[May, 
AMERICAN AGKICtrLTtTHI§l\ 
18TO.3 
r . -rrn—Mirrn ^ntfrr . Trr.'r^ar*,- ijr.-rc 
BOOKS for FARMERS and OTHERS. 
[Published unci for sale by Oratige Judd & Co., 215 Broad 1 
\vay, New York. Any of these books will be fol'wafded by 
mail, post-paid, on receipt of price ] 
Allen's (L. F.) American Cattle.,.$ 2 50 
Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture. 1 50 
Allen’s (R. L.) American Farm Book. 1 50 
Allen’s (R. L. and L. F.) New American Farm Book.. 2 50 
Allen’s (R. L.) Diseases of Domestic Animals. 1 00 
Am. Agricultural Annual. '67 to ’71, each,pa.,50c.; clo. 
Am. Horticultural Annual, ’07 to'71,each, pa., 50c.; clo. 
American Bird Fancier... 
American Rose Culturist..... 
American Weeds and Useful Plants. 1 
Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses,. 1 
Barry’s Fruit Garden.. 2 
Bement’s Rabbit Fancier.... 
Bommer’s Method of Making Manures. 
Boussingault's Rural Economy. 1 
Breck’s New Book of Flowers. 1 75 
Brill’s Farm-Gardening and Seed-Growing, 
Buist’s Flower Garden Directory. 1 
Buist’s Family Kitchen Gardener. 1 
Caldwell's Agricultural Chemical Analysis. 2 
Chorlton’s Grape-Grower’s Guide. 
Cobbett’s American Gardener. 
Cole's (8. W.) American Fruit Book. 
Cole’s Veterinarian. 
Copeland's Country Life. 5 
Copley’s Plain and Ornamental Alphabets. 3 
' Crack Shot. (Barber.). 1 
CrofTs Model Suburban Architecture. 5 
Dadd’s (Geo. II.) Modern Horse Doctor. 1 
Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor. 1 
Dana’s Muck Maunal. 1 
Darwin’s Variation ot Animals and Plants. 2 Volumes. 0 
Dead Shot; or Sportsman’s Complete Guide. 1 
De Voe’s Market Assistant. 2 
Downing’s Fruits & Fruit Trees. New Ed. Oct.,1122pp. 4 
Downing’s Landscape. Gardening. 6 
Eastwood on Cranberry. 
Eggleston’s Hoosier School-Master. 1 
Elliott’s Western Fruit Grower’s Guide. 1 
Eveletli’s School-House Architecture. 10 
Field’s (Thomas W.) Pear Culture. 1 
Flax Culture. 
Frank Forester’s Field Sports. 8vo., 2vols. G 
Frank Forester’s Fish and Fishing. 8 vo.. 100 eug’s— 5 
Frank Forester’s Manual for Young Sportsmen. 8vo. 3 
Frank Forester’s Horse and Horsemanship. 8vo„ 2 vols. 15 
French’s Farm Drainage. 1 
Fuller’s Forest Tree Culturist. 1 
1 
1 
Fuller’s Grape Culturist. 
Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist. 
Fuller's Strawberry Culturist, 
Fulton’s Peach Culture. 1 51 
Gregory on Squashes.paper.. 
Guenon on Milch Cows. 
Gun, Rod, and Saddle. . 1 
Harney’s Barns. Out-buildings, and Fences. 10 
Harris’ Insects Injurious to Vegetation.cloth.. 4 
Harris on the Pig. 1 
Henderson’s Gardening for Protit. 1 
Henderson’s Practical Floriculture... 1 
Herbert’s Hints to Housekeepers. 1 
Hoopes’ Book of Evergreens. 3 
Hooper's Dog and Gun.paper, 30c_cloth.. 
Hop Culture'. 
Hunter and Trapper. 1 
Jacques’ Manual of the House. 1 
Jacques’ Manual of the Garden and Farm-Yard......... 2 
Johnson’s How Crops Feed. 2 
Johnson's How Crops Grow. 2 
Johnson’s Peat and Its Uses. 1 
Johnston’s Agricultural Chemistry. 1 
Johnston’s Elements of Agricultural Chemistry. 1 
Leuchar’s How to Build Hot-Houses.. 1 
Lyman’s Cotton Culture. 1 
Mile3 on the Horse’s Foot. 
Mohr on the Grape-Vine. 1 
Mrs. Cornelius’s Young Housekeeper’s Friend. 1 
My Vineyard at Lalceview. 1 
Norton’s Scientific Agriculture. 
Onion Culture.. 
Our Farm of Four Acres.paper, 30c_cloth.. 
Pardee on Strawberry Culture. 
Parsons on the Rose. By Samuel B. Parsons. 1 
Pedder’s Land Measurer. 
Percheron Horse. 1 
Potato Culture. (Prize Essay.). paper.. 
