234r 
AMERICAN AG-RICTJLTURIST. 
[JUNK, 
SUPERIOR STANDARD WORKS 
Published by ORMCoTjUDB AID COMPAIY. 
THE HORSE 
FRANK FORESTER’S 
HORSE & HORSEMAISHIP 
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 S-IORSES, 
including pedigrees, histories, and performances. 
Two superb royal octavo volumes of upward of 1300 pages. 
Post-Paid, Fifteen Dollars. 
American Trotting Register. 
CONTAINING ALL THAT 18 KNOWN OF THE 
PEDIGREES OP TKOTTING 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 186S, and 
a full record of the performances of 1809 and 1870. 
Giving complete Summaries of over G,000 Contests. 
With au Introductory Essay on the true 
origin of the American 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, Five Dollars. 
WALLACE’S AMERICAN STUD-BO OIL 
Vol. One. Being a Compilation op the 
PEDIGREES OF AMERICAN AMD IM¬ 
PORTED BLOOD HORSES, 
from the earliest records, with an Appendix of all 
named animals without extended Pedigrees prior 
to the year 1840. 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 1SGG. Bj’ J. H. WALLACE. Royal octavo 
of over 1000 pages elegantly bound in extra cloth, 
beveled hoards, and splendidly illustrated. 
Post-paid, Ten Dollars. 
Horse Portraiture. ■— Breeding, 
Rearing, and Training Trotters. Prepara¬ 
tions for Races, Management in the Stable, on 
the Track, Horse Life, etc. By Joseph Cairn 
Simpson. Post octavo. Post-paid, $3.50. 
FIELD SPORTS. 
ir. 
Prank Forester’s Field Sports. 
Embracing the Game of North America, Upland Shoot¬ 
ing, Bay Shooting, Wild Sporting ot the Wilderness, 
Forest, Prairie, and Mountain Sports, Bear Hunting, 
Turkey Shooting, etc. 13th edition, revised and illus¬ 
trated. Two post octavo volumes. Post-paid, $ti.(j0. 
Frank Forester’s Fish and Fishing. 
100 engravings. Embracing a full illustrated description 
of the Game Fish of North America ; Trout, and Salmon 
F’isliing; Shoal Water and Deep Sea Fishing; Lake and 
River Fishing ; Trolling, Fly Fishing, etc. 13th 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 Break¬ 
ing, Management, and Hunting of the Dog. The vari¬ 
eties and habits of Game. River, Lake, aud Sea Fishing. 
Post octavo. Post-paid, $3.00. 
Frank Forester’s American Game in its 
SEASONS, Fully Illustrated and Described. New edi¬ 
tion, post-paid, $3.00. 
The Dog'. 
By Dinks, Mayhew & Hutchinson. Compiled and edited 
by Frank Forester. Containing full instructions in all 
that relates to ttie Breeding, Rearing, Breaking, Kennel¬ 
ing, and Condilioning of Dogs, wilh valuable recipes for 
tlie treatment of all diseases. Illustrated. Post octavo. 
Post-paid, $3.00. 
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 de¬ 
scription of the latestimproved breecli-loading weapons; 
rules and regulations for Target Practice, and directions 
for Hunting 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. 
Frank Forester.—The Captains cf the Gld 
WORLD, as Compared wild the Great Modern Strate¬ 
gists; tlieir Campaigns, Characters, and Conduct, from 
the Persian to the Punic Wars. By Uiney William 
Herbert. Post-paid, $3.00. 
Frank Forester,—The Captains of the 
GP.EAT ROMAN REPUBLIC, as'Compared with the 
Great Modern Strategists; their Campaigns, Characters, 
and Conduct, from the Punic Wars lo the death of Caesar. 
By Henry William Herbert. Post-paid, $3.00. 
AGRICULTURE. 
Woodward’s Graperies and Horticultural 
BUILDINGS. Designs and Plans of Hot-beds, Cold Pits, 
Propagating Houses, Forcing Houses, Hot and Cold 
Graperies, Greenhouses,Conservatories, Orchard Houses, 
etc., with the various modes of Ventilating and Heating. 
