INDEX.
- Ammonia Arising, [54]
- Anguillulæ, [124]
- Apparatus, Hot Water, [33]
- Atmosphere, Manure Steam for Moistening, [114]
- Remedying a too Dry, [114]
- Barn Cellars, [10]
- Bedding, Wetted with Urine, [58]
- Beds, [16]
- Alongside of Wall, [18]
- Banked Against a Wall, [53]
- Bearing in November, [25]
- Black Spot in the, [108]
- Boring Holes in, to Reduce Temperature, [76]
- Bottom of, [17]
- Box, [17]
- Casing, after Spawning, [100]
- Casing the, [104]
- Earthing Over the, [103]
- Experiments as to Proper Time to Case, [104]
- Fifteen Inches Thick, [22]
- Firmly Built, [76]
- Flat, [50]
- Flat, Sods fit only for, [107]
- Floor, [19]
- Flooring for the, [28]
- Green Sods, Method of Casing, [106]
- Killing the Mycelium in, [96]
- Loam for, [100]
- Manure, [20]
- Maximum Heat of Best, [75]
- Midwinter, [39]
- Mulching, [23]
- Mushroom, [12]
- Never Spawn, when Heat is Rising, [96]
- Odorless, in Dwelling House Cellars, [21]
- Of Low Temperature, [77]
- On the Floor, [13]
- Outside, [12]
- Parching Effect Visible on, [26]
- Picking "Fogged-off" Mushrooms from, [108]
- Rack, [13]
- Re-Invigorating Old, [120]
- Renovating Old, in England, [142]
- Ridge, [17]
- Second Crop from, [120]
- Shelf, [16], 29
- Spawned at 66° to 70°, [97]
- Spawning and Molding, [14]
- Spawning the, [96]
- Spent Mushroom, [121]
- Stale, [76]
- Tamping Surface of, [23]
- Temperature of a Twelve Inch Thick Bed, [96]
- Ten or Twelve Inches Deep, [19]
- Tending the, [17]
- Three Feet Deep, [25]
- To Keep, Warm, [109]
- Topdressed, [23]
- Under Greenhouse Benches, To make, [53]
- Watering, [24]
- Watering the, [108]
- Watering Mushroom, [111]
- When Dry to be Watered, [111]
- Wide, With Pathway Above,* [44]
- Worn Out, [120]
- Beetles, Larvæ of Two, Destroying Mycelium, [132]
- Benches Covered, [40]
- Black Spot, [124]
- Boards, Stepping, [17]
- Boiler and Pipes, [32]
- Boilers, Hitching's Base-burner, [31]
- Boxing, [19]
- "Bullet" or "Shot" Holes in Mushrooms, [128]
- Bugs, Mealy, [12]
- Calico, [18]
- Caves, [17]
- Caves of Paris, In the,* [147]
- Paris, Description of, [143]
- French Spawn Used in, [146]
- Gathering Mushrooms for Market in the, [149]
- Making Beds in the, [145]
- Manure Used in the, [144]
- Material Used for and Method of Earthing Over in, [146]
- Methods of Regulating Draughts in the, [150]
- Preparation of Manure for the, [144]
- Paris, Spawn Used in the, and How Obtained, [145]
- Stratifying Spawn Before Using in the, [146]
- Temperature in Spacious, High Roofed, [147]
- Ventilation in the, [148]
- When and How Mushrooms are Gathered in the, [148]
- Ceiling, Flat, [37]
- Cellar, Barn, [13]
- Cleanliness in the Mushroom, [26]
- Cool, [19]
- Cross-section of the Dosoris Mushroom,* [27]
- Dosoris Mushroom, [27]
- Divided, [30]
- Ground Plan of the Dosoris,* [28]
- Height of, [17]
- House, [13]
- Interior Arrangements of, [16]
- Mushroom, Under a Barn,* [16]
- Of Dwelling House, [18]
- Ordinary, [21]
- Outhouse, [18]
- Pent-up, [17]
- Unheated, [17]
- Vegetable, [12]
- Warm, [19]
- Wholly Devoted to Mushroom Growing, [15]
- Cellars, [10]
- Cistern, Large Underground, [18]
- Coal, Nut and Stove, [33]
- Cold and Vermin, [19]
- Cooking Mushrooms, [150]
- Crop, Common Average, [30]
- Crops, Capital, [17]
- Cut Flower Season, [11]
- Dirt, Roadside, [101]
- Doors, Double, [16]
- Drip, Cold, Falling upon Beds, [36]
- Dust and Noxious Gas, [17]
- Entrance, [16]
- Entrance Pits, [30]
- Economy, False, [37]
- Families, Private, [18]
- Farmers, [13]
- Flies, Manure, [126]
- Fire, Danger of, [33]
- Flock, [132]
- Floor, A Dry, Necessary, [47]
- Flooring, [29]
- Fogging Off, [106], 131
- Florists, [11]
