NEW BOOKS FOR THE FARM LIBRARY 



MR. BOLTON HALL'S 



Three Acres and Liberty interests 



The man with a small farm which is not paying as well as it should. 

 The man whose health is a little less than equal to the strain of 



industrial or commercial life. 

 The man who wants both the opportunities of the city, and the 



healthfulness of the country for his growing boys and girls. 

 The man who is working to relieve the congestion of the cities. 

 Cloth. iUustrated. $ 1 . 75 net 



MR. ALLEN FRENCH'S 



Book of Vegetables and Garden Herbs 



A Practical Handbook and Planting 

 Table for the Vegetable Gardener 



Every plant appears in its due alphabetical order. 



With each a summary is given of its uses, the method of its 

 culture, and, in case it is little known, its virtues. Sowing direc- 

 tions are also supplied with each. 



"This book is intended to help not only the man with plenty 

 of room, but also the man who by means of intensive cultivation 

 must get all he c-an from a small patch."— Author s Preface. 

 Cloth, illustrated. 312 pages; $1.75 net 



MRS. KATE V. ST. MAUR'S 



The Earth's Bounty 



The many readers of Mrs. Saint Maur's earlier book, "A Self- 

 Supportmg Home," will be pleased to learn that the present vol- 

 ume, though m no sense dependent on the one just mentioned, 

 IS, m a sense, a sequel to it. The feminine owner of the self-sup- 

 portmg home is still the heroine, and the new book chronicles the 

 events after success permitted her to acquire more land and put to 

 practical test the ideas gleaned from observation and reading. 

 Cloth, fully illustrated. In press 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



64-66 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK 



