LlB%A%Y. 



THE CENTURY 



BOOK OF GARDENING 



(SECOND EDITION.) 



Edited by E. T. COOK. A comprehensive Work for every Lover of the 

 Garden. 624 pages, with about 600 Illustrations. 31s. Net, by post 

 2is. iod. 



Times.—" No department of gardening is neglected, and the illustrations of famous 

 and beautiful gardens and of the many winsome achievements of the gardener's art are 

 so numerous and attractive as to make the veriest cockney yearn to turn gardener." 



GARDENING FOR BEGINNERS. 



(THIRD EDITION.) 



(A Handbook to the Garden.) By E. T. COOK. 



12s. 6d. Net, by post 13s. 



Spectator. — " Full of information about both the useful and the ornamental, and 

 as far as we have been able to test it, eminently practical. The beginner, by the way, will 

 have gone a long way before he has assimilated the contents of this stout volume of nearly 

 five hundred pages ; but then alia aliis curce, and the wider the choice that is offered by a 

 volume of this kind the better." 



TREES AND SHRUBS 

 FOR ENGLISH GARDENS. 



By E. T. COOK, Editorof The Garden. 12s. 6d. Net, by post 12s nd. 



Gardeners' Chronicle.—" A good book on trees and shrubs is a real want. 

 Few books are more often enquired for, and until now we have had a difficulty in replying 

 to our correspondents who have asked for information on the point. In these days of 

 trashy gardening books, it is a pleasure to come across one which bears the stamp of 

 original observation, judicious inference, and industrious research." 



ROSES FOR 

 ENGLISH GARDENS. 



By Miss GERTRUDE JEKYLL and Mr. E. MAWLEY. 

 Illustrated with 190 fall-page Plates. 12s. 6d. Net, by post 12s. lid. 



Daily Chronlclei— " All the roses of England, blossoming in a counterfeit summer 

 of black and white, seem to be gathered together into Miss Jekyll's charming book. The 

 pictures are really pleasant to look at ; near or far a rose photographs quite as well as a 

 beautiful face, and carries with it its own individual look. No one can fail to be captured 

 by Miss Jekyll's enthusiasm and fine discrimination." 



LONDON: PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICES OF "COUNTRY LIFE," LTD., TAVISTOCK IT. 

 COVENT GARDEN; AND BY GEORGE NEWNES, LTD., SOUTHAMPTON ST., STRAND, W.C. 