- Florists' Greenhouses, [10]
- Frame, Boxed-up with Straw Covering,* [19]
- Frost, Hoar, [35]
- To Exclude, [40]
- Fruit Room, [12]
- Furnace, Boxed off, [17]
- Gardens, Private, [37]
- Grapery, Beds and Frames Inside the, [13]
- Greenhouse Bench, Boxed Mushroom Bed Under,* [41]
- Greenhouse Benches, Among Other Plants on, [48]
- Greenhouse Benches, On, [42]
- Greenhouse Benches, Under, [47]
- Greenhouses, Beds in Open, Airy, [53]
- Growers, Parisian, [60]
- Heat, Artificial not Absolutely Necessary, [17]
- Heater, Base-burning Water,* [32]
- Vertical Section,* [32]
- Heating Apparatus, [28]
- Hoe, Angular-pointed, [23]
- Hops, Spent, [68]
- Spent, Cost Nothing, [69]
- Horses, Those who Keep, [13]
- Hotbed Frames, [44]
- House, A Mushroom, [34]
- Houses, Fruit-forcing, [12]
- Insecticide, Common Salt as an, [113]
- Leaves, Condition of, to Heat, [68]
- Lettuce House, Moisture of, [10]
- Lice, Wood, [129]
- Loam and Manure, [11]
- Loam, Coating, [20]
- Lot, Village or Suburban, [13]
- Manure, [13]
- Baled, [64]
- Cellar, [62]
- City Stable, [63]
- Common Horse, [21]
- Cow, [65]
- Cow, Necessary in Manufacture of Spawn, [66]
- Drying by Exposure, [71]
- Fermenting Fresh Horse, [24]
- "Fire-fanged," [62]
- Firmly Packed, [70]
- Flies, [124], 126
- Fresh, [12]
- Fresher the Better, [58]
- From City Stables, [26]
- German Peat Moss Stable, [66]
- Handling, [35]
- Homemade, [60]
- Horse, [57]
- Hog, Mycelium Evades, [63]
- Liquid, [113]
- Liquid, Cow and Sheep, [113]
- Of Entire Horses, [60]
- Of Horses fed with Carrots, [61]
- Of Mules, [62]
- Preparation of the, [69]
- Preserve the Wet and Strawy Part, [60]
- Proper Condition of, [72]
- Sawdust Stable, [66]
- Selected, [63]
- Steaming Hot, [24]
- The Best, [57]
- To Prevent "fire-fang" in, [70]
- Turning the, [14], 71
- Warm, [13]
- Well-rotted, [14]
- Without Preparatory Treatment, [22]
- Market, A Good, [25]
- Markets, Brooklyn, [26]
- In Winter, [10]
- Materials, Exhausted, [16]
- Method, Mr. Denton's, [25]
- Methods, Avoiding Complicated, [21]
- Mice and Rats, [130]
- Mice, How they Disfigure Mushrooms, [130]
- Mites not a Mushroom Pest, [130]
- Moisture, Condensation of, [46]
- Mold on Beds, How Deep to Put, [105]
- Money, Pin- [14]
- Mushroom, A Perfect,* [116]
- Affected with Black Spot,* [125]
- Bed Built Flat on the Ground,* [52]
- Bed Five Feet Wide, Profit from, [12]
- Bed, Rigid,* [53]
- Beds, [11]
- Beds in England, How made, [137]
- Beds, Making up the, [74]
- Beds, Manure-fatted Loam in, [26]
- Beds, Manure for, [57]
- Beds, Mr. Wilson's,* [51]
- Beds on Greenhouse Benches, Objection to, [42]
- Beds, Sites for Around London, [137]
- Cellar, Perspective View of the Dosoris,* [58]
- Crop, [13]
- Flock-Diseased,* [133]
- Food, [24]
- Growing in the Paris Caves, [143]
- Growing Out of Doors a Specialty, [136]
- Growing, Profit of, Around London, [136]
- Growing, Success in, [12]
- House, A Regular, [12]
- House, Best Kind of, [11]
- House, Cellar Everybody's, [15]
- House, Damping Floors of, [115]
- Houses, Cleaning the, [135]
- Houses, Growing Mushrooms in, [34]
- Houses, Ideal, [15]
- Houses, Whitewashing, [135]
- Season Closed, [31]
- Spawn, [78]
- The "Horse," [48]
- A Winter Crop, [14]
- Advantages of Pulling over Cutting, [117]
- After a Dry Summer, [55]
- And Grapevines, [13]
- Black Spot in, [124]
- Cause of Black Spot in, [124]
- English, [115]
- Filling Stump Holes with Fresh Loam, [117]
- Five Inch Diameter before Expanding, [47]
- For Family Use, [13]
- For Soups, When to Pick, [116]
- Fresh, [12]
- From Natural Spawn, [48]
- From October Until May, [30]
- Gathering and Marketing, [115]
- Gathering Field and Wild, [118]
