38 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[January, 
THE AMERICAN 
Cattle Doctor. 
[OCTAVO.] 
A COMPLETE WORK ON ALL THE DISEASES OF 
CATTLE, SHEEP, AND SWIIVE, 
lncIacUii«; every Disease peculiar to Am- 
erica, and embracing all tlic latest 
Information on tbo Cattle Plague 
and Triclilna ; containing also 
a Guide to Symptoms, a Talile 
of WeigUts and Measures, 
and a Liist of Valuable 
Medicines. 
By GEO. H. DADD, V. S., 
Tiventy-Jive years a Leading Vefennary Surgeon in Eng- 
land and the Unifed Sfate^, and Aidkor of th£ 
"" Amencan Reformed H&rse Book''' 
The work is comprised in Three Grand Di- 
visions, each one fall and complete. 
I.— Diseases and Management of Cattle. 
Showing hov/, by means of the remedies found to be so 
useful in the author's practice, to overcome the many 
troublesome and usually fatal diseases of cattle. 
The proper care and management of cattle during calving 
are plainly set forth. 
The relative value of different breeds is fully discussed. 
In this diviaion will be found, In full, the History, Causes, 
Symptoms, and Treatment of RINDERPEST or CATTLE 
PLAGUE. 
II.— Diseases and Management of Sheep. 
Beginning wKh a most valuable chapter on the Improve- 
vie7its of our Breeds of Sheep. Such diseases as Rot, Tel- 
lows, Foot-rot, Grubs, etc., are fully treated. 
III.— Diseases and Management of Hogs. 
Commencing with an able article on the importance of 
Cleanliness and Pure Air for Hogs. The various diseaaes of 
this valuable animal, with their Prevention, Causes, and 
Cure, receive full attention. The great majority of Amer- 
ican farmers are largely interested in the 7nost reliable 
treatment of that scourge among hogs— Hog Cholera. 
After years of practice In Illinois, the author confidently 
presents his Remedy for this destructive malady, aa the 
most successful one yet discovered, and it is so simple as to 
be within easy reach of all. 
876 pages. Octavo. Illustrated. Price, In Strong Leather 
Binding, Post-paid, ¥3.00 ; Cloth Binding, full gilt back, 
Post-paid, $2.50. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
Practical 
Floricultiire- 
A. Guide to ttic Successful Propagation and 
Cultivation of Florists* Plants. 
Author ot " Gardening for Profit." 
Beautifully Illustrated. Price, Post-paid, $1.50. 
In this work, which lixs everywhere become so deservedly 
popular, not only is^he wliole " art and mystery" of propa- 
gation explained, but the reader is tnu;;ht liow to plant and 
grow the plants alter tliey have been propagated. The work 
is not one for florists and gardeners only, but the amateur's 
wants are constantly kept in mind, and we have a very com- 
plete treatise on tlic cultivation of flowers under glass, or 
in the open air, suited to those who grow flowers for plea- 
sure as well as those who make them a matter of trade. 
The work Is characterized by the same radical commos 
sense that marked the author's "G;irdening lor Profit," and 
it holds a high place In the estimation of lovers of 
floriculture. The new edition has been thoroughly revised 
by tlie author, and much enlarged by the addition of vain- 
able matter. 
The following are a few of the subjects embraced In the 
latest edition: 
Laying out Flower Garden and Lawn; Designs for 
Grounds and for Greenhouses; Soils for Potting; Cold 
Frames; Hot-Heds; Greenhouses Attached to Dwellings; 
Modes of Heating ; PropaguMon of Plants by Seeds and by 
Cuttings; Culture of the Uose and Tuberose; Growing of 
Winter-f.owering Plants ; Constructlor. of IJouquets, Baskets, 
etc.; Piulor and Window-Gardening: Wurdian-Cases and 
Ferneries; Insects; What Flowers Grow in the Shade; 
Culture of Grane-Vlnes under Glass; Tlie Profits of Flori- 
culture ; How to Become a Florist, etc., etc. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, Nisw YoBE, { 
THE AMERICAN 
REFORMED HORSE BOOK. 
A Treatise on the Causes, Symptoms, and Cure of every 
Dmase incident to the Horse, including all Diseases 
peculiar to America, and which are not treated 
of in works bused upon tlie English works 
of Touatt, Mason, and others. Em- 
bracing also full details of Breed- 
ing, Hearing, and Mamtge- 
vient on ilw 
REFORMED SYSTFJi OF PRACTICE. 
By Prof. GEO. H. DADD, 
Yetennary Surgeon, "■ Axdhor of Anatomy and Physiology 
of the Horse,"'' and late Professor of Anatomy and Physi- 
ology in the Veterinary Institute of Chicago, and for over 
25 years a Regular Practicing Vetennanan. 
This Is a fresh book, the result of a lifetime of labor and 
research on the part of one of the foremost Veterinarians 
of the ago. Tears ago. Dr. Dadd perceived that incalculable 
loss was being entailed upon stock owners every year by the 
reckless, unnatural, unBcicntlfic, and cruel modes of treat- 
ment which were so generally practiced upon the Horse. 
