[November, 
AMERICAN AGrRICULTURIST. 
1870.] 
JUST PUBLISHED. 
Twenty Years of Inside Life in 
WALL STREET, 
Or, Revelations of the Personal Experi¬ 
ence of a Speculator. 
[SUGGESTIVE.] 
INCLUDING 
Sketches of the Leading Operators and 
Money Kings—The Great Rises and 
Panics—The Mysteries of the 
Rings, Pools, and Corners, and 
How Fortunes are Made 
and Lost on ’ Change. 
By HON. WM. WORTHINGTON FOWLER. 
FULLY ILLUSTRATED. 
Some ten years ago Mr. Fowler published a Volume, 
giving Ten Years of Experience in Wall Street. The 
work received the highest encomiums, and met with a 
very large sale. This New Volume brings the Author’s 
experience down to the present time, thereby presenting 
in detail all the leading facts and incidents which have 
transpired in Wall Street for twenty years’ past. Mr. 
Fowler is a graduate of a New England College, was 
formerly a State Senator of Connecticut, is widely known 
as a journalist, and tells the story of his personal ex¬ 
perience in a graphic, entertaining style. 
12m o. CLOTH PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.00. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
JUST PUBLISHED. 
American 
Wild Fowl Shooting. 
Containing; Full and Accurate Descrip¬ 
tions of tlie Haunts, Habits, and Methods 
of Shooting Wild Fowl, particularly tliose 
of tlie Western Stales of America. In¬ 
structions concerning (Runs, Blinds, 
Boats, and Decoys, tlie Training of Wa¬ 
ter-Ho trie v ers, etc. The True History of 
Choke-Bores, the Theory of their Action 
on the Charge, Construction, Lbading, 
etc., with a correct Method of Testing 
the Shooting Powers of Shot duns. 
By JOSEPH W. LONG. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
Contents Guns, Blinds, Decoys, Boats and Boat Build¬ 
ing, Dogs, Camping Out, Miscellaneous Hints, Morning Mal¬ 
lard Shooting—Fall, Midday Mallard Shooting—Fall, Even¬ 
ing Mallard Shooting—Fall, Cornfield Mallard Shooting- 
Winter, Mallard Shooting at Holes in tlie Ice—Winter, Mal¬ 
lard Shooting in tlie Timber —Spring. Blue-winged Teal, 
Green-winged Teal, Pintail Duck, Wood-Duck or Summer 
Duck, American Widgeon, Gadwall Duck, Shoveller Duck, 
Dusky Duck, Trumpeter Swan, Canada Goose, White-fronted 
Goose, Canvas-back Duck, Red-headed Duck, Scaup Duck, 
Ring-necked Duck, Buffle-lieaded Duck—Finale, Cave Cor- 
vumi, Choke-Bores—their True History, Form, and Manner 
of Construction, Choke-Bores—the Theory of their Action 
on tlie Charge; with Target Patterns, on Measuring tlie 
Striking Force of Shot; with Hints in regard to Loading, etc. 
12mo. Cloth. Tinted Paper. Price, Post-paid, $2.00. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
COOKING SCHOOL TEXT-BOOK 
AND 
HOUSEKEEPERS’ GUIDE 
To Cookery and Kitchen Management. 
By Miss JULIET CORSON, 
Superintendent of the New York Cooking School. 
This work will be “a Household Treasure,'’ explaining 
the system of Economical Cookery taught in the New York 
Cooking School. PRICE, POST PAID, $1.25. 
New Edition—Revised and Enlarged. 
Twenty-Five Cent Dinners 
FOR FAMILIES OF SIX. 
345 Broadway, New York. 
JUST PUBLISHED. 
Window Flower Garden. 
By JULIUS J. HEINRICH. 
HANDSOMELY ILLUSTRATED. 
Mr. Heinrich is a practical florist, and this entertaining 
Volume embodies his personal experiences in Window 
Gardening during a long period. All persons who desire 
to beautify their homes, and make them attractive and 
cheerful, particularly during the winter months, should 
have this book. The Author has made every thing so 
clear and plain, that any one who follows the directions, 
can easily and readily master the art of Window Garden¬ 
ing. The numerous illustrations, numbering more than 
seventy, add very materially to the attractiveness and 
value of the work. 
CONTENTS: 
Introduction.— Chapter 1. Tlie Soil.—2. Pots.—3. Saucers 
for Pot Plants.—4. Pot Mats.—5. Tlie Location of the Win¬ 
dow.—6. Fitting up tlie Window (or Growing Plants.—'7. 