- Gathering in Cold Weather, [140]
- Good, [19]
- Growing in Cellars, [15]
- Growing in Fields, [54]
- Growing, in Narrow Troughs, [59]
- Growing in Ridges Around London, [136]
- Growing in Sawdust, [67]
- Grown on Greenhouse Benches,* [43]
- Growth of from Spawning under Different Temperatures, [110]
- Head Room, [19]
- Importance of Care in Gathering and Packing for Shipment, [119]
- In August and September, [56]
- In Crates and Baskets, [118]
- In the Fields, Plan of Growing, [55]
- Insect and Other Enemies of, [122]
- Knack in Pulling, [117]
- Maggots in, [122], [124]
- "Maggots" in, appear in April, [123]
- Maggots, Size of, in, [123]
- Marketed in Paper Boxes, [118]
- Marketing, [118]
- Not a Bulky Crop, [11]
- On Greenhouse Bench Under Tomatoes, [45]
- Packed in Punnets for London Market, [119]
- Picking so as not to Disturb Buttons, [117]
- "Pin-Head," [107]
- Profit on, Clear Gain, [51]
- Proper Manner of Picking, [116]
- Pulled, Keeping Qualities of, [117]
- Scooping Out the Stumps, [117]
- Sold by the Pound, [118]
- Sorting and Packing for Market, in England, [141]
- Summer Crops of, [123]
- Under the Benches, [11]
- When Fit to Pick, [115]
- Who Should Grow, [9]
- Wild, [55]
- Mulching, When to Remove, [42]
- Mycelium, Liquid to Encourage Spread of, [77]
- Odor, Bad, [20]
- Outbuildings, [12]
- Paper, Building, [52]
- Oiled, [18]
- Passage-ways, [18]
- Pathways, [16]
- Peat Moss, Bale of German, [66]
- Pipes, Heating, [17]
- Private Gardeners, [12]
- Rats, More Destructive than Mice, [131]
- Recipes for Cooking and Preserving Mushrooms, [150]
- A la Casse, Tout, [157]
- A la Crême, [154]
- Baked, [152], [156]
- Broiled, [154], [156]
- Broiled Beefsteak and, [158]
- Cooked, General Directions for Serving, [152]
- Cooking, [150]
- Cooking, General Preparation of, for, [151]
- Curried, [154]
- Dried, [160]
- Gilbert's Breakfast, [156]
- Ketchup, [160], 161, [162]
- Kind of, to Select for, [150]
- Pickled, [162]
- Potted, [155]
- Powder, [159]
- Soup, [154]
- Soyer's Breakfast, [153]
- Stems, [155]
- Stewed, [153], 157
- To Dry, [159]
- To Preserve, [158]
- Ridges, [17]
- Roof, [35]
- Roofs water-tight, [39]
- Salad Plants, [10]
- Sashes, [46]
- Secret, No, [14]
- Shading on Sunny Days, [42]
- Shaft, Chimney-like, [16]
- Shaft, Tall, Wooden, [28]
- Shed, Open on South Side, [39]
- Sheds, Growing Mushrooms in, [39]
- Unheated, [40]
- Shelves, Temporary Structures, [25]
- Shutters, Light Wooden, [53]
- Slugs, [127]
- Soil, Conditions of for Casing, [105]
- Southern States, [10]
- Spawn, [13]
- American-made, [86]
- Amount of Imported, [80]
- Another Method by Lachaume, [94]
- Black Colored to be Avoided, [86]
- Breaking, [23]
- Brick,* [80]
- Brick, Cut in Pieces for Planting,* [97]
- Brick, How to Make, [87]
- Brick, the Best, [95]
- Depth to Plant, [98]
- Effect of Heat and Moisture Upon, [83]
- Effect of Severe Frost Upon, [83]
- English, [81]
- English Brick, [23]
- Flake, [82], [99]
- Flake, Does Best under Cover, [95]
- Flake or French,* [82]
- French, [82]
- French Flake, [24]
- Homemade Around London, [137]
- How to Distinguish Good from Poor, [84]
- How to Get, [79]
- How to Keep, [83]
- How to make French (Flake), [91]
- Imported from Europe, [79]
- In Leaf Beds, [68]
- In Manure, Do not Bury, [10]
- Inserting French or Flake, [98]
- Inserting more than Three Inches Deep, [105]
- Insuring Development of, [49]
- Lachaume's Method of Making, [93]
- Making, Distinct Branch, [87]
- Making French Virgin, [92]
- Mill-track, [81]
- Mr. J. Burton's Method of Making, [90]
- Natural, [81]
- New Versus Old, [83]
- Never use Dibber in Planting, [98]
