1881 .] 
AMEKIOAU AGRICULTURIST. 
437 
Architectural Works, 
E3&rm Plans and Ontbuildinss.-Two Hun¬ 
dred and Fifty-seven Illustrations. A Most Valuable 
work, full of Ideas, Hints, Suggestions, Plans, etc., by 
practical writers for the Construction of Barns and Out¬ 
buildings. Recently published. $1.50. 
Mouse Plans for Everybody.— By S. B. Reed. 
This useful volumo meets the wants of persons of moder¬ 
ate means, and is already among the Standard Archi¬ 
tectural Books. Bound in cloth, black and gold. $1.50. 
Country and Suburban Houses.— By Daniel 
T. Atwood. Showing Designs of Low and Medium Cost, 
with Hints on the Selection of a Site up to the Com¬ 
pletion of a House. Cloth. Amply illustrated. $1.50. 
Rural Architecture.— By L. F. Allen. Practical 
Plans for the Construction of Convenient Farm Houses, 
Cottages, Barns, Sheds, Wagon Houses, etc., etc. Illus¬ 
trated. Cloth. $1.50. 
Bicknell’s Stables, Out-Buildings, 
Pences, and Miscellaneous Retails.— Bound 
in cloth. .Quarto. $2.50. 
Palliser’s Model Homes.— A new Work, con¬ 
taining Designs for Suburban Houses ; neatly bound. $1. 
Bicknell’s Specimen Book.— Containing one 
hundred Designs of Houses, selected from the best Ar¬ 
chitectural publications; valuable to builders and all wbo 
contemplate building. Handsomely bound in cloth. $1. 
Woodward’s National Architect. — Com¬ 
plete in two volumes—containing upwards of 1,500 De¬ 
signs, Plans, and Details for City, Country, Suburban, 
and Village Houses.—This lias long been considered one 
of the best works on the subject. Beautifully bound in 
cloth—gold back and sides. Quarto. Per volume, $7.50. 
Woodward’s Cottages and Farm Houses. 
—Containing Designs of low-priced Houses and Out- 
Buildiugs. Cloth. $1.00. 
Miscellaneous. 
Harris’s “Insects Injurious to Vegeta¬ 
tion.” —8vo. 640 pages. With nearly 300 wood-cuts, 
and 8 beautiful steel plates. $4.00. With colored en¬ 
gravings. $6.50. 
Quinby’s New Bee-Keeping.— The Mysteries 
of Bee-Keeping Explained. Revised by L. C. Root. 
Combining tlm results of Fifty Years’ Experience, with 
the latest discoveries and inventions, and presenting the 
most approved methods, f ruling a complete guide to 
successful Bee Culture. It is the latest and best work on 
the subject. Illustrated with 100 engravings, and a por¬ 
trait of the late M. Quinby. Beautifully hound. $1.50. 
Draining for Profit and Health.— By Geo. 
E. Waring, Jr., Engineer of the Drainage of Central 
Park, New York. A revised and enlarged edition, treat¬ 
ing fully and practically on the land to be drained. How 
Drains Act, How to Make Drains, What Draining Costs, 
Will it Pay? etc., etc. Nearly fifty illustrations. $1.50. 
Scribner’s Lumber and Log Book for Ship 
Builders, Boat Builders, Lumber Merchants, Farmers, 
and Mechanics. 35 cents. 
Out-Door Sports and Pastimes.* 
Practical Taxidermy and Home Decora- 
Ttfion.— By Joseph II. Batty, Taxidermist for the Gov- 
erment Surveys and many Colleges and Museums in the 
United States. 125. illustrations. An entirely new and 
complete, as well as authentic work on Taxidermy—giving 
in detail full directions for collecting and mounting Ani¬ 
mals, Birds, Reptiles, Fish, Insects, and General Objects 
of Natural History. Cloth. $1.50. 
How to Hunt and Trap.— By the same author. 
An entire new revised edition for 1882. $1.50. 
