ADVERTISEMENTS. 
103 
RECENT PUBLICATIONS 
<§>tw iJirtiroMwwv sawiitwiM®, 
BY HARPER & BROTHERS, 82 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK. 
THE TREES OF AMERICA, Native and Fo¬ 
reign, Pictorially and Botanically Delineated, and Sci¬ 
entifically and Popularly Described; being considered 
principally with reference to their Geography and His¬ 
tory ; Soil and Situation; Propagation and Culture ; 
Accidents and Diseases ; Properties and Uses; Econo¬ 
my in the Arts; Introduction into Commerce; and their 
Application in Useful and Ornamental Plantations. 
By D. J. Browne, Author of the “ Sylva Americana.” 
Illustrated by numerous Engravings. 1 vol. royal 8vo., 
Muslin gilt. $5.00. 
A work of rare interest, displaying great research and an inti¬ 
mate acquaintance with the entire field of arborology.—JVeio 
York Journal of Medicine. 
Every page is replete with gratifying information. The article 
on The Vine , and its treatment, is of itself alone a treasure of 
great public value.— Extract from a letter from Gen.Tallmadge. 
THE AMERICAN POULTERER’S COMPA¬ 
NION : A Practical Treatise on the Breeding, Rearing, 
Fattening, and General Management of the various 
species of Domestic Poultry, with Illustrations, and 
Portraits of Fowls, taken from life. By C. N. Bement. 
Fifth Edition. 75 cents. 
This is a work full of valuable information to all who have any 
interest in rearing fowls. It is the product of long experience, 
and cannot fail of being useful. It has plates of remarkable 
fowls, and plans for poultry-houses. If you can’t get a living by 
fair means, buy this and learn to get one by fowl. — Albany Jour. 
A TEXT BOOK ON CHEMISTRY: For the 
use of Schools and Colleges. By John William Dra¬ 
per, M. D., Professor of Chemistry in the University 
of New York, etc. With nearly three hundred Illus¬ 
trations. 
Prof. Draper has conferred a benefit to science by giving to the 
world this outline of his annual course of lectures. Most of 
the works on chemistry, in common use in our schools, are ex¬ 
ceedingly defective, containing little or nothing of the more recent 
discoveries in the science. It has been an object with the writer 
of this text-book to make it a representation of the present state 
of chemistry. It will be introduced in all seminaries of learning 
that desire to have the reputation of teaching chemistry accord¬ 
ing to its present advancement. At the same time, it ought to be 
in every private library ; for we all need a little re-touching oc¬ 
casionally on the subject, to keep pace with the discoveries in the 
science.— Prof. Salkeld. 
THE FARMER’S COMPANION : or Essays on 
the Principles and Practice of American Husbandry. 
By the late Hon. Jesse Buel. Sixth Edition, Revised 
and Enlarged. Edited by Amos Dean, Esq. 
The author of this book, the late Judge Buel, of Albany, was 
well known throughout the Union as the conductor of the “ Cul¬ 
tivator,” and an intelligent and successful promoter of agricul¬ 
tural pursuits. We have the opinion of several practical farmers 
as to its value, and are pleased to see this neat and compact 
edition from the influential press of the Messrs. Harper.— Prot. 
Churchman. 
GARDNER’S FARMER’S DICTIONARY: A 
Vocabulary of the Technical Terms recently intro¬ 
duced into Agriculture and Horticulture from various 
Sciences, and also a Compendium of Practical Farm¬ 
ing: the latter chiefly from the Works of the Rev. W. 
L. Rham, Low, and Youatt, and the most eminent 
American Authors. With numerous Illustrations. 
12mo., Muslin gilt, $1 50; Sheep extra, $1 75. 
In the Farmer’s Dictionary we find what has never before been 
dra wn up for the farmer; nowhere else is so much important 
information on subjects of interest to the practical agriculturist 
to be found.— Cultivator. 
11 is just the book that every young farmer wants.— Maine 
Cultivator. 
•‘If every farmer should purchase it who requires it, it would 
be the most popular book published in one hundred years.” 
In many instances it may be made to supply the place of a 
library itself.— Albion . 
SMITH’S (MissP.) MODERN AMERICAN 
COOKERY: With a List of Family Medical Re¬ 
ceipts, and a valuable Miscellany. 16mo., 40 cents. 
