LEA AND BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



JOHNSON AND LANDRETH ON FRUIT, KITCHEN, 

 AND FLOW ER GA RDENING. 



A DICTIONARY OF MODERN GARDENING, 



BY GEORGE WILLIAM JOHNSON, ESQ. 



Author of llio " Principles of Practioal Gardening," " The Gardener's Almanac," ic. 



WITU ONE HONORED AND EIGHTY WOOD-CCTS. 



EDITED, WITH NUMEROUS ADDITIONS, BY DAVID LANT>RETH, OF PHIUVDEI.PHIA. 



In one large royal duodecmio volume, extra cloth, of nearly Sii Hundred and Fifty 

 double columned Pages. 



This edition has been greatly altered from the onginal. Many articles of little interest to Ameri- 

 cans h.-ive been curuiiled or wholly omitted, and much m:\\ mailer, with numerous illuslniliiins, 

 added especially wilh respect to the variutirs of fruit wluilj .■.v|K-iifiic.> has shown to be pecuharly 

 adapted to our climate. Still, the eilitnr admits that he has only fullcwed in the path so admirably 

 nrirkcd out by Mr J..lms.)ii, to whorn llie rliicf iiirrit of llie wuik bilungs. It lias been an object 

 with the editor aiul [lublislicis to iiic-rcase its popular oharacler, tberrby adapting it to the larger 

 class of iiortirulninil nailers in this ruuiitry. and they trust it will prove what they have desired It 

 to be ail t;ncyrloi);i'dia of tlardeiimg, if not of Rural Alfairs, so condensed and ut such a price as to 

 be wilhin reach of nearly all whom those subjects interest. 



" This is a useful compendium of all that description of information which is valuable to the 

 modem gardener. It quotes largely from the best standard authors, journals, and tran.saclions of 

 societies- and the labours of the American editor have fitted it for the United States, by judicious 

 additions and omissions. The volume is abundantly illustrated with hgures in the text, cmbraiaiig 

 a judicious selection of those varieties of fruits which experience has shown to be well suited to the 

 United Slates.— SilliTnan's Journal. 



" This is the most val liable work we have ever seen on the subject of gardening ; and no man of 

 taste who can devote even a quarter of an acre to horticulture ought to be without it. Indeed la- 

 dies who merely cultivate flowers mthin-doors, will find this book an excellent and conveuient 

 counsellor It contains one hundred and eighty wood-cut lUustrations, which give a distinct idea 

 of the fruits and garden-arrangements they are intended to represent. . 



" Johnson's Dictionan' of Gardening, edited by Landreth, is handsomely pnnted. well-bound, ami 

 gold at a price wluch puts it witliin the reach of all who would be hkcly to buy it."— Evergreen. 



THE COM PLETE FLORIST. 



A KlANTJI^Jj OF GARlJENIWa, 



CONTAINING PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION FOR THE MANA.JEMENT OF GREENIIOUSE 



PLANTS, AND FOR THE CULTIVATION OF THE SllKUliliEKY-1 HE t LOWER 



GARlJEN, AND THE LAWN-WrrH DESCKIPTIO.NS OF THOSE PLANTS> 



AND TREES MOST WORTHV OF CULTURE IN EACH 



DEPARTMENT. 



"WITH ADDITIONS AND AKIEN D IVIE N T S, 



ADAPTED TO THE CLIMATE OF THE UNITED STATES. 



In one small volume. Price only Twenty-five Cents. 



THE COMPLETE KITC HEN A ND FRUIT GARDENER. 



A SELECT MANUAL OF KITCHEN GARDENING, 



AND THE CULTURE OF FRUITS, 



CONTAINING FAMILIAR niRECTIONS FOR THE MOST APPROVED PRACTICE IN EACH 



DEPAR'IMENT, DESCRIPTIONS OF MANY VALUABLE FRUITS, AND A 



CALEND.VR OF WORK TO BE PERFOKilED EACH 



MONTH IN THE YEAR. 



THE WHOLE ADAPTED TO THE CLIMATE OF THE UNITED STATES. 

 In one small volume, paper. Price only Twenty-five Cents. 



LANDRETITS RURAL REGISTER AND ALIVIANAC, FOR 1848, 



WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS. 



STILL ON HAND, 



A FE'W COPIES OF THE REGISTER FOR 1847, 



WITH OVER ONE HUNDRED WOOD-CUTS. 



This work has 1.W large 12mo. pages, double columns. Though published annually, and contain- 

 ing an almanac, the principal part of the matter is of permanent iiUhty to the horticulturist and 

 6imier. 



