382 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
with Hints on the Selection of a Site and following it up 
to the Completion of a House. Cloth. Amply illus¬ 
trated SI.50. 
Downing’s Dandscape Gardening.— By A. 
J. Downing. A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of 
Landscape Gardening, adapted to North America ; with 
a view to the Improvements of Country Residences, 
Comprising directions for laying out grounds, the des¬ 
cription and cultivation of hardy trees, decorative ac 
companiroents of the house and grounds, the formation 
of pieces of artificial water, flower gardens, etc. — with 
Remarks on Rural Architecture by the late A. J. Down 
mg, Esq Together with a Supplement by Henry Win- 
t-hrop Sargent, bringing some account of new shrubs 
and trees down to date. Beautifully illustrated, with 
thirty-nine engravings on wood, six on stone, and six on 
steel, one of which is a fine portrait of the author. 
Cloth. $6.50. 
Mural Architecture.— By L. F. Allen. Practical 
Plans foi the Construction of Convenient Farm Houses, 
Cottages. Barns. Sheds, Wagon Houses, etc., etc. Illus¬ 
trated. Cloth. $1.50. 
Harney’s Hams, ©Ht-lSuildfngs, and 
Fences.-Handsomely hound in cloth. Quarto. $4.00. 
JSicknell’s Stables’, Out - Buildings, 
Fences, and miscellaneous Details.— Bound 
in cloth. Quarto $2.50 
MoncUton’s National Carpenter and 
Joiner.— A Complete Work on the whole Science of 
Carpentry, Joinery. Roofing, etc. Fully illustrated. 
Bound in cloth Quarto. $5.00. 
Palliser’s Model Moines.— A new Work, con¬ 
taining Designs for Suburban Houses. Neatly hound in 
cloth. $1.00 
ISicknell’s Specimen Book.- Containingsone 
hundred Designs of Houses, selected from the best Ar 
chitectural publications, and valuable to builders and all 
who contemplate building. Handsomely bound in cloth. 
$ 1 . 00 . 
Weidenmann’s Beautifying Country 
Homes. — By J. Weidenmann, Landscape Gardener. 
This magnificent work is illustrated not only with nu¬ 
merous fine wood-engravings, but also with seventeen 
full-page and seven double-page colored lithographs of 
places already improved, showing Buildings, Walks, 
Trees, Shrubs, etc. in short, bringing the places directly 
to the eye, of the reader. It is a most elegant and useful 
work. Quarto. Cloth. $15.00. 
Detail Cottage and Constructive Archi¬ 
tecture.— The standard work on Details—an invalua¬ 
ble aid to Architects, Builders, Carpenters, etc. Bound 
elegantly in cloth. Largo quarto. $10.00. 
Woodward’s National Architect.— Com¬ 
plete iu two volumes—containing upwards of 1,500 De¬ 
signs. Plans, and Details for City, Country. Suburban, 
and Village Houses.—This has 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 ant! FarmHouses. 
—Containing Designs of low-priced Houses and Out 
Buildings. Cloth. $1.00. 
Books on Alphabets. — Copley’s Plain and 
Ornamental Alphabets, $3.00.—Woodward's Fancy and 
Ornamental Alphabets, $6.00.—Ames’ Alphabets, $1.50. 
Miscellaneous. 
Quinfoy’s New 55ee-K.eeping.— The Mysteries 
of Bee-Keeping Explained. Revised by L. C. Root. 
Combining the results of Fifty Years' Experience, with 
the latest discoveries and inventions, and presenting the 
most approved methods, forming a complete guide to 
successful Bee Culture. It is the latest and best work on 
the subject, Illustrated with one hundred engravings, 
and a portrait of the late M. Qninbv. Beautifully bound 
in cloth $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. 
Bound in cloth $1.50. 
Harris’ Insects Injurious to Vegetation. 
—By Thaddeus William Harris, M. D. Enlarged and 
Improved. With additions from the author’s manu¬ 
scripts and original notes. Illustrated by Engravings 
drawn from Nature by Charles L. Flint, Secretary of 
the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture. This 
work is fully illustrated with two hundred and seventy- 
eight fine wood-cuts, and eight beautiful steel-plates, full- 
page size, containing ninety-five figures. Published in 
two beautiful editions; one plain, with steel engravings, 
extra cloth; the other in extra cloth, beveled boards, red 
edges, engravings colored with great accuracy. Octavo. 
640 pages. Plain, $4.00. Cloth. $6.50. 
Dyman’s Cotton Culture. —By Joseph B. 
