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RABBITS, HARES,

HEDGEHOGS, SQUIRRELS,

MICE, TORTOISES. Coloured Plates. Many Woodcuts.

BEES, SILKWORMS, INHABITANTS of the AQUARIUM, FERNS. Many Woodcuts.

BRITISH SONG BIRDS. Coloured Plates. Many

Woodcuts.

BRITISH SONG and TALKING BIRDS. Coloured Plates. Many Woodcuts.

THE PARROT TRIBES, HAWKS, and OWLS. Coloured Plates. Many Woodcuts.

BIRDS' NESTS and EGGS, TAXIDERMY (Bird Stuffing). Coloured Plate. Woodcut.

Price 7s. 6d., post 8vo, half roan, illustrated; half calf, 10s. 6d.,
BEETON'S

ARDEN MANAGEMENT.

d Street, Covent Garden.

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Embracing SHOOTING, HUNTING, COURSING, FISHING, HAWKING, RACING, BOATING, PEDESTRIANISM, and the various Rural Games and Amusements of Great Britain.

Illustrated with many Hundred Engravings.

"Scarcely any of the conventional methods of pursuing sport in the country are left undescribed by STONEHENGE. We should say that every one who desires to understand how the most enjoyment can be extracted from life in the country upon visits to country friends, will be glad to be possessed of this full and solid volume, which may inform the most practical sportsman, while it will help the least practised through a course of rural revelries, without the risk of being thought a cit or a hedge cockney."-Athenæum.

"No one can doubt for an instant the utility and importance of outdoor amusements in promoting health, and this alone ought to be sufficient to cause their encouragement. In an age like the present, when, in the struggle for precedence in the senate, the bar, or the haunts of commerce, time is considered as of equal value with money, it can scarcely be wondered at, that many of the competitors in the race lose health, both of body and mind. Nothing enfeebles and lowers the bodily and mental tone more than an entire giving up of all the energies to one single pursuit. The overworked lawyer or merchant, however, has only to bestow an occasional day upon any one of the various sports within his reach, and he speedily recovers himself, and instead of losing way in the course which he is pursuing, he is enabled to do more than make up the lost time which his absence has occasioned, by the increased vigour that his change of scene and occupation have given him.

"Invaluable to all Sportsmen."-Bell's Life.

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"The very best and most instructive work on British Rural Sports."Sporting Review.

"The English Sportsman's vade-mecum."-Illustrated Nervs.

"A complete, readable, and instructive book."-The Field.

Bedford Street, Covent Garden.

A VALUABLE WORK FOR EVERY AGRICULTURIST.

Ín demy 8vo, price 10s. 6d. half-bound, 640 pp:,

FARMER'S

THE

CALENDAR.

By J. CHALMERS MORTON,

AUTHOR OF "THE PRINCE CONSORT'S FARMS," "THE CYCLOPÆDIA OF AGRICULTURE," " FARMER'S ALMANACK," ETC.

A systematic Work on Farm Practice, accompanied by Explanations and References to Theory when necessary; but mainly and intentionally descriptive of actual Experience and Work in Field, Fold, and Farmery. It is fully illustrated with Wood Engravings of Buildings, Land Drainage, Machinery, and Plants.

Mr. J. CHALMERS MORTON, from whose pen it comes, has long been well known as an agricultural writer, and by the description of Farm Practice in all parts of the country, which, during the last eighteen years, has been given in his paper, "The Weekly Agricultural Gazette." There is thus ample guarantee that the readers of this volume have not only the most trustworthy, but the latest agricultural experience laid before them in its pages.

Amongst the GENERAL CONTENTS will be found—

1. The whole work of all kinds of Farms is described in

monthly succession, as step by step it occupies the attention of the Farmer throughout the year.

2. The Cultivation of all kinds of Soil-their Drainage, Tillage, and Manuring.

3. The Cultivation of all Farm Crops--food for man or beast-including the lesson of actual experience on the different varieties of each, and on the cultivation proper for each.

4. The Breeding, Rearing, and Feeding of all the Live Stock of the Farm, including a full account of the several breeds of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, and Pigs; of their respective peculiarities and merits; of the Management required by each; the value of the different foods and processes employed in the meat manufacture; with in

formation on Marketing, Localities, and Prices.

5. The Use of all kinds of Agricultural Tools and Machines— for Hand-work, Horse-labour, and Steam-power respectively; and the Economy of their employment.

6. The relation of the Farmer to the Landowner, the Labourer, and the Sail, including all questions of Rent, Lease, Tenant's Rights, Wages, Permanent Improvements of Land by Buildings, Roads, Drains, Fences, &c.; and its Current Cultivation by Implements, Plants, and Animals, receives full and systematic narrȧtion.

7. The Influence of Weather, which overrides and influences all, is given in great detail, month by month, in reference to 30 or 40 stations in England, Scotland, and Ireland.

Bedford Street, Covent Garden.

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