The Dogs of Great Britain, America, and 
other Countries.— Their Breeding, Training, and 
Management in Health and Disease, comprising all the es¬ 
sential parts of the two latest standard works,by STONE¬ 
HENGE. It is the latest and most reliable Dog hook, 
edited by the best informed American writers on the sub¬ 
ject. It describes the best Hunting gronnds in America. 
Gives names of prize winners at Dog Shows, and is illus¬ 
trated with over one hundred excellent engravings, em¬ 
bracing some of most noted dogs on both continents. The 
* Send two 3-cent postage stamps for Sportsman’s Com¬ 
panion for 1882. just issued. The most elegant thing of 
the kind ever published. It contains brief descriptions 
of nearly 200 works on out-door sports and pastimes, and 
is elegantly illustrated with over 100 spirited illustrations, 
many of them drawn from life, and portraying the charac¬ 
teristics of Game. Birds, Fishes, Dogs. Horses, etc., etc. 
All books in this list are included in the offer on page436. 
Orange Judd Co., 751 Broadway. 
Chapters on the Management, and Treatment ot Diseases 
of Dogs, make it especially valuable to every owner of a 
dog. Handsomely bound in cloth, black and gold. Print¬ 
ed on tinted paper. New enlarged edition, recently 
published. $2.00. 
Hunter and Trapper.— By Halsey Thrasher 
an old and experienced sportsman. 12ino. Cloth. 75c. 
Book of the Black Bass, comprising its com¬ 
plete Scientific and Life History, together with a practi¬ 
cal Treatise on Angling and Fly Fishing, and a full de¬ 
scription of Tools, Tackle, and Implements. By James 
A. Henshall, M.D. Fu'ly Illustrated. $3.00. 
Frank Forester's Fleltl Sports of the 
United States and British Provinces of 
North America.— New Edition, containing liumer- 
our corrections and additions, with illustrations from 
nature, and a brief memoir of the author. In two volumes. 
Cloth. Per volume, $2.00. 
Frank Forester’s Fish and Fishing; of 
the United States and British Provinces 
of North America.— Contains 100 engravings. $2.50. 
Frank Forester’s Complete Manual for 
Young Sportsmen, of Fowling, Fishing, 
and Field Sports.— 8vo. Ciotu. $2 00. 
American Wild Fowl Shooting.— By Jo¬ 
seph W. Long. New, Revised, and Enlarged Edition. 
Containing full and accurate descriptions of the Haunts, 
Habits, and Methods of Shooting Wild Fowl, Instruc¬ 
tion concerning Guns, Blinds, Boats, and Decoys. The 
true history of Choke Bores, and a correct method of 
testing the shooting powers of Shot Guns. Fully illus¬ 
trated. Cloth. Tinted paper. $2.00. 
Hallock’s Sportsmen’s Gazetteer.— Full of 
valuable information on Hunting, Fishing, etc., together 
with a Directory of all the Game Resorts. $3.00. 
Trolling for Pike, Salmon, and Trout.-* 
By H. C. Pennell, Author of the “ Modern Practical Ang¬ 
ler,” etc., etc. Illustrated, 12mo. Boards. 50c. 
How to Camp Out.— By John M. Gould. $1.00. 
Camp Cookery.— By Miss M. Parloa. 18mo. 50c. 
NUMBERED PREMIUMS. 
Nos. I and 2. —Pictorial Family 
Bible. —Prices $10.00 and $12.00. —ThisBihlo contains 
over 1,400 Pages, with 2,500 Engravings, on Steel 
and Wood, by some of the best artists, and printed in 
large, clear type. The title pages are illuminated, and 
it contains maps of Holy Land, Jerusalem, Mt. Sinai, and 
many other places of note, with the History of the Eng¬ 
lish Bible; also of existing Religious Denominations; 
large Concordance ; full Marginal Notes and References 
on every page; with much other useful and valuable in¬ 
formation. It lias also a very-elegant Marriage Certificate 
and Family Record, in different colors, etc., etc. No. 1 is 
bound in Turkey Morocco, deep panelled , beveled edges, 
full gilt on edges, sides and back (see engraving). Price 
$12. i Deluding receiver’s name, gilt in one line. PRE¬ 
SENTED lo any one sending 13 subscriptions at $1.50 
each.—No. 2,—The same Bible as No. 1 in every way, 
with raised panels, gilt edges, etc., except that the bind¬ 
ing is in French Morocco, and the sides are plain, in¬ 
stead of full gilt. Price $10. PRESENTED for 
only 11 subscribers at $1.50 each. (We will supply either 
for tlic price.) Stmt post-paid. 
