430 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[November, 
DOWNI-NG'S 
FRUITS 
FRUIT TREES. 
A. J. DOWNING. 
Newly Revised and Greatly 
Enlarged 
BY 
CHARLES DOWNING. 
Octavo, 11*22 Pages. 
The original work of the late A. J. Downing appeared 
In 1815. Some years after It was revised and ranch en- 
larged by hifl brother, Charles Downing, who has again 
completed the work of a second revision. Charles 
Downing is upon all hands acknowledged as one of our 
highest pomological authorities. He writes but seldom, 
hut whatever bears his name is accepted as the judgment 
3i one who is entirely disinterested, as far as the com- 
mercial aspects of pomology are concerned. The present 
edition contains the results of many years' labor and ex- 
perience which havo beeu devoted to testing the value 
of fruits and acquiring a knowledge of them that should 
heneflt others. 
Recommendation prom Hon. MARSHALL P. WILDER, 
President of the Anierican Pomological Society. 
Boston, Oct. 4, 1869. 
Gentlemen: 
1 have received a copy frsni Mr. Charles Downing of 
the second revised edition of the " Fruits and Fruit 
Trees of America." It is the most comprehensive of 
any similar work, in fact a complete Encyclopedia op 
American Pomology brought down to the present time. 
The original edition by his brother, the late Andrew 
Jackson Downing, popular as it ever has been, is made 
doubly interesting and useful by this revision, compris- 
ing as it does the results of a long life of critical obser- 
vation. 
As a work of reference it has no equal in this country, 
and deserves a place In the library of every Poinolo- 
gist in America. MARSHALL P. WILDER. 
This elegant and valuable work will be an indispensa- 
ble requisite to every library, and to all interested in 
Fruits or Fruit Culture. 
PRICE, PREPAID, $7.50. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 
245 Broadway, New-York, 
AMERICA! CATTLE 
THEIll 
HISTORY, BREEDING, 
MANAGEMENT, 
By Lewis F. Allen, 
Lai* President yew York State Agricultural Society, editor 
" American Short-horn Herd Book" author "Rural 
Architecture" etc., etc. 
NOTICES EY THE PRESS. 
We consider this the most valuable work that has 
recently been issued from the American press. It em- 
braces all branches of the important subject, and fills a 
vacancy In our agricultural literature for which work the 
author by his many years' experience and observation was 
eminently fitted It ought to be in the hands of every 
owner of cattle, and the country, as well as individuals, 
would soon be much richer for its teachings. 
Journal of Agriculture (St. Louis). 
The large experience of the author in improving fho 
character of American herds adds to the weight of his 
observations, and has enabled him to produce a work 
winch will at once make good its claims as a standard 
authority on the subject. An excellent feature of this 
volume is its orderly, methodical arrangement, condens- 
ing a great variety of information into a comparatively 
small compass, and enabling the reader to find the point 
on which he is seeking light, without wasting his timo 
in turning over the leaves. A T . Y. Tribune. 
This will rank among the standard works of the «oun- 
try, and will be considered indispensable by every breeder 
of live-stock. Practical Farmer (Phila). 
We think it is the most complete work upon neat 
stock that we have seen, embodying as it does a vast 
amount of research and careful study and observation. 
Wisconsin Farmer. 
His history of cattle in general and of the individual 
breeds in particular, which occupies the first 180 pages 
of the volume, is written with much of the grace and 
charm of au Allison or a Macauley. Ilis description of 
the leading breeds is illustrated by cuts of a bull, a cow, 
and a fat ox, of each race. The next one hundred pages 
are devoted to the subject of Breeding This is followed 
by chapters on Beef Cattle, Working Oxen, Milch Cows, 
Cattle Food, Diseases, etc. The arrangement, illustra- 
tions, analytical index, etc., of the work are in the best 
style of modern book-making. 
New England Fanner. 
