ELEMENTS OF AGRICULTURE 



A TEXT-BOOK PREPARED UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THE ROYAL 

 AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 



By W. FREAM, LL.D. 



Eighth Edition. With numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 5s. net. 



A UNIONIST AGRICULTURAL POLICY 



By A GROUP OF UNIONISTS. 

 6d. net. 



"Stands out among the numerous programmes and policies recently put 

 forward or promised as the only one which attempts to deal comprehensively 

 with the whole problem." Times. 



THE OCCUPYING OWNERSHIP 

 OF LAND 



AN ANALYSIS OF THE POSITION OF THE TENANT FARMER, AND 



SOME SUGGESTIONS ON THE CREATION OF THE PEASANT 



OWNER, DRAWN FROM PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE. 



By BEVIL TOLLEMACHE. 

 With a Preface by ROWLAND E. PROTHERO, M.V.O. 



Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. net. 



Politicians of all shades of opinion are agreed as to the necessity of some 

 reform and regeneration of our greatest National Industry Agriculture. 

 Many schemes have been set forth, mostly by people who are profoundly 

 ignorant of country life. This work, however, is based on close practical 

 experience of the needs of farmers it advocates the creation of a peasant 

 class in this country, and shows how this can be best accomplished from the 

 practical results of experiments, by legislation and otherwise, which have been 

 attempted from time to time. 



Attention is drawn to the insecure position of the tenant farmer in this 

 country because of the large number of landowners who are selling their 

 estates owing to the trend of recent legislation. Arguments are drawn as to 

 why the State should advance the whole of the purchase money on a reducible 

 mortgage to enable them to acquire their holdings. 



ANNUAL AND BIENNIAL GARDEN 

 PLANTS 



THEIR VALUE AND USES: WITH FULL INSTRUCTIONS 

 FOR THEIR CULTIVATION. 



By A. E. SPEER., F.R.H.S. 



With numerous Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 7s. 6d. net. 



" Xot many new gardening books have as strong a claim to the attention of 

 the garden lover as Mr. Speer's manual. It is a book that will be welcomed 

 by every gardener, of whatever degree, for it deals fully and comprehensively 

 with a class of plants that call for specialised description, so slightly and so 

 discursively are they treated in most general works on flower cultivation . . . 

 the horticulturist will find adequate data relating to most varieties of every 

 flower. . . . Mr. Speer's work bears evidence of an intimate knowledge of 

 cultural conditions relating to a vast floral family, and it deserves to rank as a 

 standard authority." Pall Mall Gazette. 