- Other Recipes for Making, [89]
- Planting of in Open Fields, [54]
- Preparing the, [97]
- Principal American Growers of, [86]
- Relative Merits of Flake and Brick, [94]
- Signs of Sterility in, [85]
- Simplest Way of Making, [88]
- Steeped, [99]
- The Way in which it Comes, [81]
- To tell Quality by Smell of, [85]
- Transplanting Pieces of Working, [99]
- "Very Dead," [84]
- "Very Living," [84]
- Virgin, [82], [91]
- What is Mushroom, [78]
- Where Obtained, [79]
- Spiders, Red, [12]
- Spores, Myriads of, [78]
- Spurious Fungi, [102]
- Stable, Empty Stall in Horse, [13]
- Staging, Erecting Temporary, [46]
- Stairway, [16]
- In Pit, [32]
- Standard Crop, [9]
- Stoke-hole, [12]
- Stove, Common Iron, [26]
- Straw, Rye, [47]
- Sunlight, Protection from, [10]
- Temperature, [10]
- Thrips, [12]
- Toads, [131]
- Toadstools, [102]
- Trapping Rats and Mice, [131]
- Traps for Wood Lice, [129]
- Tunnel, Subterranean, [27]
- Ventilation, Assisting, [17]
- Ventilator, Chimney-like, [22]
- Ventilators, [16], [28]
- Village People and Suburban Residents, [13]
- Wall, Cold, not Injurious, [30]
- Walls, [35]
- Warmth, Artificial, [17]
- Steady, [17]
- Water, Manure, for Beds in Full Bearing, [112]
- Space and Double Casing, [32]
- Watering, Endeavor to Lessen Necessity of, [111]
- Wife, Farmer's, [14]
- Windows, [16]
- Winds, Piercing, and Draughts, [39]
- Women Searching for Remunerative Employment, [14]
- Wood Lice, [129]
- Work, Clean, [14]
A Valuable Periodical for everybody in City, Village, and Country.
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Useful and Ornamental Breeds and their Profitable Management. This excellent work contains the combined experience of a number of practical men in all departments of poultry raising. It is profusely illustrated and forms an unique and important addition to our poultry literature. Cloth, 12mo. 1.00
Barn Plans and Outbuildings.
Two Hundred and Fifty-seven Illustrations. A most Valuable Work, full of Ideas, Hints, Suggestions, Plans, etc., for the Construction of Barns and Outbuildings, by Practical writers. Chapters are devoted, among other subjects, to the Economic Erection and Use of Barns. Grain Barns, House Barns, Cattle Barns, Sheep Barns, Corn Houses, Smoke Houses, Ice Houses, Pig Pens, Granaries, etc. There are likewise chapters upon Bird Houses, Dog Houses, Tool Sheds, Ventilators, Roofs and Roofing, Doors and Fastenings, Work Shops, Poultry Houses, Manure Sheds, Barn Yards, Root Pits, etc. Recently published. Cloth, 12mo. 1.50
Parsons on the Rose.
By Samuel B. Parsons. A treatise on the propagation, culture, and history of the rose. New and revised edition. In his work upon the rose, Mr. Parsons has gathered up the curious legends concerning the flower, and gives us an idea of the esteem in which it was held in former times. A simple garden classification has been adopted, and the leading varieties under each class enumerated and briefly described. The chapters on multiplication, cultivation, and training are very full, and the work is altogether one of the most complete before the public. Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo. 1.00
Heinrich's Window Flower Garden.
The author is a practical florist, and this enterprising volume embodies his personal experiences in Window Gardening during a long period. New and enlarged edition. By Julius J. Heinrich. Fully Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo. .75
Liautard's Chart of the Age of the Domestic Animals.
Adopted by the United States Army. Enables one to accurately determine the age of horses, cattle, sheep, dogs, and pigs. .50
Pedder's Land Measurer for Farmers.
