly % 
possible for any one, any where, to read this $ 
Journal a year, icithout getting some hint, j 
^ that will directly or indirectly put many * 
£j= dollars into his pocket, or at least save § 
| many dollars of loss.) —Thousands upon t 
* thousands of persons have written, tel- * 
% ling how its teachings have put money in I 
* their pockets, 7i .any times its cost. (These jjj 
| letters would fill many large volumes.) $ 
| Tens of thousands of Mechanics, g 
% Traders, Professional men, Factory-work- * 
g ers, etc., now enjoying their pleasant g 
$ garden-plots and yards, cultivated sole- I 
4 ly from the directions of this Journal. * 
It is of universal utility, containing 
hints and suggestions useful in every part 
of fhs world. 
To Housekeepers everywhere it is 
of great value for its practical talks about 
all departments of home labor and care. 
To Children and Youth it affords 
pleasing Pictures and entertaining and 
With all the above, it is the Cheapest 
Paper in the world, taking into account 
its size, its beauty, and the great expense and 
■care devoted to its preparation. (Every 
volume contains more reading matter than 20 
ordinary Books which are sold at $1 each.) 
The PRICE per annum is only $1.50, of 
XT. S. Currency; four to nine copies are sent for 
$1.25 each; ten to nineteen copies, for $1.20 
each, and twenty or more copies, only $1 each! 
f(N.B.—As the Publishers will pay the post¬ 
age after Jan. 1, 1875, 10 cents in addition to 
’the above terms must be sent with each sub¬ 
scription, to prepay this postage.) 
(The Publishers will pay the postage by the ton weight, 
-so that expense will be saved the subscribers by the new 
Arrangement, and the Publishers will be able to enlarge 
'the paper from time to time, without doubling the 
(postage to the readers, as lias hitherto been the case.) 
To our Old Readers the Publishers beg to 
say, that while the long-time Managing Editor, 
and his full force of workers, will continue as 
heretofore, the Old Editor has returned from a 
year’s furlough, re-invigorated in health, and 
has disconnected himself from all other litera¬ 
ry journals and pursuits, and will hereafter de¬ 
vote himself to this Journal, and the Publishers 
believe you will find the American Agricultur¬ 
ist not only better than ever before, if possible, 
but better and letter, as time goes on. 
To Yew Readers let us say, that we be¬ 
lieve you will find great profit in reading the 
American Agriculturist a year. Try it l It 
will cost you but $1.50, (less than 4 a cent a 
day, which is easily saved,) and much less if you 
get three or more others to join you in a club. 
************************** *********************** 
************************** *********************** 
SPECS AIL—©YE.—To each NEW Sub¬ 
scriber, who remits 25 cents extra (for mounting, 
postage, etc.) the Publishers will send, mount¬ 
ed, packed, and prepaid, a BEAUTIFUL 
CSIRd&M®, viz: “Up for Repairs,” 
or “ Misclsief Brewing,” but the choice 
must be named at the time of subscribing. 
|| SPECSAE— TWO— Extra.—Ev- p 
5* ery subscriber for 1875 (Yol. XXXIV) || 
1 1 received in November, 1874, will be || 
1* entered at once, and ySTTeceivc. with- 11 
11 out extra charge, the December nuru- 11 
J * her of 1874. Thus, those subscribing * | 
S t in November, 1874, for tlie year 1875, 11 
| ; will have the paper 13 months for 12 1 1 
11 months’price.-Those subscrib- 
11 ing at any time for 1875, will get many £ £ 
t J times their money's worth in a year’s 11 
S J numbers of this superb Journal. The 11 
* { hints of a single p;ige are often worth 11 
11 far more than the price for a whole year. | £ 
* * * * 
A.-k************** ********************** ***4* 
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To A EE, we say, for American Agriculturist, 
You are Invited 
To Try it a Year, 
And thus Prove its Value; 
It will Pay You, 
And Pay You Well. 