Lyman. A complete manual for Cotton growing, for 
those not familiar with this crop. It discusses climate, 
the farm, stock, implements, preparation of soil, and 
planting, cultivation, picking, ginning, baling, and mar¬ 
keting, and gives a calendar of monthly operations. Also 
the extent of the cotton lands, the varieties of the cot. 
ton plant, insects and diseases that molest it, valuable 
statistics and suggestions, etc. An additional chapter 
has been prepared by J. R. Sypher, Esq., upon Cotton 
Seed and its Uses, giving the details of manufacturing the 
oil The work contains a colored map of the Cotton Lands 
of the United States, besides other illustrations. $1.50. 
Scribner’s Dumber and Dog Book for Ship 
Builders. Boat. Builders, Lumber Merchants, Farmers, 
and Mechanics. By J. M. Scribner, A. M. It gives cor¬ 
rect measurement of Scantling, Boards, Plank, Cubical 
Contents of Square and Round Timber, Saw Logs, re¬ 
duced to Board Measure, by DOYLE’S RULE, Specific 
Gravity and Weight of Different Woods, Capacity of 
Cisterns, Measurement of Wood and Price per Cord, 
Stave and Heading Bolt Table, Hints to Lumber Dealers 
and Mechanics in Selection of Standing Trees, Defects 
of Timber (especially Oakj. and Felling Timber. Tables 
of Wages by the Month. Board or Rent by the Week or 
Day. Interest Tables, etc. 35 cents. 
The Tim Bunker Papers, or Yankee 
Farming. —A Quaint, most, interesting book, giving 
the experiences, observations, etc., of “Timothy Bunk¬ 
er, Esq.,’’of Hookertown, Conn. No other book on Am¬ 
erican farming contains so much entertainment with in¬ 
struction-. Cloth. $1.50. 
A History of the Menhaden.— With an ac¬ 
count of the Agricultural Uses of Fish, and an introduc¬ 
tion bringing the subject down to date. By Prof. G. 
Brown Goode, Curator U. S. National Museum; Assistant 
U. S. Fisb Commission; Author of “The Game Fishes 
of North America.” etc.; and Prof. W. O. Atwater, Pro¬ 
fessor of Chemistry, Wesleyan University, etc. 30 plates. 
Cloth. $2.00. 
Oiit-!>oor Sports and Pastimes.* 
Practical Taxidermy and Home Decora¬ 
tion. —By Joseph H. Batty, Taxidermist for the Gov¬ 
ernment Surveys and many Colleges and Museums in the 
United States. 125 illustrations. An entirely new and 
complete, as well as authentic work on Taxidermy—giv¬ 
ing in detail full directions for collecting and mounting 
Animals. Birds. Reptiles, Fish, Insects, and General Ob¬ 
jects of Natural History. Cloth. $1.50. 
How to Hunt and Trap.— By Joseph H. 
Batty. An entirely new and comprehensive Sportsman’s 
Guide for Hunting, Trapping, etc., including Wild Sports 
of the Wilderness, Mountain Shooting, Bear Hunting, 
and Trapping; Camping; the use of Mules, Dogs, Guns, 
Boats. Canoes, etc. Fully illustrated, handsomely bound 
in cloth, printed on tinted paper, $1.50. 
The Dogs of Great Britain, America, and 
other Countries. —Their Breeding, Training, and 
Management in Health and Disease, comprising all 
the essential parts of the two latest standard works, by 
STONEHENGE. It is the latest and most reliable Dog 
book, edited by the best informed American writers on 
the subject. It describes the best Hunting grounds in 
America. Gives names of prize winners at Dog Shows, 
and is illustrated with over one hundred excellent en¬ 
gravings, embracing some of the most noted dogs on both 
continents. The Chapters on the Management and 
Treatment of Diseases of Dogs, make it specially valu¬ 
able to every owner of a dog. Handsomely bound in 
cloth, black and gold. Printed on tinted paper. $2.00. 
Hallock’s Sportsman’s Gazetteer. — The 
new edition, now ready, is full of valuable information on 
Hunting, Fishing, etc.; on the Game, Animals, Birds, 
etc., of North America, together with a directory of all 
the principal game resorts. Substantially bound in 
cloth. $3.00. 
Practical Boat Sailing.— By Douglas Frazar. 
Master of the “ Maryland,” Commander of the yacht 
“ Fenimore Cooper,” etc. The author claims that after 
reading this little volume through, a person may safely, 
* For titles and descriptions of nearly 200 additional 
Works on Out-Door Sports and Pastimes, which we offer 
as Premiums, send five cents to the Oranok Judd Co., 
245 Broadway, New York, for Sportsman's Library of 
Standard Books. It comprises forty large pages, taste¬ 
fully printed on tinted paper, and is elegantly illustrated 
with over 100 spirited engravings, many of them drawn 
from Life, and faithfully portraying the points and 
characteristics of Game Birds and Animals, Fishes, 
Horses, Dogs, etc. The books described in the Sports¬ 
man’s Library are supplied as premiums, on same 
terms as those enumerated in this Premium Sheet. 
understandingly and successfully, handle any sailing 
craft. Neatly hound in cloth. $1.00. 
