BIBLIOGRAPHY 



MoRLEY, Margaret W.: Flowers and Their Friends. 

 Ginn and Co., Boston, 1897. $ .60 



(Delightful stories for little folks about the morning glory, the 

 geranium family, the hyacinth and the general structure of 

 flowers) 



Seed Babies. Ginn and Co., Boston, 1896. $ .30 



(Catchy stories for little folks, such as "This is the flower so 

 bright and gay" after "The house that Jack built") 



Parsons, Henry G.: Children's Gardens for Pleasure, 

 Health and Education. Sturgis and WaJton, 

 New York, fi.oo 



(Announced for April, 1910) 



Parsons, Mrs. Henry M.: Report of the Children's 

 Farm School of DeWitt Clinton Park, 1902 -1904 

 Annual Reports of the Children's International 

 School Farm League, 1907- 1909 



Reports of Cleveland Home Gardening Association. 



Address the Secretary, 501 St. Clair Ave. 



("The Home Gardening Association aims to make the city 

 beautiful. It strives to interest larger numbers of people in the 

 task. This is done through the distribution of seeds in penny 

 packets, through illustrated lectures, through school, training 

 and vacant lot gardens. Thirty thousand families in Cleve- 

 land, as well as schools and civic organizations in more than 

 one hundred other cities and villages participate in the work." 

 See also in connection with these the reports of the Cleve- 

 land Board of Kducation for school garden work in that city.) 



Schwab, Erasmus: The School Garden (1855). Trans- 

 lated by Mrs. Horace Mann, 1879. M. L. Hol- 

 brook. New York, 1879. | .50 



(The earliest bo<jk on the subject and by the founder of the 

 school garden in Europe. Still a classic) 



/ SiPE, Susan B.: School Gardening and Nature Study 

 in English Rural Schools and in London. U. S. 

 Dept. of Agric, Office of Exp'm't Stations, 

 Bulletin No. 204 



(Showing what can be done under the hardest city conditions) 

 -^' 355 



