Tile Drainage, 



OR 



Why, Where, When, and How to Drain Land with Tiles. 



A PRACTICAL BOOK FOR PRACTICAL FARMERS. 



BY W. I. CHAMBERLAIN, A. M., LL. D. 



Formerly Secretary of the Ohio State Board of Agriculture, and late 

 President of the Iowa State Agricultural College. At pres- 

 ent Associate Editor of the Ohio Farmer. 



" Tiles are political economists. They are so many young 



Americans, announcing a better era and. a day of 



fat things. "Ralph Waldo Emerson. 



This is a valuable companion to our other rural books. It embraces 

 the experience of forty years of one of our foremost practical agricul- 

 turists, who has laid with his own hands over 15 miles of tile. The 

 book is fully illustrated. 



PRICE 35 GTS.; BY MAIL, 4O GTS. 

 A. I. ROOT, MEDINA, OHIO. 



IN THREE RARTS. 



Part First. By J. W. Day, of Crystal Springs, Miss., treats of Tomato 

 Culture in the South, with Some Remarks by A. I. Root, 

 Adapting it to the North. 



Part Second. By D. Cummins, of Conneaut, O., treats of Tomato Cul- 

 ture Especially for Cunning=Factories. 



Part Third. By A. I. Root, treats of Plant=Growing for Market, and 

 High=Pressure Gardening in General. 



This little book is interesting because it is one of the first rural books 

 to come from our friends in the South. It tells of a great industry 

 that has been steadily growing for some years past; namely, tomato* 

 growing in the South, to supply the Northern markets. The little 

 book, which is fully illustrated, gives us some pleasant glimpses of the 

 possibilities and probabilities of the future of Southern agriculture. 

 Even though you do not grow tomatoes *-.o any considerable extent, you 

 will find the book brimful of suggestions of short cuts in agriculture 

 and horticulture, and especially in the line of market-gardening. 



J*RICE 35 CTS.; BY MAIL, ZO CTS. 



A. I. ROOT, - - - MEDINA, OHIO. 



