SCIENCE.— AD VER TISEMENIS. 



Every one who has a garden, from a window-ledge to a "little place out of town," should read 



THE AMATEUR'S PRACTICAL QARDEN=BOOK 



Containing the Simplest Directions foe the Growing of 

 THE Commonest Things About the House and Garden. 



By C. E. HUNN, Gardener, Horticultural Department, Cornell University, and L. H. BAILEY. 



Cloth 16mo$1.00. 



Illustrated by many marginal "thumb-nail" cuts. This is the latest issue of the Garden-Craft series. It is the book 

 for the busy man or woman who wants the most direct, practical Information as to just how to plant, prune, train, and to 

 care for all the common flowers, fruits, vegetables, ornamental bushes and trees, — for those who have no time to go into 

 the whys and wherefores, and who want directions as to how to grow plants. 



QARDEN=jyj^AKINQ : By L. H. bailey, aided by 



Suggestions fok the Utilizing L. R. Taft, F. A. Waugh, and Eknest Walkek. 



OF Home Grounds. Third Edition. $1.00. 



Here is a book literally " for the million" who in broad America have some love for growing things. No 

 modern American work covers this important field. The illustrations are copious and beautiful. 



"Ideal summer reading." "Delightful gift-books." 



gLIZABETH AND HER JVl^RE pOT pOURRI FROM 



QERMAN QARDEN A S^'^'^^^ QARDEN 



"A cliarming book." — Literature. ^7 "'^^- ^- "• Earle. 



Cloth $1.75. Cloth, $2.00. 



"A sweet and pleasant mixture" of gardening, cooking, 



"Elizabeth. . . prevails upon her husband— The Man philosophy, art, poetry and housekeeping, the reflection of 



of Wrath-to let her go down to an old neglected country- the life of a cultivated observant woman of many interests, 



seat on the Baltic, and fix things up to suit herself. For one A wholesome, entertaining book of miscellaneous notes 



thing she resolves to have a garden. On this matter of a grouped as taken by the months of a year-Just the thing 



garden, she has plenty of ideas but no experience, and she to put on the sewing table for ten minute dips of Inspira- 



undertakes to realize them by the aid of a gardener who has tion and refreshment in a busy woman's life, 

 experience but no ideas, except the general one that Eliza- 

 beth's are stupid. Her struggles with the stupidity of man 

 and the perversity of nature are amusingly told." — Nation . 



" In sweetness and freshness of feeling, in pure delight 

 in the beauty and mystery of Nature, and in her love for 

 "A German Garden emits a flower-like aroma of fresh- noble literature, Mrs. Eakle reminds us of the Knglish EMz 

 ness and purity."— Kate Sanborn. , abeth in her German Garden."— New York Tribune. 



•pHE SOLITARY gUMMER By the Author of O'^'^ flARDENS By S. REYNOLDS HOLE. 



^ Elizabeth AND HKK ^^ ^^ Author of "A Book About Roses" 



Cloth, $1.50. German Garden. Cloth, $3.00. "Memories of Bean Hole," 



"More Memories," etc. 

 "A continuation of that delightful chronicle of days ^ith the most charming illustrations of The Deanery 



spentinandaboutoneofthemostdelightfulgardensknown aarden ; with a wealth of practical suggestions to the 



to modern literature. The author's exquisite humor is ever gardener, it is overrunning too with the ripe wisdom and 



present, and her descriptions . . . have a wonderful fresh- cheery philosophy of a fascinating personality." - THE. 



ness and charm."-EvENiNG Post. Daily Telegraph, Philadelphia, 



GARDENS ANCIENT AND MODERN 



AN EPITOME OF THE LITERATURE OF THE QARDEN=ART 



With an Historical Epilogue by Albert Forbes Sieveking. Illustrations in Photogravure. 



Cloth, 8vo. $3.00. 



"A pretty fancy. . . .The illustrations are charming " The Praise of Gardens is a theme dear to every quiet 



and every care has been exercised to make the book reioice and cultured mind. The charming volume at hand is fra- 



., " „ ,, *!, 1-. ■ - ^- r ^,. * J grant With the Choicest flowers of prose and poetry gathered 



the eye as well as the literary imagination of the garden j^^m every field, classic and modern."- Public Ledger 



lover."— The Outlook. Philadelphia. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, New York 