Building a Conservatory.—8. Heating.—9. Heaters for Con¬ 
servatories.—10. Giving Air.—'1. Temperature.—12. Shades. 
—13. Watering.—14. Sprinkling or Syringing.—15. Insects.— 
10. Pruning or Trimming.—17. Training and Staking,—18. 
Treatment of Winter Flowering Plants.—19. Potting.—20. 
Treatment of Frozen Plants.—21. Increasing Plants by Cut 
tings or Slips.—22. How to Sow Seeds.—23. Manures and 
Fertilizers.—24. Sun and Light.—25. Watering Pots.—26. Fer¬ 
neries or Wardian Cases.—27. Plant-Stands.—28. Hanging- 
Baskets.—29. Treatment of Dutch Bulbs.—30. List of Plants 
fortlie Window or Room.—31. General Rules for tlie Culture 
of Window Plants. —32. Short Description of Winter Flower¬ 
ing Plants.—33. Flowers that will Grow from Seed.—3t. im¬ 
plements.—35. Tlie Window Garden Out-Doors.—36. Designs 
Made of Dried Everlasting Flowers, etc. 
12mo. Cloth. Tinted Paper. Price, Post-paid, 75 Cents. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishers, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
By Miss JULIET CORSON, 
Superintendent of the New York Cooking School. 
Miss Corson undertakes to show that a good dinner can he 
made for the sum of twenty-five cents, not only for one per¬ 
son, hut for a family of six, comprising tlie two parents and 
four children of the usual ages and appetites. We can com¬ 
mend tliis work to every family, especially to farmers’ fam¬ 
ilies, who will find here the methods of cooking the articles 
of food furnished by tlie farm, in a variety of acceptable 
forms. Most farmers have a great abundance, but their 
tables lack variety, and to this end, Miss Corson’s little book 
will be found full of useful Hints. 
PAPER COVERS, PRICE, POST-PAID, 25 CENTS. 
New Edition—Revised and Enlarged. 
The Shepherd’s Manual. 
A Practical Treatise on the Sheep. 
Designed Especially for American Shepherds. 
By HENRY STEWART. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
The first edition of this Manual has been so well received, 
and the letters acknowledging indebtedness for assistance 
derived from it have been so many and so emphatic, that 
the author has the best of reasons for presenting this new 
and enlarged edition to the public. It is intended to he so 
plain that a farmer, or a farmer’s son, who lias never kept a 
sheep, may learn from its pages how to manage a flock suc¬ 
cessfully, and to be so complete that even the experienced 
shepherd may gather some suggestions from it. The author 
feels, with enlarged experience since the first publication of 
the volume, that lie can still more confidently than before 
encourage the young shepherd to accept this Manual as a 
guide and a counsellor. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
Any one of the above hooks sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 345 Broadway, N. Y. 
A Trochar for Cattle-Men. 
In June of 1872 we gave illustrations of a Trochar and 
Cannula lo he used in ringing a hull, and on 
page 13 (January) and page 97 (March) of the 
American Agriculturist for 1873 (copies of 
which may he got from this office for 15 cents 
each) w T e described the use of this apparatus 
in relieving hoven in cattle. These ar¬ 
ticles have brought out a large demand for 
Trochars, and failing to find just the right 
kind among the makers of surgical imple¬ 
ments, we have induced an establishment 
to undertake their manufacture. We give 
herewith a small engraving of the Trochar. 
These articles are now in the trade, and 
may he had of most dealers in agricultural 
implements. Those who can not get them from dealers 
can receive them from this office, prepaid, for $1.09. 
A COPPER BULL-RING- 
0 2*4 inches in diameter, of the 
• most approved pattern, with 
screw-driver for putting it to¬ 
gether, will be sent, prepaid, on 
receipt of $1.00. Address 
ORANGE JUDD CO., 345 Broadway, New York. 
BACK VOLUMES OF 
American Agriculturist, 
The publishers of the American Agriculturist can supply 
any of the hack volumes of that paper from the Sixteenth 
to the Thirty-seventh. These volumes contain more varied 
and interesting information on all matters pertaining to 
the Farm, Garden, and Household, than can he obtained in 
hooks costing three times as much money. Price of each 
hound volume, at the Office, $2.00; sent post-paid, $2.30. 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 345 Broadway, N. Y. 