The work is one that has been long needed, as it takes 
the place of the foreign books of like nature to which 
our farmers have been obliged to refer, and furnishes in 
a compact and well-arranged volume all they desire upon 
this important subject. Maine Farmer, 
Whatever works the stock farmer may already have, he 
cannot afford to do without this. Ohio Farmer. 
It is one of the best treatises within our knowledge, 
and contains information sound and sensible, on every 
page. The People ( Concord, N. H.) 
The object of the work, as stated by the author in his 
preface, " is not only to give a historical account of the 
Bovine race, to suggest to our farmers and cattle breeders 
the best methods of their production and management, 
but to exalt and ennoble its pursuit to the dignity to which 
it is entitled in the various departments of American 
agriculture.'''' From the little examination we have beem 
able to give it, we can not recommend it too highly. 
Canada Farmer. 
Considering that there arc some ten million milch cows 
in the United States, and nearly a thousand millions of 
dollars invested in cattle, the magnitude of this interest 
demands that the best skilled talent be devoted to the 
improvement of the various breeds and the investigation 
of the best method of so caring for the animals as to gain 
the greatest profit from them. This volume will give the 
farmer jnst the instruction which he wants. 
y. Y. Independent, 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $-3.50. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
A BEAUTIFUL GIFT. 
A Picture for the Home Circle. 
"DANDELION TIME." 
By MRS. LILLY M. SPENCER. 
The Publishers of the American Agriculturist have 
purchased of the artist this beautiful painting, and now 
issue it as a Chromo, believing that it will be gladly 
secured by thousands as an ornament and source of 
pleasure in their homes. Mrs. Lilly M. Spencer has al- 
ready won an honorable name in art. Though of a poetic 
imagination, and the author of many paintings which 
comprise classical and allegorical subjects, she is best 
known for her pictures of domestic life. Her works of 
this class have been reproduced in colored lithographs 
and other forms, and through these her name has become 
a familiar one throughout the country. Finding that 
pictures of a domestic character with something of the 
humorous In them were more popular than those to 
which her natural tastes inclined her, Mrs. S. for some 
years painted such subjects almost exclusively. Her 
''Shake Hands," "Jolly Washerwoman," "The Gos- 
sips," and others, are known to all lovers of pictures. 
They arc full of lifo and meaning, and at the same time 
finished with an accuracy and detail that few artists 
attempt. Among her latest productions are '"War Times 
at Home," "The Home of the Red, White and Blue," 
" The Starry Flag," " Beauty to the Brave," etc. In the 
beautiful picture now offered, called 
"DANDELION TIME," 
three children, of whom the youugest is a plump, rosy 
babe, and a huge Newfoundland dog which they have 
decked with a dandelion wreath, are represented out 'at 
play upon the green grass. This Chromo is done in the 
best style, by Hermann Bencke, whose work equals any- 
thing of the kind done in this country. The scene is full 
of happy life and cannot fail to delight both old and 
young. 
The picture would prove an ornament in any home, 
and be a most beautiful and acceptable present to make 
to a friend. It is 13x13 inches in size, and mounted on 
linen, will bo sent by mail, in a tube, with all materials 
and directions for stretching. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $8.00. 
If preferred, the picture will be sent by express, mount- 
ed on artists' board, all ready for framing, on receipt of 
the price, $6.00, the purchaser to pay express charges. 
If ordered in a frame, it will be sent by express, care- 
fully boxed, on receipt of prices, as follows: 
In a neat Black- walnut Frame, gilt band $ 9.00. 
11 " " " wider gilt band.. 10.00. 
" carved edged " " 11.00. 
" beautiful gilt " best quality 15.00. 
If taken with a frame at the store, 245 Broadway, tho 
charge for boxing, which is 75 cents, will be deducted 
from these prices. Iu all cases where sent by express, 
the punchaser will pay express charges. 
A LIBERAL DISCOUNT MADE TO THE TRADE. 
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245 Broadway, New York* 