Nos. S & 4.— Grand Premium.—Price $10. 
—A large, handsome Volume of 1 854 pages, containing 
considerably more than 1 00,000 words in its Vocabu¬ 
lary, with the correct Pronunciation, Definition, and Ety¬ 
mology. Fully illustrated and unabridged. Four full- 
page illuminated piates. Bound in library sheep, mar¬ 
bled edges. Most of the thoroughly educated men of the 
country consider this as l>y far the best Dictionary in the 
English Language. It is now regarded as the STAND¬ 
ARD AUTHORITY, and so recommended by our most 
distinguished scholars. Asa source of general informa¬ 
tion, this grand volume stands next to the Universal 
Cyclopsdia. It is published by Messrs. J. B. Lippincott 
& Co., Philadelphia.—We have a limited supply of the 
Old Edition, No. 3, which we will furnish for a club 
of 8 O subscriptions at $1.50 each, while tho supply lasts, 
or the New Edition, No. 4, with Supplement, for 12 sub¬ 
scriptions at $1.50 each. Will also furnish it for the 
price. Receiver to pay expressage. 
No. 5. - Wagner’s Famous “Chari¬ 
ot Race.”— Price $5.00.—We have secured thissplen- 
did etching, executed by the celebrated artists. Moran 
and Ferris, which gives in a clear and beautiful manner 
all the details of this grand painting. It brings vividly to 
the mind the glories of Rome, when she was Mistress of 
the Earth, both in the subject and in tho manner of its 
treatment, making it the most popular etching among all 
classes of people. It is full of life, vigor, and energy, and 
no description can do it justice. Size 17Qby2S. Fur¬ 
nished to us by J. C. McCurdy & Co., 632 Chestnut St., 
Philadelphia, Pa. We will present it to any person send¬ 
ing us 5 subscriptions at $1.50 each, (or supply it for 
$5.00.) sent post-paid. 
No.6.—Webster’s Pocket Dictionary. 
Price $1.00.—Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor & Co.’s Edition. 
This volume is abridged from the American Dictionary 
of Noah Webster, LL.D. By W. G. Webster and W. A. 
Wheeler. It embraces a careful selection of about 18,000 
of the most important words of the language, and is illus¬ 
trated with nearly 200 engravings on wood. Bound in 
cloth, illuminated sides. This will be sent post-paid 
for 2 new subscriptions at $1.50 each, (or for $1). 
No. 7.-Bound Volumes of the Am¬ 
erican Agriculturist.— Plice $2.00 per volume. 
These 25 volumes are very neatly bound in uniform 
style, with gilt title, alphabetical table of contents, etc., 
making a very fine Agricultural Library in themselves. 
The price of these volumes, finely hound, is $2.00 each, 
or, sent post-paid for $2.30. To every person who is 
himself a subscriber we will present and Bend post-paid, 
any One of the above volumes, in return for every 3 
new subscribers he will send at the regular subscrip¬ 
tion price of $1.50 each. The receiver of the Premium 
can make his own selections from any of the volumes. 
No. 8. — Pocket Ink- 
stand.— Price $1.25. — Made of 
Brass, covered with Russia Leather 
and having a spring cover. From 
Willy Wallach, No. 36 Park 
Row. 2 subscriptions at $1.50 each 
will secure this post-paid, (or we 
will mail it for $1.50 post-paid.) 
Good Books on Field Sports are both instructive and entertaining. 
