AND HORTICULTURIST 



3VIOWTIILY 



FOR 1883. 



(^g ♦♦ ^5» !*■ i[^ ^1^ *H*» «^» ^^ <ft are requested to send at least one NEW name with their own, if possible. For 

 Sai M 5«P 83 V*l + i^^««P»0 this attention, we will furnish THE TWO at ?:i 20 for the year. ' 



TWO NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS at S:5.20; FIVE at 87. OO. Remit by Money Order or Reg sfered Letter; or if you send Draft or Check, 

 make payable on Middle btates New F.nglana or Maryland. On Banks we<t and south of tiiose points add twenty-five cents to each 

 Check, to rrfiinH coit charged us for collection, t urrency is at risk of sender. 



REISPO'N'SIBLaEI A.Gr'E'RrTS will be allowed a lib-ral commission, retainable out of subscriptions secured and 

 forwarded, bend for net riites. i-aniple copy 18 cts., postage stamps. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the acts of BogTts Ag-ents. 



Subscribers must choose their Agents at their own ri^k. 

 Any Subscriber who has already renewed his subscription and paid $2.10 may order a new subi-cribcr at the rate of 33.20 the two, by 

 emitting the additional $1.10 to balance, and oblige, with thanks for pa.st favors and efforts. 

 All subscribers, at whatever rate, are invited to take advantageof our list of Club Papers. See advertisement. 



CHAS. H. MAROT, Publisher, 814 Ghestaut Street, Philadelphia. 



-SECOND EDITION, REVISED BY THE AUTHOR.- 



The NeiAT Botany. 



A Lecture on the Best Method of Teaching the Science. By W. J. BEAL, M.SC, PH.D., Professor of Botany in the 

 Agricultural College, Lansing, Mich. 8vo, paper. 23c. Mailed, post-paid, on receipt of price. 



"Dr. Beal does well to say that hooks are an aid in the study, and not the proper source of knowledge at all. One 

 examination of a plant will teach more than the perusal of fifty books. Every student of Botany may profit by taking 

 counsel of Dr. Beal." — London Gardener's Magazine. 



"This book well merits the attention of all engaged in teaching Botany, and also of those who are about to study it. 

 Some excellent directions are given as to what shouhl be the objects in stuiiving Natural Science, and the best modes of 

 cultivating habits of correct observation." — London Jownal of Horticulture.' 



"The tendency of modern instruction tseems to be in the direction of emancipation from text -books, with their 

 stereotyped formulas : and we believe that in no department is there more need of it than in that of Botany."— 3/ar6ie- 

 head (Mass.) Messeyiger. 



" Neither Botany nor Horticulture is what it was a half eentuiy ago. True Gardening in these davs embraces a 

 knowledge of flowers to an extent that makes a gardener really a botanist ; while Botany is a great deal more than a 

 mere classification of a lot of dried sticks. In the new order of things Botany deals with plant life, just as Gardening 

 does. Few have done'so much, proljably no one more, to make Botany popular" than Prof. Beal. In tliis lecture he tells 

 how he does it. No better service could be rendered to botanists and gardeners than to have this lecture in the hands of 

 every teacher." — Gardener.^' Monthly, January. 1S89. 



•' Prof. Beal is one of the best of our modern teachers of Botany."'— J6uZ, September, 1S8^. 



Address, CHAS. H. MAROT, Publisher, 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelpliia. 



"ferns of KENTUCKY, 



BY JOHN WILLIAMSON. 



With 60 full page etchings, and 6 wood cuts drawn by the 

 Author. Illustrating Structure, B'ertilization, Classification, Genera 

 and Species. 154 pp , cloth. Price, ^2 00. Mailed postpaid on 

 receipt of pi ice. 



CHAS. H. MAROT, 814 Chestnut Street, Phila. 



THE WILD GARDFN; 



Or, Our Groves and Shrubberies made Beautiful by the 

 Naturalization of Hardy £xotic Plants. 



By W. ROBIKSON, F. L. S. 

 With Frnntispiece. 236 pages, wmo, cloth. Price, 

 Mailed postage free, on receipt of price. Address, 



CHAS. H. MAROT, 814 Chestnut St., PhUa. 



52.25. 



SECOND-HAND BOOKS 



BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF PRICE. 



SPEAK QUICKLY IF YOU WANT THEM, 



^^Say in your order, "Second-Hand List." 



Alleirs Domestic Animals 



" American Farm Book 



Beet Root'Sugar, Grant 



Bridgcniun's .Vmerican Kitchen Gardener 



Butler' .s Family A(iuarium ' 



Downing's Landscape Gardening and Rural Archit. . . 



" Rural Essays 



Fruit, Flower and Vcgetaljle Gardeners Companion. . 



Fuller's Grape Culturist 



Fulton on Peach Culture 



Gray"s Lessons in Botany 



" School an<l Fiehl Botany 



Green and Congdon's Botany, Ciuarto Illustrated 



Harris on Injurious Insects.".^ 



" " " colored plates 



Hooper's Western Fruit Book 



Johnston's Agricultural Chemistry 



" Elements of Agricidtural Chem. & Geology 



Klippart's I.iind Drainage 



Liebegs Turners' Chemistry, 1391 pp., 8vo 



Loudon's Encyclopaedia of ftardcnuig, cloth 



n 00 

 1 00 

 1 00 



oO 



•50 



4 50 



2 50 



3 8.5 

 1 00 

 1 00 

 1 li5 

 1 00 

 3 25 



1 50 



2 oO 

 ■5 .50 



1 00 

 50 

 1 .50 

 1 2.5 

 1 2.5 



3 50 

 7 00 



Ma vhcw's Illustrated Horse Management 



Mcintosh's Orchard, with colored idates 



New American Gardener 



Parkniun's Book of Roses 



Plants of Holy Land, gilt, 18 colored illustrations 



Popular Treatise on Agricultural Chemistry 



Prince on the Vine 



Prince's Pomological Manual 



Rand's Flowers tor Parlor and Garden 



Smith's Landscape Gardening 



Stei)licu's Book of the Farm. 2 vols., oct 



Stewart's Stable Book 



Studies, by .T. A. Dorgan 



Talpa. or Chronicles of a Clay Farm 



The IM.uit, a Bioscraphy, col", plates and 13 wood eng's 



Todd's How to Make Fanning Pay . . 



Trees, Plants and Flowers, coloreil plates 



Waring's Elements of Agri(ailture 



Warder's American Poniology 



Wood's Class-book of Botanvfor Schools 



•2 50 



3 00 



75 



1 50 



3 00 

 50 

 75 

 75 



2 25 

 1 00 



4 00 



1 25 

 75 

 75 



2 .50 

 2 00 

 4 5f> 



2 50 

 1 00 



Address. 



CHAS. H. RIAROT, 



814 Chestnut Street, Phila 



