UIKKATURE AND LITEKAKY I'!; IN 1807. 





hi thu Summer of 1806, by 



" 

 Trip, liy r.iivnnl Taylor. 



> \v. Hepwonh Dixon. Wtth 11- 



lastrati'iii^ : ..|>hs. 



r Southerner^, I.;. Ki-v. B. &. 

 MI. 



W. D. IIOWCIIB. 



The I nil. ii Paoino Railway, Maseru Division; or, 

 Ti.i ' ;:i u Railway Car, by 



Charles Codi'n -\ I.elund. 



A .li.;inie\ to ABhango-Lond. and Further Pene- 

 . [iiat"rial Ai'riea, !>\ Paul 15. Du 

 llu. 



: or, Filmland, F ranee, ami Scotland, as 

 [ivn American, l>y Henry Morford. 



A Trip to the A/.<>res or WestorD Islands, by M. 

 F. HeiiriiiueB. 



Mining and Milling in the Becse-Rivor Region of 

 r ral and Southeastern Nevada, by A. Blatch- 

 ly. M. I!. 



(ilimpses of West Africa; with Sketches of Mis- 

 M-'iiary Labor, by Rev. S. J. Whiton. 



The Romance of the Age ; or, the Discovery of 

 Gold in California, by Edward E. Dunbar. 



The Mines of Colorado, by 0. J. Holli ; 



OKI K.n'_rlnnd ; its Scenery, Art, and People, by 

 - M. lli>|'|>iu, Professor in Yale College. 



Glimpses of Southern France and Spain, by L. E. 

 Mills. 



Incidents of a Trip through the Great Platto Val- 

 ley to the Rocky Mountains and Laramie Plains, 

 in the Full of 1860, by C. B. Seymour. 



The Land of Thor, by J. Ross Browne. Illustrated 

 by the Author. 



The i ultural and Mineral West ; a Guide 



to the Emigrant. With Itinerary of Routes, and 

 Journal of Residence in Idaho and Montana : by 

 J. L. Campbell. 



History of the Panama Railroad and the Pacific 

 Mail Steamship Company, by F. N. Otis, M. D. 



Appletons' Handbook of American Travel ; North- 

 ern Tour; Northern States and British Povinces. 

 Ninth annual edition. By Edward II. Hall. 



A Painter's Camp, by P. G. Hamerton. 



Beyond the Mississippi, from the Great River to 

 the Great Ocean, by Albert D. Richardson. 



Californien. Uber desscn Bevolkerung imd Gesell- 

 schaftliche Zustando, politische, religiose und 

 Schul-Verhaltnisse, Handel, Industrie. Minen, 

 Ackerban, etc., von Karl Ruhl. Mit einer Karte, 



A View of St. Anthony's Falls, Present and Pro- 

 spective ; being a Report of Manufacturing, etc., 

 Advantages, by W. D. Storey. 



Tourists and Invalids' Guide to the Northwest; 

 containing Information about Minnesota, Wis- 

 consin, Dakota, and the Lake Superior Region, 

 compiled by C. II. Sweetser. 



Millers Guiae to Saratoga Springs and Vicinity, 

 by T. Addison Richards. 



The works on MILITAKT SCIENCE were few, 

 but of considerable importance. They were : 



An Elementary Course of Military Engineering ; 

 Part II. : Permanent Fortifications. By D. II. 

 Mahnn, LL. D. Twenty-three Plates. 

 Manual of Arms, Bayonet Exercise, and General 

 Instruction for officers and soldiers of the Na- 

 tional Guard of the State of New York. By G. 

 M. Baker, Colonel 74th Regiment N. G. S. N. Y. 

 A new System of Infantry Tactics, Double and 

 uk. Adapted to American Topography 

 and Improved Fire-Arms. By Brevet Major- 

 Gcneral Emory Upton, U. S. A. 