§ uinbv’s Mysteries of Bee Keeping. 1 
andall’s Sheep Husbandry. 1 
Randall’s Fine-Wool Sheep Husbandry. 1 
Richardson on the Dog.paper, 30c—cloth_ 
Rivers’Miniature Fruit Garden. 1 
Rural Church Architecture. Folio, in colors, 45 plates. 12 
Saunders’ Domestic Poultry... .paper, 40c_bound.. 
Schenek’s Gardener’s Text-Book. 
Simpson’s Horse Portraiture. 2 
Skillful Housewife.. 
Stewart’s (John) Stable Book. 1 
The Dog. By Dinks, Mayhew, and Hutchinson. 3 
Thomas’ Farm Implements and Machinery. 1 
Thompson’s Food of Animals. 1 
Tim Bunker Papers. 1 
Tobacco Culture.. 
Turner’s Cotton Planter’s Manual. 1 
Wallace’s American Trotting Register. . 3 
Wallace’s American Stud Book. Vol.l. 10 
Warder’s American Pomology.. 3 
Warder’s Hedges and Evergreens. 1 
Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health. 1 
Waring’s Elements of Agriculture. 1 
Waring’s Earth Closets and Earth Sewage. 
Weidenmann’s Beautifying Country Homes. A superb 
quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, in colors_ 1.5 
3 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
Wheeler’s Rural Homes. 
Wheeler’s Homes for the People. 
White’s Cranberry Culture. 
White's Gardening for the South. . 
Woodward’s Cottages and Farm-Houses. 
Woodward's Suburban and Country Houses. 
Woodward's Country Homes. 
Woodward’s Graperies and Horticultural Buildings. 
Woodward’s National Architect. . . 12 
Wright's Practical Poultry Keeper. 
Youatt and Spooner on the Horse. 
Youatt and Martin on Cattle.. 
Y ouatt on the Hog. 
Youatt on Sheep. 
O. J. & Co. keep in Stock the following Books: 
Architecture. By Cummings & Miller.if 10 00 
“ Bicknell’s Village Builder. 10 00 
“ Principles and Practice of. ByLoring&Jenney 12 00 
“ Review and American Builder’s Journal. By 
S. Sloan. In Nos., each. 50 
Art of Saw Filing. (Holly.). 75 
Bailey’s Our Owii Birds of ttie United States.. 1 50 
Bement’s Poulterer’s Companion. 2 00 
Bridgeman’s Young Gardener’s Assistant. 2 50 
Purr’s Vegetables oi America. 5 00 
Carpenters and Joiners’ Hand-Book. (Holly,).* 
8 arpenter and Joiner. (R. Riddell.),. . . 
hemistry of the Farm. (Nichols.). 
Cider-Maker's Manual.... 
Downing's Cottage Residences.. ... 
Downing’s Rural Essays.,. . 
Du Breuil’s Vineyard Culture. (Dr. Warder.). 
Farming for Boys.. 
Fishing in American Waters. (Scott.). 
Flagg's European Vineyards. 
Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses... 
Flint's Milch Cows and Dairy Farming.... 
Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding.. 
Gray’s How Plants Grow. 
Gray's Manual of Botany and Lessons, in one vol.. 
Gray’s School and Field Book of Botany. 
Harazthy’s Grape Culture and Wine-Making. 
Hatfield’s American House Carpenter. 
Hay’s Interior Decorator. . 
Horse Training Made Easy. (Jennings.). 
Husmann’s Grapes and Wine. . 
Jennings on Cattle. 
Jennings on Sheep, Swine, and Poultry. 
Jennings on the Horse and his Diseases . 
Kemp’s Lan dscapc Gardening. 
Langstroth on the Honey Bee. 
Maynew’s Illustrated Horse Doctor'.. 
Mayhew’s Illustrated Horse Management. 
Mayhew’s Practical Book-Keeping for Farmers_ 
Blanks for do do do. 
Manufacture of Vinegar (Dussauce). 
Mechanic’s Companion. (Nicholson.). 
Morrell's American Shepherd. 
Mrs. Hale's New Cook Book. 
My Farm of Edgewood. 
Norris' Fish Culture. 
Packard’s A Guide to the Study of Insects. 
Painter, Gilder, and Varnisher. 
Quincv (Hon. Josinli) on Soiling Cattle. . - 
Quinn's Money in the Garden. 
Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit.. 
Rand’s Bulbs. 
Rand’s Flowers for Parlor and Garden. 
Register of Rural Affairs. Bound, 5 vols., each. 
Riddell's New Elements of Hand Railing. 
Roosevelt’s Five Acres too Much. 
Rural Studies.. 
Scribner's Ready Reckoner and Log-Book. 
Silloway’s Modern Carpentry. 
Strong’s Cultivation of the Grape. 
Tegetmeier’s Poultry Book. 
Ten Acres Enough. . 
The Horse. (Stonehenge.) Eng. edition, 8vo„ 622 pages. 
The Mule. (Riley.)... . 
Thomas’ Fruit Culturist. 
Trapper’s Guide. 
Tucker's Register of Rural Affairs... 
Vaux’s Villas and Cottages.. 
Watson’s American Home Garden. 
Tollman's Household Science.. 
