Riding for Ladies: With Hints on the Stable
PART II.
GARDEN PLANTS.
1. Culinary Vegetables.
2. Dessert Fruits.
3. Edible Nuts.
4. Ornamental Annuals.
5. Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, and Herbaceous Perennials.
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1. Origin and Character of Soils.--2. Ploughing and Preparing for Seed.--3. Manures and Composts.--4. Wheat Cultivation.--5. Barley.--6. Oats.--7. Rye.--8. Rice.--9. Maize.--10. Sugar-producing Sorghums.--11. Common Sorghums.--12. Sugarcane.--13. Oil Seed.--14. Field Pea Crops.--15. Dall or Pulse.--16. Root Crops.--17. Cold Spice.--18. Fodder.--19. Water-Nut.--20. Ground-Nut.--21. Rush-Nut or Chufas.--22. Cotton.--23. Tobacco.--24. Mensuration.--Appendix.
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“A work of extreme practical value.”--_Home News._
“Mr. Pogson’s advice may be profitably followed by both native and European agriculturists, for it is eminently practical and devoid of empiricism. His little volume embodies the teaching of a large and varied experience, and deserves to be warmly supported.”--_Madras Mail._
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Reviews of Wheeler’s ‘Tales from Indian History.’
“While the work has been written for them (natives), it has also been written for the people of England, who will find in the volume, perhaps for the first time, the history of our great dependency made extremely attractive reading. Mr. Wheeler’s narrative is written in a most graceful style; indeed, he is master of the English language. He does not confine himself to the mere dry details of history, but tells the adventures of Indian heroes and heroines in legends of love and war; describes the village communities of India, their organization and self-government; delineates the results of caste, infant marriage, and other Hindoo institutions and usages as seen in the family and social life of the people in villages and towns, as well as in courts and palaces.... The work also contains valuable observations on the foreign relations of the Indian Empire with Persia, Russia, Turkey, and China. Altogether this is a work of rare merit.”--_Broad Arrow._
“In going through an interesting book, the reader will be furnished with a good general notion of Indian history, and learn besides something about Indian modes of life.”--_Queen._
“Will absorb the attention of all who delight in thrilling records of adventure and daring. It is no mere compilation, but an earnest and brightly-written book.”--_Daily Chronicle._
“This little volume contains a history of India in the form of tales and narratives, intended by the author for the people of India as well as for those of the British Isles.”--_Army and Navy Gazette._
“No young reader who revolts at the ordinary history presented to him in his school books will hesitate to take up this. No one can read a volume such as this without being deeply interested.”--_Scotsman._
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THE
MANAGEMENT AND MEDICAL TREATMENT
OF
CHILDREN IN INDIA.
BY EDWARD A. BIRCH, M.D.,
_Surgeon-Major Bengal Establishment_.
Second Edition; being the Eighth Edition of GOODEVE’S “Hints on the Management of Children in India.”
_Dr. Goodeve._--“I have no hesitation in saying that the present edition is for many reasons superior to its predecessors. It is written very carefully, and with much knowledge and experience on the author’s part, whilst it possesses the great advantage of bringing up the subject to the present level of Medical Science.”
_The Medical Times and Gazette_, in an article upon this work and Moore’s “Family Medicine for India,” says:--“New editions of these two well-known works have recently appeared. They are both intended to supply in some measure the medical wants of our numerous countrymen in India, who may be either far from professional help in emergencies of sickness or of accident, or destitute of medical advice regarding the proper management of their own health, and especially that of their children, in the trying climate of Hindostan. Although we are, as a rule, very much opposed to popular medical instruction, believing that the result is most frequently a minimum of serviceable knowledge along with a vast preponderance of what is but partial, misleading, and dangerous, yet the peculiar circumstances of many of our countrymen in India, together with the special and insidious dangers of its varying climate, fully justify the publication of a few trustworthy popular works to warn the unwary new-comer, before it be too late, of the dangers he has to encounter, and to give judicious counsel to solitary individuals and families who cannot enjoy the advantages of personal professional advice. Moreover, the two works before us are in themselves probably about the best examples of medical works written for non-professional readers. The style of each is simple, and as free as possible from technical expressions. The modes of treatment recommended are generally those most likely to yield good results in the hands of laymen; and throughout each volume the important fact is kept constantly before the mind of the reader, that the volume he is using is but a poor substitute for personal professional advice, for which it must be discarded whenever there is the opportunity. Written with such objects, and in such a spirit, these volumes cannot fail to be of the greatest service; and that they are appreciated is shown by the rapid appearance of successive editions, the second mentioned and elder treatise having now reached the seventh edition. We would add, that although they are specially written for lay readers, there are few young medical officers proceeding to India who would not receive several useful hints from these unpretentious volumes. But it is to parents or to the guardians of European children in India that they must be of pre-eminent service.”
_Published Annually, in Thick Royal 8vo., Price £1 16s._
THACKER’S
INDIAN DIRECTORY
EMBRACING
The whole of India and Burmah.
