How To Behave: A Pocket Manual Of Republican Etiquette, And Guide To Correct Personal Habits - BestLightNovel.com
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and how to use your riches wisely.
How to Write--How to Talk--How to Behave--How to Do Business, bound in one large handsome volume, for $2
PRACTICAL OUTDOOR BOOKS.
HOW TO RAISE FRUITS.--A Handbook of Fruit Culture. Being a Guide to the Proper Cultivation and Management of Fruit Trees, and of Grapes and Small Fruits, with condensed descriptions of many of the best and most popular varieties, with upwards of 100 engravings. By THOMAS GREGG. $1.00
A book which should be owned by every person who owns a rod of available land, and it will serve to secure success where now there is nothing but failure. It covers the ground fully, without technicalities, and is a work on "Fruit Culture for the Million."
It tells of the cost, how to plant, how to trim, how to transplant, location, soil, selection diseases, insects, borers, blights, cultivation, how to prune, manuring, layering, budding grafting, etc., including full description and management of Orchard Fruit, such as Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Cherries, Quinces, Apricots, Nectarines, etc. It is a most Complete Guide to Small-Fruit Culture, with many ill.u.s.trations and descriptions of the latest varieties of Grapes, Strawberries, Blackberries, Raspberries, Gooseberries, Currants, etc.
HOW TO PAINT.--A New Work by a Practical Painter. Denoted for the use of Farmers, Tradesmen, Mechanics, Merchants, and as a Guide to the Professional Painter. Containing a plain common-sense statement of the methods employed by painters to produce satisfactory results in Plain and Fancy Painting of every description, including Gilding, Bronzing, Staining, Graining, Marbling, Varnis.h.i.+ng, Polis.h.i.+ng, Kalsomining, Paper-Hanging, Striping, Lettering, Copying, and Ornamenting, with directions for mixing and applying all kinds of Paints. Makes "Every Man his Own Painter." $1.00.
THE MODEL POTATO.--An exposition of the proper cultivation of the Potato; the Causes of its Disease, and the Remedy; its Renewal, Preservation, Productiveness, and Cooking. 50 cents.
HORSES: THEIR FEED AND THEIR FEET.--A manual of horse hygiene, invaluable for the veteran or the novice, pointing out the causes of "Malaria," "Glanders," "Pink Eye," "Distemper," etc., and how to Prevent and Counteract them. By C. E. PAGE, M.D., with a Treatise and Notes on Shoeing by Sir George c.o.x and Col. M. C. Weld. 150 pp. 12mo, paper, 50 cents; extra cloth, 75 cents.
By mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. Address
FOWLER & WELLS CO., Publishers, 753 Broadway, New York
A NEW WORK.
_FRESH, SEASONABLE, ADVANCED._
BRAIN AND MIND;
OR
MENTAL SCIENCE CONSIDERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRINCIPLES OF PHRENOLOGY, AND IN RELATION TO MODERN PHYSIOLOGY
By HENRY S. DRAYTON, A.M., and JAMES McNEILL.
Ill.u.s.trated with over One Hundred Portraits and Diagrams.
12mo, extra cloth Price, $1.60.
This contribution to the science of mind has been made in response to the demand of the time for a work embodying the grand principles of Phrenology, as they are understood and applied to-day by the advanced exponents of mental philosophy. The authors state in their Preface: "In preparing this volume it has been the aim to meet an existing want, viz. That of a treatise which not only gives the reader a complete view of the system of mental science known as Phrenology, but also exhibits its relation to anatomy and physiology as those sciences are represented to-day by standard authority."
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CHAPTERS.
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II. OF THE TEMPERAMENTS.
III. STRUCTURE OF THE BRAIN AND SKULL.
IV. CLa.s.sIFICATION OF THE FACULTIES.
V. THE PHYSICO-PRESERVATIVE, OR SELFISH ORGANS.
VI. OF THE INTELLECT.
VII. THE SEMI-INTELLECTUAL FACULTIES.
VIII. THE ORGANS OF THE SOCIAL FUNCTIONS.
IX. THE SELFISH SENTIMENTS.
X. THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS.
XI. HOW TO EXAMINE HEADS.
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XIII. THE ACTION OF THE FACULTIES.