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READ 
The New Story, 
By the author of “ The Hoosier School-Master,” 
The extraordinary success of Edward Eg¬ 
gleston’s Hoosier School-Master,which appeared 
in Hearth and Home last autumn, and which 
was pronounced by the leading authorities in 
literature one of the most admirable pictures of 
Western life ever produced, lias given Mr. Eg¬ 
gleston a high rank as a writer of fiction. 
The Publisheus have great pleasure in an¬ 
nouncing that Mr. Eggleston has almost com¬ 
pleted a New Story, the publication of which 
was begun in Hearth and Home, No. 16, 
April 20th, witli profuse Illustrations by the best 
Artists. It is entitled 
THE END OF THE WORLD. 
A LOVE STORY. 
The scene is laid in the West thirty years ago, 
and we feel sure that the story will excel The 
Hoosier School-Master in vividness, humor, and 
powerful delineation of character. 
Annual subscriptions for Hearth and 
Home, at Three Dollars, may begin with the 
story, and the Publishers make a special 
offer of the paper from the commencement 
of the story to the end of 1872 (more than eight 
months) for Two Dollars. 
Orange Judd & Go., 
243 Broadway, New York. 
Have You Head It? 
8th Thousand 
Selling Rapidly. 
THE 
HOOSIER 
SCHOOL-MASTER. 
By EDWARD EGGLESTON. 
Finely Illustrated, with 12 Full-Page 
Engravings on Tinted Paper, 
and Numerous Other 
Cuts. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
Tlie development of the story is substantially a rude epic 
of truth, gentleness, and true pluck. For the young master, 
younger than most of his pupils, far more cultivated in 
every direction than any of the population, and practically 
religious, instructs the community as well as the school; 
reclaims some of the worst, foils some, and has some de¬ 
tected and punished; encourages and loves, and Is loved 
by a charming orphan, and graduates into a higher position 
with the highest honors. The moral is one of robust man¬ 
hood confirmed in the worst conditions.—American and 
Gazette (Philadelphia). 
The talent of the author is by no means limited to exter¬ 
nal observation, but extends below the surface to shrewd 
recognition of the lights and shades of character. He 
makes free use of the comic element in his descriptions, 
but only when comic objects fall in his way; lie is not al¬ 
ways bound on a forlorn pursuit of fun, and does his read¬ 
ers the justice to remember that they are capable of amuse¬ 
ment without being kept on a broad laugh by perpetual 
caricature. Although possessing a strong sense of the ludi¬ 
crous, lie is no cynic; lie is not one who rejoices I 11 making 
sport of the faults and foibles of his fellow-creatures; bis 
power of satire furnishes him with a trenchant blade, but 
lie lias too much good-nature to use it for mischief. Tlie 
kindly tone of liis volume does not at all detract from its 
piquant effect, while it will recommend it to many readers 
who prefer humanity to ill-liumor.— New York Tribune. 
It is full of quaint humor, a tender pathos, and vivid de¬ 
scriptions.— New York Standard. 
Tlie “ events ” are stirring and dramatic, and tlie style is 
quiet, impersonal, and almost epigrammatic in its ability to 
lay bare an entire situation or character in a sentence or 
phrase.— Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 
It is at once quaint and truthful, and illustrated as it is hi’ 
masterly cuts, it should be one of tlie most popular 
books.— Christian Standard (Cincinnati). 
For realistic conception and life-like delineation of char¬ 
acter, it is not excelled by any American story.— Methodist. 
Mr. Eggleston’s powerful novel, 11 Tlie Hoosier Scliool- 
Master,” increases In Interest as It goes on, and contains 
some characters truly original.— Springfield Republican. 
Some passages in it, for life-like delineation and tlie sim¬ 
ple, artless beauty which constitute tlie highest perfection 
of story-writing, are equal to some of tlie very best passages 
in Dickens.— Religious Telescope. 
Edward Eggleston's genius for story-telling is now flower¬ 
ing out in “Tlie Hoosier School-Master,” an illustrated 
story, which promises to be of rare interest.— Sunday-school 
Times. 
Edward Eggleston’s story, “The Hoosier School-Master,” 
affords one of tlie most graphic and picturesque portrait¬ 
ures of the early frontier life ot tlie West which lias ever 
been written. Some of his character sketches are inimita¬ 
ble, and all have an individuality and freshness which stamp 
him as a genuine artist.— N. Y. Evening Mail. 
The London Fun says of this book, an edition of which 
has appeared in England: 
“ The Hoosier School-Master, both by its description as a 
book of American humor and by tlie cut on tlie wrapper, 
would lead one to suppose it was something in tlie ‘Josh 
Billings ’ line. It is, however, a pleasant disappointment to 
find it a charming story ill the vein of Wendell Holmes; 
humorous it is true, but full of a rough, natural pathos that 
will commend itself to all readers. We must keep an eye on 
Mr. Eggleston.” 
PRICE, POST-PAID.$1.25. 
Orange Judd & Co., 
245 Broadway, New York. 