 A i ':<:-! oi 1 Instruction in Ordnance and Gunnery 

 the use of the (V United 



' litary Academy. By Brevet Colonel J. 

 0. Beaton. 



Tactical Use of the Three Arms, Infantry, Artil- 

 VOL. vii. 29 



lery, and CavJry. 1, .'. Lij,j,itt, Brevet 



.1 of volant 



Tlii- wor! ' i -ult ural Topics were more 



IIIIIIH.TOIK, and most <>i' Minn of great prn 

 value. Tlie principal \vi-rc: 



Ameriean llortieultural Annual for 1867. A Year 

 Book of Horticultural Progress for the GUM 

 Fruit-Griiwor and Florist. 



..nin/ f.r 1'n.iit: A Guide to the Successful 

 Cultivation of the Market und Family Garden. 

 By Peter Henderson. 



The American Fruit Culturist, containing Practical 

 Directions for the Propagation and < 'ulti vation of 

 Fruit Trees in the Nursery, Orchard, and Gar- 

 den ; etc. .etc. By John J. Thomas. 



American Pomology ; Apples. By Dr. John A. 

 Warder. Two hundred and ninety Illustrations. 



A Now Svstem of Bce-kccping, wit i Description* 

 of and "Directions for Managing Bees in the Sec- 

 tion Bee-Hive. By Aduir. 



An Elementary Treatise on American Grape Cul- 

 ture and Wine-Making. By Peter B. Mead. Two 

 hundred Illustrations. 



Vim-land. Rapport Presentd au Jury do 1'Exposi- 

 tion do Paris. 



Woodward's Record of Horticulture for the year 

 I860. Edited by Andrew S. Fuller. 



Practical and Scientific Fruit Culture. By Charles 

 R. Baker. 



The Small Fruit Culturist. By Andrew S. Fuller. 



Handbook of Grape Culture: or Why, Where, 

 When, and How to Plant and Cultivate a Vineyard, 

 Manufacture Wines, etc. Adapted to the State 

 of California, and to the United States generally. 

 By A. Hart Hyatt. 



Geyelin's Poultry-Breeding in a Commercial Point 

 of View. Natural and Artificial Hatching, Rear- 

 iiiLT, and Fattening, with Plans, Elevations, Sec- 

 tions, and Details, with Preface by Charles L. 

 Flint. 



Draining for Profit, and Draining for Health. By 

 George E. Waring, Jr. 



Squashes : How to Grow them. A Practical Trea- 

 tise on Squash Culture. By J. J. II. Gr 



Du Breuil on Vineyard Culture. With Notes by 

 John A. Warder. 



The Grapc-Vine : a Practical Scientific Treatise on 

 its Management. By F. Mohr. Translated from 

 the German, with Hints as to American Varieties 

 and Management. By Horticola. 



The Young Farmer's 'Manual ; vol. 2. How to 

 make Farming pav. With a Chapter on Soils. 

 By S. Edwards Todd. 



The Principles and Practice of Land Drainage. By 

 John H. Klippart. Second edition. 



The record of JUVENILE BOOKS is longer even 

 than that of general fiction, though there are 

 reasons for classing many of them among re- 

 ligious fiction. The class of Religions Juveniles 

 numbered 286 volumes, of which 124 were from 

 the pens of anonymous writers, and 1G2 were 

 the productions of 93 authors. 



The books ranged under the general heading 

 of MISCELLANEOUS admit a somewhat closer 

 classification. A considerable number of them 

 pertain directly and indirectly to the Masonic 

 Order. Of these the following are the most 

 important : 



The Secretary's Special Help : a Monitor for the 

 Secretary of the Lodge, with Directions for Keep- 

 ing Minutes, etc., and Forms of Official Docu- 

 ments. 



Light on Free Masonry. By Elder David Bernard. 

 Revised edition, with an Appendix, rovwfflng 

 the Mysteries of Odd Fellowship, by a Member 

 of the "Craft. 