XIV. THE RELATION OF PHRENOLOGY TO METAPHYSICS AND EDUCATION.
XV. VALUE OF PHRENOLOGY AS AN ART.
XVI. PHRENOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY.
XVII. OBJECTIONS AND CONFIRMATIONS BY THE PHYSIOLOGISTS.
XVIII. PHRENOLOGY IN GENERAL LITERATURE.
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It is printed on fine paper, and substantially bound in cloth, and contains 325 pages. 12mo. Price $1.50, by mail post-paid.
_Address_ FOWLER & WELLS CO., 753 Broadway, N. Y.
HOW TO PAINT.
_"EVERY MAN HIS OWN PAINTER."_
How to Paint.--A complete Compendium of the Art. Designed for the use of Tradesmen, Mechanics, Merchants, Farmers, and a Guide to the Professional Painter. Containing a plain Common-sense statement of the Methods employed by Painters to produce satisfactory results in Plain and Fancy Painting of every Description, including Gilding, Bronzing, Staining, Graining, Marbling, Varnis.h.i.+ng, Polis.h.i.+ng, Kalsomining, Paper Hanging, Striping, Lettering, Copying and Ornamenting, with Formulas for Mixing Paint in Oil or Water. Description of Pigments used; their Average Cost, Tools required, etc. By F. B. GARDNER, author of the _Carriage Painter's Manual_. 127 pp. Cloth, $1.00.
This is just the work needed by every person who has anything to paint, as will be seen from the following from the Table of Contents.
It is very complete, and will make "Every Man his Own Painter."
CHAPTER I.--PAINTING--Tools used.
CHAPTER II.--BRUSHES.
CHAPTER III.--DRY COLORS--White Lead; Fine White; Lamp Black; Drop Black; Ivory Black; Prussian Blue; Ultramarine Green; Yellow; Vermilion; Brown; Lake; Carmine; Rose Pink; Whiting; Glue; Pumice Stone; Asphaltum.
CHAPTER IV.--LIQUIDS--Spirits of Turpentine; Oils; Varnishes; Furniture Varnish; Average Prices of Varnish; Sh.e.l.lac Varnish; j.a.pan Gold Size; Brown j.a.pan Size; Fat Oil Size; Quick Size; Asphaltum Size; Honey Size; Size for Gla.s.s.
CHAPTER V.--COLORS IN OIL--Tube Colors; Compound Colors.
CHAPTER VI.--Mixing Paint; White Paint; White for Inside Work; China Gla.s.s; Oil Color for Outside Work; Dead, or Flat Color; Colors Ground in Oil. PUTTY--Common Window Putty; Carriage Painters' Putty; Cementing Putty; Furniture Putty; Hardwood Putty; Putty for Plaster Work.
CHAPTER VII.--MILK PAINT--Distemper Painting; Kalsomine; Preparing Kalsomine; Paint for Out-Buildings; Paint for Iron Railing; White wash; Size for Walls; Paste for Paper hanging; Hanging Paper.
CHAPTER VIII.--Graining; Oak in Distemper; Oak in Oil; Maple; Mahogany; Rosewood; Black Walnut; Staining; Granite; Brown Stone; Portland Stone; Smalting; Flockings; Marbling.
CHAPTER IX.--GILDING--Gold Leaf; Silver Leaf; Dutch Metal; Gilding on Gla.s.s; Bronzing; Stenciling; Transferring; Decalcomanie; Transparent Painting; Pearl Inlaying; Making a Rustic Picture; Painting Flower Stand; Polish for Mahogany; Varnis.h.i.+ng Furniture; Waxing Furniture; Cleaning Paint; Paint for Farming Tools; Paint for Machinery; Paint for Household Goods; Paint for Iron; To Imitate Ground Gla.s.s; Pumicing Ornaments; Painting to Imitate Damask; To Paint a Farm Wagon; To Re-Varnish a Carriage; To Duplicate Plaster Casts; "Putty Work;"
Permanent Wood Filling for House Work.