Bnrning:* Blisteringr* Bleediug by the gallon, and the 
giving of Poisonous Drngs wore the order of the day 
(and we are sorry to say such practices still find learned (?) 
advocates even In our day), and the result was that they 
killed more than theij cured. Actuated by a laudable desire 
to rescue so noble an animal from such " heroic practice," 
Dr. Dadd adopted and strenuously advocated the Refokm- 
ED System of Practice, which, under the guidance of 
such men as Wooster Beach, John C. Gunn, and, others, rose 
rapidly Into popular favor in human practice, and de- 
monstrated beyond a doubt that 7iatnre^s remedieft are the 
most uniformly successful. Sucli was Dadd's success that 
he became widely known, and it was no unusual thing for 
him to be sent for, hundreds of miles, to attend valuable 
horses. His career as a practicing Veterinary Surgeon has 
been one of rare success, and deeming It his duty to spread 
abroad among his countrymen a knowledge of Reform 
Principles, as applied to the Horse, he has prepared this 
work, and asks that It be candidly examined. Being a thor- 
oughly American Work, It quotes foreign authors but very 
little. It aims to treat fully and plainly, on rational princi- 
ples, every ill that Horseflesh is heir to, including those 
complaints peculiar to this country, and which 
have hitherto been but very imperfectly treated of by 
authors aspiring to be educators of the public on Veterinary 
Science. 
44^ pages, Octavo, Illustrated, Price, In Strong Leather 
Binding, Post-paid, $3.00; Cloth Binding, full gilt back. 
Post-paid, $2.50. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
Play and Profit 
IN MY GARDEN. 
By E. P. ROE, 
Author of *^ BaiTiera Burned Aivay,^^ etc. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
The author takes us to his garden on the rocky hill-sides in 
the vicinity of West Point and shows us how out of it, after 
four years' experience, he evoked a profit of $1,000, and this 
while carrying on pastoral and literary labors it, 
is very rare that so much literary taste and skill are mated 
to so much agricultural experience and practical good sense. 
—Harper's Magazine. 
This book is as poetical as it is practical. Still he is no 
dreamer. He goes into every essential detail with as much 
minuteness and precision as If he were writing a Tuannal for 
the practical farmer. Indeed few works professedly de- 
voted to agriculture give more sound and valuable informa- 
tion on tlie secret of winning golden harvests from the soil 
than this brief idyllic sketch.— iV. Y. Tribune. 
A very charming book, not only by reason of its pleasant 
style, but for Its quiet reflncd humor and fund of really use- 
ful information on the subject of gardening.— TJosiojiGdaei^. 
It deserves to stand side by side with "My Summer in a 
QssA^n"— Christian Eegister. 
A fresh, lively work.— iV^. 5'. Observer. 
One reads without weariness and learns much of practical 
value.— C/iiC(T(70 Evening Journal. 
Full of information. Explains just what the reader wishes 
to know. We most heartily commend it.— Providence Even- 
i7ig Press. 
A chatty, sensible, profitable book.— CVet'e;rt7irf Herald. 
The book gives much valuable information, and gives It 
in tlie pleasantest mannerlnin2:inable.— 7>^(rif7 Daily Uniofi, 
Pice, Post-paid - - - - $|.50 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
Beckwith 
Sewing Machine 
ONLY $20. 
We Lave offered as a Preminm. and al?o for sale, for 
more tlian a year past, the BeckAvitli Sewing 
Macliiiie, which has been fully described in previous 
numbers of this paper. We have already given and sold 
more than one thousand of these machines, and testi- 
monials of satisfaction have come from every quarter. 
The Beckwith Sewing Machine Company has from 
time to time added improvements to their original Ma- 
chines, which have been sold for $12. They now manu- 
facture only 
THE BECKWITH PORTABLE 
FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. 
PRICE S30. 
Enlarged and Improved. Its Weight is 7 Pounds. 
PORTABLE FAMILY MACHnfE. 
A new and very simple braiding-foot has been made, 
by which a child can bcw on braid without the least 
trouble, following any desired pattern with ease ; also a 
new arm, spiral spring and lever for raising the presser- 
foot, all of wliich arc now set in a position that leaves 
the needle free to be threaded. The joint is much en- 
larged, and the machine is otherwise greatly strengthen- 
ed and improved. The use of the braider-foot alone will 
be vahicd more than the cost of the machine. 
The $90 Portable Family Machine 
Comprises all the excellencies of the former machines, 
witli many valuable Improvements. Its size and power are 
increased, and Us capacity thus very much enlarajed.wlthout 
Impairing Its portability. There have been added cam and 
eccentric movement, a balance-wheel, and also an oscillat- 
ing necdle-clanip, by which the length of stitch can with the 
greatest ease be changed to the finest shade of variation 
without touching the needle. 
Each of tliese machines is put in a neat, compact 
box, with heyntner and guide, oil-can with oil. tJiread^ 
different-sized needles, etc., with full Printed Directiona 
for using. 
To any one sendlnsus $20, we will send one of the Machines 
(packed in a neat, portable case, with handle ro carry it 
easily), expressage to bo paid by purchaser. 
XUc Iffacliine as a Prcmiuiifi. 
AVc -ivill give one of these S'30 Machines to 
aity one ^vho will collect and forward to us 
Thirty Subscribers to American Agriculturist 
for one year at $1.60 each, or One Hundred 
at Sl.lO each, expressage on the Machine ta 
bo paid by the recipient of it. 
(^" Almost any lady can readily secnrc the small 
number of subscribers required to get this Machine as 
described above; or some friend can thus obtain it for 
her as a present. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
245 BroadwaTj New Tork* 