Send subscription price, single or club, with 
postage (10c.) by Check or Draft on New York 
Banks (or P. 0. Money Order,) payable to 
the Publishers, or Registered Money Letters. 
Orange Judd Company, Publishers, 
245 Broadway, New York. 
AND NOW 
ABOUT 
“Mbs Good AM) Matins Money;” 
ALSO ABOUT 
Large Pay Little Work. 
I.—If by your solicitation you persuade an¬ 
other to take and read the American Agricul¬ 
turist, you will do him a positive good. This 
Journal will benefit him many times its cost — 
and the Publishers will reward you as follows: 
IT.—The}' have selected with great care, and 
collected a very fine assortment of very useful 
and very desirable articles, good for one’s own 
use, or for ready cash sales. Every article is 
first-rate — new, well made, direct from the chief 
manufactory of each, [gp See List of them in 
the Table of Premiums, next page, and especially 
Descriptions and Illustrations of them on 
the following pages.—By large cash wholesale 
purchases, and by other favorable arrange¬ 
ments, the Publishers have secured these good 
articles on extraordinary terms and guarantees, 
and are thus able to supply them very advan¬ 
tageously, viz., they give them away to 
their friends, who cooperate with them in 
introducing this valuable Journal into other 
families—which can be done with little time or 
trouble, and for which the reward or pay 
will be large, as detailed further on. Some 
of the articles are given for obtaining as few 
as 3 subscribers at only $1.50 a year. 
IV.II .—Their facilities for getting these good pre¬ 
mium articles, referred to above, are such that the 
publishers can generally afford twice as much for get¬ 
ting subscribers, bg giving these premiums, as they 
could possibly pay in cash, while the articles offered 
are just as good as so much money, or in most cases 
better than money, on account of their special value, 
and they can be readily sold for cash. 
A - .IB.— Under similar, and even less favorable of¬ 
fers, many persons have canvassed for subscribers as a 
business, receiving the Pi-emiums, and selling 
them for cash, and they have thus secured salaries rang¬ 
ing all the way from $24)0 to $25,.»00 a year, and 
this for working only part of the time. ( We quite recent¬ 
ly met a Mechanic on a steamer, who assured us that 
our paper, furnished him by one of our lady canvassers, 
had been worth hundreds of dollars. As she made 
over $2,000 a year, by receiving and selling our Premi¬ 
um Articles for Subscribers which she obtained, she 
certainly “ made money and did good ” at the same 
time—and this is only one of many cases.) Put 
Any One 
Anywhere 
can collect and send us few or many names of 
subscribers, and receive a corresponding article, 
(one or more of them,) from our Premium List. 
Some start for large premiums, but, being 
otherwise occupied, they stop at a few names, 
and take any article offered for the number of 
names actually obtained. Others have started 
for a small premium, and finding the work 
very easy, have gone on, and obtained one or 
more of the most valuable articles. Every name 
sent for a Premium List, if so stated at the time 
of sending, is credited to the sender, and he is 
supplied with any premiums his names are en¬ 
titled to. FURTHER, while names should 
be sent in as fast as secured, so that the sub¬ 
scribers may begin to receive the papers, the 
canvasser can have any time desired for en¬ 
larging or completing a list, up to July 
1st, 1875, but he can call for any premium 
he is entitled to at any time before, and it will be 
promptly forwarded. See “ Explanatory Notes." 
Easy Work. 
The collection of subscribers is very easy, as 
the paper is so cheap and valuable, that almost 
all will take it, if it is brought to their notice 
and its value properly explained. 
More than Fifteen TSsousand Per¬ 
sons, Men, Women, and Children, in all parts 
of the Country, and in almost all stations of life, 
liave been successful in securing from 
one to a dozen or more of these Premiums, and 
with general satisfaction and pleasure. As 
many as 1,000 to 11,300 subscribers have 
• been sent from single Post-offices by our pre- 