Fisk Hatcking and Fisk Catcking.— By 
H. B. Roosevelt, Commissioner of Fisheries of the State 
of New York, and Seth Green, Snpt. of Fisheries of the 
State of New York. The author’s names render a de¬ 
scription of this work unnecessary, and it is needless to 
say that it is a valuable volume for sportsmen. Illustrated. 
Cloth. $1.50. 
Tke American Sportsman.— New edition.— 
By Elisha J. Lewis, M. D. Containing Hints to Sports¬ 
men, Notes on Shooting, etc. Fufly illustrated. Hand¬ 
somely bound in cloth. Colored plate frontispiece. $2.75. 
Hunter and. Trapper. -By Halsey Thrasher, 
an old and experienced sportsman. 12mo. Clolh. 75c. 
Frank Forester’s American Game in its 
Seasons. — Fully illustrated and described. 8vo. 
Cloth $1.50. 
Field, Cover, and Trap SkooSing. —By 
Captain A. H. Bogardus. 12mo. Cloth. $2.00. 
American Partridge and 1‘keasant 
Skooting.— By Frank Schley. 12mo. Cloth. $2.00. 
Trolling for Dike, Salmon, and Trout.— 
By H. C. Pennell, Author of the “ Modern Practical 
Angler,” etc., etc. Illustrated. 12mo. Boards. 50c. 
Fly Fisking and Worm Fisking for 
Salmon, Trout, and Grayling.— By the same 
author. Illustrated. 12mo. Boards. 50c. 
Tlie Solitary Hunter, or Sporting Ad¬ 
ventures in tke Prairies.— By John Palliser, 
Esq. I2mo. Boards. SOc. 
Frank Forester’s Field Sports ot tke 
United States and Britisk Provinces of 
Nortk America.— New Edition, containing numer¬ 
ous corrections and additions, with illustrations from 
nature, and a brief memoir of the author. In two vol¬ 
umes. 8vo. Cloth. Per volume $2.00. 
Frank Forester’s Fisk and Fisking of 
tke United States and Britisk Provinces 
of Nortk America. —Contains 100 engravings. $2.50. 
Frank Forester’s Complete Manual for 
Young Sportsmen of Fowling, Fisking, 
and Field Sports.— Svo. Cloth. $2.00. 
How to Camp Out.— By John M. Gould. 16mo. 
Cloth. $1.00. 
Camp Cookery. —By Miss M. Parloa. ' ISmo. 
Cloth. 50c. 
Canoe and Camera. —By Thomas Sedgwick 
Steele. A Photographic Tour of Two Hundred Miles 
Through the Maine Forests. This isone of the most en¬ 
tertaining and exquisitely illustrated hooks of the season. 
It is the result of recent personal explorations by the 
author, Mr. Thomas Sedgwick Steele. It is embellished 
with sixty engravings of the very finest style, by well 
known artists, with new Maps of the State prepared ex¬ 
pressly for this book, and the story is told in a thoroughly 
fascinating manner. The author’s interesting description 
of a section of Maine which is now but little known, 
should give this hook a wide sale, and draw to Maine a 
crowd of pleasure-seekers. Handsomely bound in cloth, 
black, and gold. $1.50. 
Camps and Tramps in tke Adirondacks, 
and Grayling Fisking in Northern Micki- 
gan. —By A. Judd Northrup. A record of summer va¬ 
cations in the wilderness. Those who are fond of I he 
woods will he delighted with this new hook. It. bristles 
with information on shooting and fishing, and may he re¬ 
lied on as an accurate guide to ail the chief points of 
attraction in this famous region, and gives valuable sug¬ 
gestions on Camping Outfits, Fishing, Hunting, etc., etc 
Handsomely bound in cloth. 16mo. $1.25. 
Troiiting on tke Brule Silver; or, Sum¬ 
mer Wayfaring in tke Nortkern Wilder¬ 
ness.— By John Lyle King. The author is well known 
both for his literary labors and ardent love of the rod and 
gun. In this beautifully gotten up volume heuarrat.es 
the adventures of himself and parly during weeks of 
Camping Out in the wild regions of Northern Wisconsin 
and Michigan, along the Michiami, Paint, Trout, Brule, 
and Menominee Rivers, which abound in fish and game 
of every variety. The volume gives a general description 
of these sporting regions, which are beginning to attract 
general attention, presents a complete map of the same, 
and tells all about the best routes to get to them. 12nto. 
$1.50. 
American Wild Fowl Skooting. —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¬ 
tions 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. 
Subscriptions for Fugliali or German Editions are at the same rates, and count alike for Premiums, together or separately. 