GAYLORD AND TUCKER’S AMERICAN 
HUSBANDRY: Being a series of Essays, &c., de¬ 
signed for its Improvement 2 vols.l8mo., half Sheep. $1. 
KITCHINER’S COOK’S ORACLE AND 
HOUSEKEEPER’S MANUAL. Containing Re¬ 
ceipts for Cookery, and Directions for Carving. With 
a complete System of Cookery for Catholic Families. 
I2mo., Sheep extra. 88 cents* 
The Cook’s Oracle is better than a mere book of cookery • it is 
a medical book, and ought to be installed in every family, in the 
place of Buchan.— Mew England Palladium. 
MORRELL’S AMERICAN SHEPHERD : Being 
a History of the Sheep, with their Breeds, Manage¬ 
ment, and Diseases. Illustrated with Portraits of dif¬ 
ferent Breeds, Sheep Barns, Sheds, &cc. With an Ap¬ 
pendix, embracing upward of Twenty Letters from 
eminent Wool-growers and-Sheep-fatteners of different 
States, detailing their respective Modes of Manage- 
ment. Engravings. 12 mo., Sheep extra, $1 00; Mus¬ 
lin, 90 cents; Paper, 75 cents. 
This book is one of sterling value. It was written by a prac¬ 
tical man, who for many years has devoted himself to the rearing 
of sheep with great ardor. He writes, in the practical portion of 
the work, what his own eyes have seen, and what his own hands 
have handled.— Recorder. 
It cannot fail of acceptability, as it comes out under the strong 
recommendation of the State Agricultural Society, and may be 
regarded as a work of high authority and value.— Courier. 
PARKES’S (Mrs. W.) DOMESTIC DUTIES: 
Or, Instructions to Young Married Ladies on the Man¬ 
agement of their Households, and the Regulation of 
their Conduct in the various Relations and Duties of 
Married Life. l2mo., half Sheep. 75 cents. 
It contains many subjects necessary to be considered by all 
ladies who are ambitious of deserving the eulogy, more to be 
coveted by a married woman than the loudest prean from the 
trump of fame, “ Her children rise up and call her blessed; her 
husband also, and he praiseth her.”— Mrs. Hale. 
WEBSTER (Thomas) AND PARKES’S (Mrs.) 
Encyclopaedia op Domestic Economy: comprising 
such Subjects as are most immediately connected with 
Housekeeping, as, the Construction of Domestic Edi¬ 
fices; Articles of Furniture; Animal and Vegetable 
Substances used as Food, and the Methods of preserve 
ing and preparing them by Cooking; making Bread; 
Materials employed in Dress and the Toilet; Business 
of the Laundry; Preservation of Health; Domestic 
Medicine, &c. &e. With Additions by an American 
Physician. Nearly 1000 Engravings. 8vo., Sheep 
extra, $3 75; Muslin, $3 50. 
There is nothing in the entire range of the domestic economy 
of a family that cannot be found in this book. It contains nearly 
1250 pages, with a copious index, and is profusely illustrated.— 
Anglo-American. 
An invaluable acquisition to the housekeeper.— Mew Bedford 
Mercury. 
A treasury of knowledge upon matters of which we all feel 
the importance.— Littell's Living Age. 
A work every husband should buy for his wife, and every 
lather for his daughters.— M. Y. Com. Advertiser. 
FRENCH DOMESTIC COOKERY: combining 
Elegance with Economy, in 1290 Receipts, besides a 
Variety of new Modes of Carving, culinary prepara¬ 
tion, and other Domestic Hints. With numerous En¬ 
gravings. Paper, 50 cents; extra Sheep, 62^ cents. 
The work for which this is an adapted translation, is the Mrs. 
Rundell of France. It has gone through nearly thirty editions, 
and upwards of eighty thousand copies have been sold. 
It presents a novelty to the gastronome, being the only work 
of its kind, and as such it will be one of the most acceptable 
aids to housekeepers that has been offered for many years. 
BUEL’S FARMER’S INSTRUCTOR: Consist¬ 
ing of Essays, Practical Directions, and Hints for the 
Management of the Farm and the Garden: 2 vols.l8mo.j 
$1 00; 
half Sheep. 