Post-paid, $1.50. 
Jacques’ Manual of the Garden, Farm, 
AND BARN-YARD. Embracing the Cultivation of 
Vegetables, Fruit, Flowers, all Field Crops, Details of 
Farm Work and Rearing Domestic Animals. New and 
Revised Edition. One volume. Post-paid, $1.73. 
Young Farmer’s Manual. 
Vol. I. The Farm and the Workshop, with Practical 
Directions for laying out a Farm, Erecting Buildings, 
Fences, Farm Gates, Selecting good Farm and Shop 
Tools, and performing Farm Operations. Fully Illus¬ 
trated. Post-paid, $1.75. 
Young 1 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, $1.75. 
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. 
Elliott’s 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. 
ORANGE JUDD & CO., 245 Broadway, New York. 
Gardening for Profit 
In the Market and Family Garden, 
By Peter Henderson. 
ILLUSTRATED. 
Notices by the press. 
All the vegetables that thrive in the open air in ©nr 
latitude are described, together with the best methods 
for growing them. The author also imparts practical 
instructions on the subjects of drainage, aud the forma¬ 
tion and management of hot-beds. Numerous well-ex¬ 
ecuted wood-ents tend to make clearer the instructions Ot 
the author .—Philadelphia Inquirer. 
The author of this treatise is one of the best known 
and most successful of those gardeners who supply New 
York with green vegetables; and as he writes from long 
aud dear-bought experience', the positive, dogmatic tone 
he often assumes is by no means unbecoming. The book 
itself is intended to bo a guide for beginners embarking 
in the author’s business, and gives full and explicit direc¬ 
tions about all the operations connected with market¬ 
gardening, lists of varieties of the most profitable vege¬ 
tables, and much sound advice on kindred topics. Though 
designed for a special class, it cau not fail to be valuable 
to the amateur and private gardener, and unlucky experi¬ 
ence has taught ns that the information contained in a 
single chapter would have been worth to us the price of 
the book .—Daily Mercury (New Bedford). 
It is unquestionably tho most thorough and the best 
work of its kind we have yet had from, the pen of au 
American author. It is written in a clear, concise style, 
and thus made more comprehensive than works which 
smack more of the office than the farm or garden. 
[Daily Evening Times (Bangor, Me.). 
Mr. Henderson writes from knowledge, and is not one 
of those amateur cultivators whose potatoes cost them 
ten dollars a bushel, and whose eggs ought to he as 
valuable as those of that other member of their family— 
the goose of golden-egg-laying memory—for they are all 
but priceless. No; he is a practical man, and he has the 
art of imparting the knowledge he possesses in a very 
agreeable manner ; and he has brought together an ex¬ 
traordinary amount of useful matter in a small volume, 
which those who would “garden for profit’’ ought to 
study carefully .—Evening Traveller (Boston). 
There are marvels of transformation and rapid repro¬ 
duction recorded therein, which might well shame the 
dull fancy of the author of Aladdin or of Kaloolah. 
There is no theory about it; a man who has made him¬ 
self rich by market-gardening plainly tells ohr young 
men how they can get rich as easily as he did, and with¬ 
out wandering to California or Montana for it cither. 
[Horace Greeley in tho E. 3”. Tribune. 
We have devoted more space to this little work than 
we usually do to tomes much more pretentious. We have 
done so because of the rare merits of the hook in its 
fund of information, useful to the farmer and market- 
gardener, and because of the dearth of that kind of 
knowledge. We earnestly advise that fraternity, for 
whom this work was written, to buy it and study it. If 
any among them have never yet read a hook, let this be 
their primer, and wo will vouch for the excellence and 
endurance of the priming. The work is profusely illus¬ 
trated with wood-cuts .—Louisville Daily Journal. 
Price, post-paid, $1.50. 
ORANGE JUDD & COMPANY, 
245 Broadway, New Yobs. 
