438 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[November, 
SUPERIOR STAWDAEP VOBIS. 
FIELD SPORTS. 
FRANK FORESTER'S FISH AND FISHING. 
100 engravings. Embracing a full illustrated description of 
the Game Fish of North America ; Trout and Salmon Fish¬ 
ing; Shoal Water and Deep Sea Fishing; Lake and River 
Fishing ; Trolling, Fly Fishing, etc. 12th edition. One post¬ 
octavo volume. Post-paid, $3.50. 
FRANK FORESTER'S COMPLETE MANUAL. 
For Young Sportsmen, of Fowling, Fishing, and Field 
Sports. With directions for handling the Gun, the Rifle, and 
the Rod. Art of Shooting on the Wing. The Breaking, Man¬ 
agement, and Hunting of the Dog. The varieties and habits 
of Game. River, Lake, and Sea Fishing. Post octavo. 
Post-paid, $3.00. 
FRANK FORESTER'S AMERICAN CAME 
IN ITS SEASONS. 
January. Caribou or American Reindeer.— February. 
Moose Deer. Wild Gosse.— March. Mallard and Wid¬ 
geon.— April. American Snipe. Striped Bass.— May. 
American Trout. Brent Goose.— June. Bay Snipe. God- 
wit. Salmon.— July. Woodcocks.— August. Summer 
Duck. Common Deer. —September. Teal. — October. 
Quaii. Bittern. — November. Ruffed Grouse. Yellow 
Perch.— December. Canvas Back. Winter Duck. Fully 
Illustrated and Described. New edition. Post-paid, $3.00. 
THE DOG. 
By Dinks, Maylicw & Hutchinson. Compiled and edited 
by Frank Forester. Containing full instructions in all that 
relates to the Breeding, Rearing, Breaking, Kenneling, and 
Conditioning of Dogs, with valuable recipes for the treat¬ 
ment of all diseases. Illustrated. Post octavo. 
Post-paid, $3.00. 
THE BREECH LOADER. 
By Gloan. Description, Selection, Manufacture, Separa¬ 
tion, Loading, Cleaning, Shooting, etc. Post-paid, $2.00. 
THE DEAD SHOT: 
Or, Sportsman’s Complete Guide; a Treatise on the use of 
the Gun, with Rudimentary and Finishing Lessons in the 
Art of Shooting Game of all kinds. By Marksman. 
Post-paid, $1.75. 
THE CRACK SHOT: 
Or, Young Rifleman’s Complete Guide; being a Treatise 
on the use of the Rifle, with Lessons, including a full descrip¬ 
tion of the latest improved breech-loading weapons; rules 
and regulations for Target Practice, and directions for Hunt¬ 
ing Game. By Edward C. Barber. Post-paid,$1.75. 
GUN, ROD , AND SADDLE. 
Nearly fifty practical articles on subjects connected with 
Fishing, Shooting, Racing, Trotting, etc. Post-paid, $1. 
PRACTICAL TROUT CULTURE. 
By J. H. Slack, M. D., Commissioner of Fisheries, New Jer¬ 
sey. Fully illustrated and describing thoroughly all that is 
requisite to successful Trout Culture, Post-paid, $1.50. 
AGRICULTURE. 
WOODWARD'S GRAPERIES AND HORTI¬ 
CULTURAL BUILDINGS. 
Designs and Plans of Hot-beds, Cold Pits, Propagating 
Houses, Forcing Houses, Hot and Cold Graperies, Green¬ 
houses, Conservatories, Orchard Houses, etc., with the va¬ 
rious modes of Ventilating and Heating. Post-paid, $1.50. 
JAQUES' MANUAL OF THE GARDEN, FARM, 
AND BARN-YARD. 
Embracing the Cultivation of Vegetables, Fruit, Flowers, 
all Field Crops, Delailsol Farm Work and Rearing Domestic 
Animals. New and Revised Edition. One volume. 
Post-paid, $1.75. 
YOUNG FARMER'S MANUAL. 
Vol. I. The Farm and the Workshop, with Practical Di¬ 
rections for laying out a Farm, Erecting Buildings, Fences, 
Farm Gates, Selecting good Farm and Shop Tools, and per¬ 
forming Farm Operations. Fully Illustrated. 
Post-paid, $1.73. 
YOUNG FARMER'S MANUAL. 
Vol. II. How to Make Farming Pay, with full Details of 
Farm Management, Character of Soils, Plowing, Manage¬ 
ment of Grass Lands, Manures, Farm Implements, Stock, 
Drainage, Planting, Harvesting, etc. Illustrated. 
Post-paid, $1.73. 