A convenient Pocket Companion, showing at once the contents of any piece of land, when its length and width are known, up to 1,500 feet either way, with various other useful farm tables. Cloth, 18mo; .60
How to Plant and What to Do with the Crops.
With other valuable hints for the Farm, Garden and Orchard. By Mark W. Johnson. Illustrated. Contents: Times for Sowing Seeds; Covering Seeds; Field Crops; Garden or Vegetable Seeds, Sweet Herbs, etc.; Tree Seeds; Flower Seeds; Fruit Trees; Distances Apart for Fruit Trees and Shrubs; Profitable Farming; Green or Manuring Crops; Root Crops; Forage Plants; What to do with the Crops; The Rotation of Crops; Varieties; Paper Covers, post-paid. .50
Your Plants.
Plain and Practical Directions for the Treatment of Tender and Hardy Plants in the House and in the Garden. By James Sheehan. The above title well describes the character of the work—"Plain and Practical." The author, a commercial florist and gardener, has endeavored, in this work, to answer the many questions asked by his customers, as to the proper treatment of plants. The book shows all through that its author is a practical man, and he writes as one with a large store of experience. The work better meets the wants of the amateur who grows a few plants in the window, or has a small flower Garden, than a larger treatise intended for those who cultivate plants upon a more extended-scale. Price, post-paid, paper covers. .40
Husmann's American Grape-Growing and Wine-Making.
By George Husmann of Talcoa vineyards, Napa, California. New and enlarged edition. With contributions from well-known grape-growers, giving a wide range of experience. The author of this book is a recognized authority on the subject. Cloth, 12mo. 1.50
The Scientific Angler.
A general and instructive work on Artistic Angling, by the late David Foster. Compiled by his Sons. With an Introductory Chapter and Copious Foot Notes, by William C. Harris, Editor of the "American Angler." Cloth, 12mo. 1.50
Keeping One Cow.
A collection of Prize Essays, and selections from a number of other Essays, with editorial notes, suggestions, etc. This book gives the latest information, and in a clear and condensed form, upon the management of a single Milch Cow. Illustrated with full-page engravings of the most famous dairy cows. Recently published. Cloth, 12mo. 1.00
Law's Veterinary Adviser.
A Guide to the Prevention and Treatment of Disease in Domestic Animals. This is one of the best works on this subject, and is especially designed to supply the need of the busy American Farmer, who can rarely avail himself of the advice of a Scientific Veterinarian. It is brought up to date and treats of the Prevention of Disease, as well as of the Remedies. By Prof. Jas. Law. Cloth, Crown 8vo. 3.00
Guenon's Treatise on Milch Cows.
A Treatise on the Bovine Species in General. An entirely new translation of the last edition of this popular and instructive book. By Thos. J. Hand, Secretary of the American Jersey Cattle Club. With over 100 Illustrations, especially engraved for this work. Cloth, 12mo. 1.00
The Cider Maker's Handbook.
A complete guide for making and keeping pure cider. By J. M. Trowbridge. Fully Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo. 1.00
Long's Ornamental Gardening for Americans.
A treatise on Beautifying Homes, Rural Districts, and Cemeteries. A plain and practical work at a moderate price, with numerous illustrations, and instructions so plain that they may be readily followed. By Elias A. Long. Landscape Architect. Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo. 2.00
The Dogs of Great Britain, America and Other Countries.
New, enlarged and revised edition. Their breeding training and management, in health and disease; comprising all the essential parts of the two standard works on the dog, by "Stonehenge," thereby furnishing for $2 what once cost $11.25. Contains Lists of all Premiums given at the last Dog Shows. It Describes the Best Game and Hunting Grounds in America. Contains over One Hundred Beautiful Engravings, embracing most noted Dogs in both Continents, making together, with Chapters by American Writers, the most Complete Dog Book ever published. Cloth, 12mo. 2.00
Stewart's Feeding Animals.
By Elliot W. Stewart. A new and valuable practical work upon the laws of animal growth, specially applied to the rearing and feeding horses, cattle, diary cows, sheep and swine. Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo. 2.00
How to Co-operate.
A Manual for Co-operators. By Herbert Myrick. This book describes the how rather than the wherefore of co-operation. In other words it tells how to manage a co-operative store, farm or factory, and co-operative dairying, banking and fire insurance, and co-operative farmers' and women's exchanges for both buying and selling. The directions given are based on the actual experience of successful co-operative enterprises in all parts of the United States. The character and usefulness of the book commend it to the attention of all men and women who desire to better their condition. 12mo. Cloth. 1.50
Transcriber's Notes:
1. Changed Page 1 to Page 9 in Table of Contents Chapter I.
2. Asterisks are used in the index to refer to illustrations.