THE “TIMES.”
“The fact that this work, originally known as the ‘Directory of Bengal,’ has now reached its 24th annual issue, is sufficient to recommend it to all those who are brought into contact, in a military, civil, or commercial sense, with the civilization and intelligence of our Eastern dependencies. No longer confined to the narrow limits of Bengal, Messrs. Thacker furnish us with complete and detailed information respecting not only Calcutta, but also the citizens of Bombay and Madras. The parts which relate to the yearly almanac, public holidays, stamps, telegraphs, and customs are pretty much one and the same; but in most other matters we have before us separate and distinct information as to the various departments of Government and the arrangements of commerce, education, charitable societies and hospitals, clubs, railways, and companies. There is also a separate Army list, we note, for each of the three Presidencies. The alphabetical list of residents, comprising as it does a full record of all those of our countrymen who have taken up their permanent abodes in any of the Indian Presidencies, will be found of the greatest use to those in England who have lost all clue to their relatives and friends in the far East and wish to discover their whereabouts.”--Aug. 28, 1886.
THE CALCUTTA “ENGLISHMAN.”
“Before everything, the volume before us is in reality what it professes to be--a Directory for India. Besides an enormous mass of information of the purely Directory kind, which must have taken a world of labour to collect and collate, the volume comprises complete Army Lists for Bengal, Madras, and Bombay, including the Volunteers; lists of officers in the various Government Departments; lists of the Tea, Indigo, Coffee, and other estates in the country; and much valuable information regarding the Telegraphs, Postal Rules, Law Courts, Charities, and a host of other subjects. Nothing more strikingly represents the change that has come over India in recent years than this great Directory.”
THE “MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.”
“The Directory now includes every district and principal town in British and Foreign India, every Native State, and in fact aims at being a directory to the whole of India. It contains separate classified and street directories of each of the cities of Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras, a remarkably comprehensive and detailed Mofussil Directory, and a vast amount of general information relating to India, its Government, commerce, postal arrangements, festivals, and official establishments.... The expansion of the work will be welcomed as a response to the growing requirements of commerce with India.”
_ADVERTISEMENTS._
ALEXANDER SCOTT,
RIDING-HABIT
MAKER,
15, SOUTH MOLTON ST., GROSVENOR SQUARE, W.
SPECIALITY--SAFETY SKIRTS.
_NEW WORKS BY CAPTAIN HAYES; IN THE PRESS._
IN DEMY 8vo.
SOUNDNESS AND AGE OF HORSES.
With One Hundred and Seventy Illustrations.
A Complete Guide to all those features which require attention when purchasing Horses, distinguishing mere defects from the symptoms of unsoundness, with explicit instructions how to conduct an examination of the various parts.
CHAPTERS.
I.--Soundness. II.--Defects which are Absolute Unsoundness. III.--Defects which are not necessarily Unsoundness. IV.--Method of Examination. V.--How to Handle a Horse. VI.--Examination of the Mouth. VII.--Examination of the Eyes. VIII.--Examination of the Head, Neck, and Trunk. IX.--Examination of the Limbs. X.--Lameness.
OBLONG 4TO.
THE POINTS OF THE HORSE.
_A FAMILIAR TREATISE ON EQUINE CONFORMATION._
ILLUSTRATED BY J. H. OSWALD BROWN.
Describing the Points in which the perfection of each class of Horses consists; illustrated by very numerous reproductions of Photographs of Living Typical Animals, forming an invaluable Guide to Owners of Horses.
HENRY HEATH,
105, 107, & 109, OXFORD ST., W.
_ONLY ONE ADDRESS_
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“The Hunting Hats made by this Firm deserve commendation.”--Vide _The Queen_, Nov. 21, 1885.
Prices 10s. 6d., 12s. 6d., 16s., 18s. 6d., &c.
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_Post-free upon application._
THOMAS & SONS’ RIDING HABITS
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* * * * *
Transcriber’s Notes.
Italic text is denoted by _underscores_ and bold text by =equals signs=. Variant spelling, punctuation, and inconsistent hyphenation have been preserved as printed; simple typographical errors have been corrected. The following list shows the changed text below the original text.
Table of Contents: Introduction ix Introduction xi
Page xi: INTRODUCTION. INTRODUCTION
Page 45: subject with which it is engaged. subject with which it is engaged
Page 60: in a tranverse direction in a transverse direction
Page 155: there in nothing more conducive there is nothing more conducive
Page 160: for ladies fo ride for ladies to ride
Illustration 216-f (full-page): “COME ALONG, OLD MAN!’ “COME ALONG, OLD MAN!”
Page 245: An excellant sample An excellent sample
Page 283: most carefully weighed. most carefully weighed
Page 292: shy, nervous, and rething shy, nervous, and retiring
Page 351: Specialite Habit Makers Specialité Habit Makers
End of Project Gutenberg's Riding for Ladies, by Mrs. Power O'Donoghue