WILLARD'SPRA CTICALDAIRYHUSBANDR Y. 
A Standard Work on Dairy Farms and Farming, Dairy 
Stock and Stock Feeding, Milk, its Management and Manu¬ 
facture into Butter and Cheese, nistory and Mode of Organi¬ 
zation of Butter and Cheese Factories, Dairy Utensils, etc., 
etc. By X. A. Willard, A. M. This is a most full, practical, 
and reliable work on Dairy Husbandry, and it describes the 
recent great improvements in the Dairy Bnsiness. It is 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
highly recommended by leading agricultural and other in¬ 
fluential journals, and is a Standard Authority. It will pay 
every one engaged in any branch of dairy business, or who 
keeps a single cow, to obtain and study this work. Prac¬ 
tical Dairy Husbandry embraces 510 large octavo pages, 
is handsomely and fully illustrated, printed on superior 
paper, and elegantly bound. Post-paid, $3.00. 
PRACTICAL BUTTER BOOK. 
A complete treatise on Butter Making at factories and 
farm dairies, including the selection, feeding, and manage¬ 
ment of stock for butter dairying—with plans for dairy 
rooms and creameries, dairy fixtures, utensils, etc. By X. 
A. Willard, A. M„ Author of Practical Dairy Husbandry. 
Post-paid, $1.00. 
THE PEOPLE' S PR A CTICA L POULTRY BOOK. 
A Work on the Breeding, Rearing, Care, and General 
Management of Poultry. By William M. Lewis. Tliisisone 
of the finest gotten-up works on the subject on which it 
treats, for its size and price, of any publication of the kind 
in thjs country. It is finely and profusely illustrated and 
printed, and bound in extra style. Contains 224 large octavo 
pages. Contains also full descriptive Details of the art of 
Caponizing, with description of the implements used for the 
purpose. Post-paid, $1.50. 
RANDALL'S SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 
With an account of the different Breeds, and general direc¬ 
tions in regard to summer and winter management, herd¬ 
ing, and the treatment of diseases. With portraits and 
other engravings. By Henry S. Randall, LL.D., with his 
letter to the Texas Almanac on Sheep Husbandry in Texas, 
and Geo. W. Kendall’s on Sheep-Raising in Texas. Octavo, 
23S pp. Post-paid, $1.50. 
RANDALL'S PRACTICAL SHEPHERD. 
A Complete Treatise on the Breeding, Management, and 
Diseases of Sheep. With Illustrations. By Henry S. Randall, 
LL.D., Author of “ Sheep Husbandry in the South,” ‘"Fine- 
Wool Sheep Husbandry,” etc., etc. 12mo., 432 pp. 
Post-paid, $2.00. 
HUSMANN'S GRAPES AND WINE. 
The Cultivation of the Native Grape and Manufacture of 
American Wine. By Geo. Husmann, of Missouri. 
Post-paid, $1.50. 
ELLIOTTS LAWN AND SHADE TREES. 
For Planting Parks, Gardens, Cemeteries, Private 
Grounds, and Avenues. Fully Illustrated and described. 
Post-paid, $1.50. 
FULLER'S FOREST TREE CULTURIST. 
The Cultivation of Forest Trees for Shade, for Shelter, 
for Fuel, for Timber, and for Profit. Illustrated. 
Post-paid, $1.50. 
OPEN AIR GRAPE CULTURE. 
A Practical Treatise on the Garden and Vineyard Culture 
of the Vine. By John Pliin. Illustrated. Post-paid, $1.50. 
THE THOMERY SYSTEM OF GRAPE 
CULTURE. 
From the French, by M. Du Breuil. Illustrated. Cultiva¬ 
tion of the Vine upon Trellises in Northern and Central 
France, according to the New Methods in use at Thomery, 
etc. Post-paid, flexible cloth covers, 50 cts. 
THE HORSE. 
FRANK FORESTER'S HORSE OF AMERICA. 
By Henry Wm. Herbert. Revised, corrected, enlarged, 
and continued to 1871, by S. D. and B. G. Bruce. Always an 
acknowledged standard, and now the most complete and 
authentic work on the horse. With steel-engraved portraits 
of thirty of the most famous representative horses, includ¬ 
ing pedigrees, histories, and performances. Two superb 
royal octavo volumes of upward of 1300 pages. 
Post-paid, Ten Dollars. 
WALLACE'S AMERICAN STUD-BOOK. 
