editor’s table. 
227 
dEiritor’js 3Tabk. 
Washington’s Agricultural Correspondence to 
Arthur Young and Sir John Sinclair, with Statistical 
Tables and Remarks by Thomas Jefferson, Richard 
Peters, and other Gentlemen, on the Economy and 
Management of Farms in the United States. Edited 
by Franklin Knight, pp. 198 quarto. It has been the 
object of the editor in bringing out this work to make 
the agricultural community acquainted with the Illus¬ 
trious Farmer of Mount Vernon , he, “ who was first in 
war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his coun¬ 
trymen.’ f 
Washington is universally known as a successful j 
general and a wise statesman. But, reader, are you 
aware that agriculture was his study and delight 'l 
That in the cultivated field his practice was as excel¬ 
lent as his skill in the field of battle 'l And that his 
maxims of husbandry were as wise as his political 
precepts 'l So important did he consider the position of 
the American Farmer, both as to the wealth and pros¬ 
perity of the nation, that he himself, setting the prime 
example, devoted all his leisure time, either to the cul¬ 
ture of his farm in person, overseeing and directing all 
things with his own eye, or in conducting an extensive 
correspondence on the subject with some of the most 
experienced and enlightened men in Europe. There¬ 
fore, the letters and other information, contained in the 
work before us, cannot be too highly prized, and we 
heartily wish that they might be read by every person 
in the country. The book is elegantly got up, orna¬ 
mented by a beautiful portrait of Washington, with 
several views of his estate at Mount Vernon 5 and, we 
are happy to learn, it is extensively adopted as a pre¬ 
mium to be contended for by agriculturists in our State 
and County Societies. 
The work is for sale by Baker and Scribner, of New 
York, and William S. Martien, of Philadelphia. Price 
$3.50 to $ 6 , according to binding and size. 
A Dictionary op Modern Gardening. By George 
W. Johnson, Author of the Principles of Practical Gar¬ 
dening, &c., &c., with 180 wood-cuts. Edited with 
Numerous Additions, by David Landreth. Philadel¬ 
phia: Lea and Blanchard, pp. 635, 12mo. Price 
$1.75. We are pleased to announce this valuable work 
of Mr. Johnson, Americanized by so experienced a hor¬ 
ticulturist as Mr. Landreth, which has been greatly 
altered from the original. Many articles of little inte¬ 
rest to Americans have been curtailed, or wholly omit¬ 
ted, and much new matter, with numerous illustrations, 
added. It appears to have been an object with Mr. 
Landreth to increase the popular character of the work, 
thereby adapting it to the larger class of horticultural 
readers in this country, forming a complete Encyclo¬ 
paedia of Gardening, in so cheap and condensed a form 
as to be within the reach of most persons interested in 
r ural affairs. We have it for sale at our warehouse. 
Washington and his Generals. By J. T. Head- 
ley, 8 th Edition. New York : Baker and Scribner, 3G 
Park Row, 2 vols. 12mo. pp. 720. The brilliancy, as 
a writer, of the author of Napoleon and his Marshals, 
is too well known to need comment here. In a similar 
manner, as with his Napoleon, he has designed to group 
around Washington the chief characters and scenes of 
our Revolution, by giving the eventful part, rather than 
its detailed history. The work is neatly got up, illus¬ 
trated by sixteen portraits from steel engravings. For 
sale by C. M. Saxton, 205 Broadway, N. Y. Price 
$2.50. 
A Cyclopaedia op 6000 Practical Receipts, and 
Collateral Information in the Arts, Manufactures, and 
Trades, including Medicine, Pharmacy, and Domestic 
Economy. Designed as a Compendious Book of Re¬ 
ference for the Manufacturer, Tradesman, Amateur, and 
Pleads of Families. By Arnold J. Cooley, Practical 
Chemist. Illustrated with Numerous Engravings. 
New York: D. Appleton & Co., pp. 576, 8 vo. Price 
$2. The design of this work is to present an accurate 
and compendious collection of formulae and processes, 
with a variety of information suitable to the general 
reader, and practical purposes. We should judge that 
it constitutes the best manual extant, for family use, Ibi 
the culinary and other departments of household life, 
and will prove particularly useful to the dairyman, the 
farmer, and, in short, to almost every manufacturer in 
the arts. 
A Statement of the Claims of Charles T. 
Jackson, M.D., to the Discovery of the Applicability of 
Sulphuric Ether to the Prevention of Pain in Surgical 
Operations. By Martin Gay, M.D. Boston: pp. 48, 
l2mo. This pamphlet presents a general statement of 
the most important facts relating to the history of the 
above-named discovery, and establishes beyond a doubt 
that its application originated with Dr. Jackson, by ex¬ 
periments on himself and others, and that he had urged 
its use as a preventive of pain in dental operations, as 
early as 1842. 
The Mining Journal and American Rail-Road 
Gazette, Devoted to Improvements in Mining, Manu¬ 
factures, Inter-Communication, and the Arts, is publish¬ 
ed semi-monthly at the Office of the Merchants’ Maga¬ 
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annum. 
The Rose Culturist ; a Practical Treatise on the 
Cultivation and Management of the Rose; just pub¬ 
lished and for sale at 25 cents, by W. H. Starr, 135 
Nassau street, N. Y. 
Illustrated Botany.— The Illustrated Botany no¬ 
ticed in our last volume, published by J. K. Wellman, 
has passed into the hands of B. H. Culver, 139 Nassau 
St., N. Y., and is issued monthly at $3 per annum. 
Liebig’s Agricultural Chemistry. Edited from the 
Manuscript of the Author, by Professors Playfair and 
Gregory, from the 4th London Edition, Revised and 
Enlarged. New York: Wiley & Putnam, pp. 400, 
12mo. Price 75 cents. The present edition has been 
entirely revised, and is enriched with a large number 
of recent analyses of manures, and especially of the 
ashes of plants, the greater part of which have been 
made under the eye of the author in his laboratory at 
Giessen, and with the aid of the most improved me¬ 
thods. The work appears to be accurately printed, 
and is a decided improvement over all former editions. 
The Works of Flavius Josephus ; A New Trans¬ 
lation, by Rev. Dr. Robert Traill, with Notes, Explana¬ 
tory Essays, etc., by Rev. Isaac Taylor, of Ongar, and 
Numerous Pictorial Illustrations. New York: Harper & 
Brothers. The entire works of the Jewish Historian con¬ 
stitute in this translation, two portions. The first con¬ 
tains his “ Life,” by himself, the “Jewish War,” and 
the two books against “ Apion,” with at least one hun¬ 
dred engravings, and is now in the course of publication. 
The second portion is immediately to succeed the 
completion of the first, and will comprise the “ Antiqui¬ 
ties,” with some apocryphal pieces which have usually 
been attributed to Josephus. 
The American edition will contain every word of the 
original, and will be published in parts of 64 octavo 
pages each, at about one-fifth the price of the London 
copy. The first two numbers have been issued and are 
for sale at 25 cents each. 
Instructions to Young Sportsmen, in all that re¬ 
lates to Guns and Shooting, by Lieut. Col. P. Hawker. 
First American, from the ninth London edition, to 
which is added the Hunting and Shooting of North 
America, with descriptions of the animals and birds, 
carefully collected from authentic sources, by Wm. T. 
Porter, Esq., editor of the New York Spirit of the 
Times, pp, 456 octavo, with numerous illustrations, 
