262 
A. For the general public (“ A” courses, p. 263) 
B. For teachers (“ B” courses, p. 266) 
C. For children (“ C” courses, p. 268) 
D. Other courses of a special nature (“ D 
No course will be given when less than ten persons apply for 
registration. Since registration in many of the courses is re- 
stricted to a fixed number on account of the limited space avail- 
able in the greenhouses, and for other reasons, those desiring to 
attend are urged to send in their application for enrollment and the 
entrance fee to the Secretary, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, several 
days in advance of the first exercise. This avoids delay at the be- 
ginning of the first exercise, ensures a place in the course, and 
enables the instructor to provide adequate material for the class. 
The following equipment is available for the courses: 
1. Three Classrooms (in addition to the Boys’ and Girls’ Club 
Room in the Laboratory Building), equipped with stereoscopes 
and views, a stereopticon, plant collections, economic exhibits, 
models, and other apparatus and materials for instruction. 
2. Two Laboratory Rooms, with the usual equipment for plant 
study. 
3. The Instructional Greenhouses, three in number, for the use 
of juvenile as well as adult classes for instruction in plant propa- 
vy 
eonrses:p. 271) 
— 
gation and related subjects. 
4. The Children’s Garden, on a piece of land about three- 
quarters of an acre in extent, in the southeast part of the Botanic 
Garden, divided into about 150 plots which are used throughout 
the season for practical individual instruction in gardening. 
5. The Children’s Building, near the north end of this plot, con- 
taining rooms for conferences and for the storage of tools, seeds, 
notebooks, special collections, etc. 
6. The Auditorium, on the ground floor, capable of seating 570 
persons, and equipped with a motion-picture lantern and_ stere- 
opticon, 
In addition to these accommodations, the dried plant specimens 
in the herbarium, the living plants in the conservatories and 
plantations, and the various types of gardens are readily accessible, 
while the main library and children’s library, which contain a 
ection of books on every phase of gardening 
— 
comprehensive col 