Vol. One. Being a compilation of the pedigrees of Ameri¬ 
can and imported blood horses, from the earliest records, 
with an appendix of all named animals without extended 
pedigrees prior to 1S40. And a Supplement, containing a 
history of all horses and mares that have trotted in public, 
from the earliest trotting races until the close of 1866. By 
J. H. Wallace. Royal octavo of over 1,000 pages, elegantly 
bound in extra cloth, beveled boards, and splendidly illus¬ 
trated. Post-paid, Ten Dollars. 
WALL ACTS AMERICAN TROTTING 
REGISTER. 
Containing all that is known of the bedigrees of trotting 
horses, their ancestors and descendants, with a record of all 
published performances in which a mile was trotted, or 
paced, in 2.40 or less, from the earliest dates until the close 
of 1868, and a full record of the performances of 1869 and 
1870. Giving complete summaries of over 6,000 contests. 
With an introductory essay on the true origin of the Ameri¬ 
can Trotter. And a set of rules for the government of all 
trials of speed. By J. H. Wallace, compiler of Wallace's 
American Stud Book. Royal octavo. Post-paid, Ten Dollars. 
HORSE PORTRAITURE. 
Breeding, Rearing, and Training Trotters. Preparations 
for races, management in the stable, on the track, horse 
life, etc. By Joseph Cairn Simpson. Post octavo. 
Post-paid, $3.00. 
Publishers, 245 Broadway, New York. 
Play and Profit 
IN MY GARDEN. 
By E. P. ROE, 
Author of “ Barriers Burned Away," etc. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
The author takes us to his garden on the rocky hillsides in 
the vicinity of West Point and shows us how out of it, after 
four years’ experience, he evoked a profit ot $1,000, and this 
while carrying on pastoral and literary labors.It 
is very rare that so much literary taste and skill are mated 
to so much agricultural experience and practical good sense. 
—Harper's Magazine. 
This book is as poetical as it is practical. Still he is no 
dreamer. He goes into every essential detail with as much 
minuteness and precision as if ho were writing a manual for 
the practical farmer. Indeed few works professedly de¬ 
voted to agriculture give more sound and valuable informa¬ 
tion on the secret of winning golden harvests from the soil 
than this brief idyllic sketch.— N. Y. Tribune. 
Price, Post-paid - $1.50 
THE 
A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON 
THE SHEEP. 
DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR 
AMERICAN SHEPHERDS. 
By HENRY STEWART. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
NOTICES by the press. 
We like this book very much, as it treats of the modern 
improved breeds of sheep. It treats of sheep as an in¬ 
dustrial product; of the summer management of sheep ; 
of the best soils; of the best pastures and grasses ; the 
best way to feed roots ; management of ewes and lambs; 
winter management; breeds and breeding sheep; wool, 
its structure and uses; diseases and remedies, etc. We 
would advise every breeder to get this manual.— The 
Michigan Farmer, Detroit. 
Mr. Stewart is a veteran shepherd, and his knowledge 
lias been gathered in the reliable, if sometimes tardy 
school of experience, and by this means alone lie has 
learned successfully how to meet the needs of the modern 
improved breeds of sheep in American climate, and under 
American methods.— The Weekly Blade, Toledo, O. 
It is a work of 252 pages, handsomely illustrated, show¬ 
ing the various breeds of sheep, and contains many other 
illustrations that will be of great service to the shepherd. 
— Caiman's Jlural World, St. Louis. 
Henry Stewart has written, awl Orange Judd Co. have 
published, the most thorough and practical treatise upon 
the management and breeding of sheep, that has yet been 
prepared for the shepherd. With the exception of Ran¬ 
dall’s Sheep Husbandry, which relates especially to 
Merinos and fine wool, the American shepherd has hither¬ 
to had no help except from English works, not only out 
of date, hut incomplete, giving no account of the modern 
improved breeds, or of the diseases to which they are 
subject, and the occasional paper read before the Farm¬ 
er’s Club. He can congratulate himself now upon the 
possession of a manual superior in every respect, and 
thoroughly trustworthy.— The World , New York. 
The book cannot fail to be of great value to all farmers 
who are breeding this kind of stock, and its sale will ho 
large, especially in the West, where sheep growing is ac¬ 
quiring new importance.— The Indiana Farmer , Indiana¬ 
polis. 
We have seen no agricultural work for a long time 
which appears so well calculated to answer its purpose.— 
The Dirigo Rural , Bangor, Me. 
A very practical treatise on a very important depart¬ 
ment of stock raising.— The Congregationalism Boston. 
It contains a condensed amount of practical informa¬ 
tion, of which every farmer who attends less or more to 
sheep raising should avail himself.— The United Pres¬ 
byterian, Pittsburgh. 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $1.50. 
Either of the above hooks sent post-paid on receipt of 
price by 
ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 
345 Broadway, New York. 
