11 



Garden and Forest. 



[Number 463 



PRACTICAL. POPULAR. SCIENTIFICALLY EXACT. 



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GARDEN 



•/\ N D 



FOREST 





A-JOURNAL'OF--HORTICULtUREl 

 ■LANDSCAPE-ART-ANDfORESTRYi 



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TREATS of the science and 

 the art of gardening, and 

 is a trustworthy record ot 

 progress in horticulture. The 

 weekly issues contain practical 

 directions for cultivation under 

 glass and out-of-doors, corre- 

 spondence on seasonable topics, 

 editorials and articles on forestry, 

 and on legislation affecting- the 

 national forests. The contribu- 

 tors are botanists and specialists 

 of the highest standing. The 

 illustrations are original, accurate 

 and artistic. 



For the enlightened owners of gardens and 

 woodlands this journal is invaluable. — New 

 York Tribune. 



Its writers are authorities in their lines and 

 the illustrations very artistic. — Springfield 

 Union. 



Its character is at once dignified and 

 pleasing, and its contents are scholarly and 

 scientific in the exact sense. — Chicago Evening 

 Journal. 



Faultless in mechanical make-up, and writ- 

 ten throughout in a polished style seldom 

 found in the best periodical literature. — Phila- 

 delphia Press. 



It continues on its high level — its highest 

 level, for it has no peer. It appeals, as mere 

 literature, to every cultivated person, and is 

 full of information for the lover of Flowers 

 and Trees. — N. Y. Evening Post. 



Its arrival is the coming of a wise and intel- 

 ligent and entertaining friend, who enables 

 us to live more happily because more harmo- 

 niously with nature. — Harper's Weekly. 



The foremost journal of its class, keeping in 

 touch with every advance in the scientific, 

 artistic and practical phases of horticulture 

 and arboriculture. — Boston Herald. 



Published weekly. $4.00 a year. 



Specimen copy free on application. 



GARDEN AND FOREST PUBLISHING CO 



Tribune Building, New York. 



Hardy Evergreens, 



For Lawns, Parks and Cemeteries. 



A large stock of Colorado Conifers, from six inches 

 to ten feet high, all grown from seeds on our own 

 grounds. Evergreen Seedlings in large quantities for 

 Nursery and Forest planting. Shade Trees for Street 

 and Ornamental planting. Deciduous Tree Seedlings 

 tor Forest planting. 



R. DOUGLAS & SOUS, Waukegan, Ell. 



CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a 



prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to 

 IUUNN & CO., who have had nearly fifty years' 

 experience In the patent business. Communica- 

 tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In- 

 formation concerning Patents and bow to ob- 

 tain them Bent free. Also a catalogue of mechan» 

 leal and scientific books sent free. 



Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive 

 special notice in the Scientific American, and 

 thus are brought widely before the public with- 

 out cost to the inventor. This splpndid paper, 

 issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the 

 largest circulation of any scientific work in the 

 world. $3 a year. Sample copies sent free. 



Building Edition.monthly, $2.50 a year. Single 

 copies, *J5 cents. Every number contains beau- 

 tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new 

 houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the 

 latest designs and secure contracts. Address 



MUNN & CO.. New Yoke, 301 Broadway, 



The Critic 



A Weekly Review of Literature and the Arts. 



Founded 1SS1 hy J. B. and J. L. Gilder. 



10 cts. a copy. 3 samples, 10 eta. {3 a year. 



"It is impossible," says Sir Walter Besant 



in the August Author, " to get a day-by-day 



knowledge of American literature without 



taking in The Critic. I read it regularly." 



New volumes begin January and July. 



THE CRITIC CO., 

 287 Fourth Avenue, New York. 



1831 THE CULTIVATOR 1897 



AND 



try GenfEemaEi. 



THE BEST OF THE 



AGRICULTURAL WEEKLIES. 



DEVOTED TO 



Farm Crops and Processes, 



Horticulture and Fruit-Crowing, 

 Live-Stock and Dairying, 



While it also includes all minor departments of Rural 

 interest, such as the Poultry Yard, Entomology, Bee- 

 Keeping, Greenhouse and Grapery, Veterinary Replies, 

 Farm Questions and Answers, Fireside Reading, Do- 

 mestic Economy, and a summary of the News of the 

 Week. Its Market Reports are unusually complete, 

 and much attention is paid to the Prospects of the Crops, 

 as throwing light upon one of the most important of all 

 questions — When to Buy and When to Sell. It is liberally 

 Illustrated, and contains more reading matter than ever 

 before. The subscription price is $2.50 per year, but 

 we offer a SPECIAL REDUCTION in our 



CLUB BATES FOR 1897. 



TWO SubSCriptiOnS, in one remittance $4: 



Six Subscriptions, do do 10 



Ten Subscriptions, do - do 15 



JQ&- To all New Subscribers for 1897, paying in 

 advance now, we will send the paper WEZK.LY , from 

 our receipt of the remittance, to January 1st, iSqj, 



WITHOUT CHARGE. 



j8ST Specimen Copies Free. Address 



LUTHER TUCKER &. SON, Publishers, 



Albany, N. Y. 



BUY NO INCUBATOR 



and pay for it be- 

 fore giving it a 

 trial. 



The firm who is afraid 

 to let you try their in- 

 cubator before buying 

 it has no (aith in their 

 machine. We will sell 

 you ours on trial. 

 NOT A CENT until 

 tried, and a child can run it with five minutes' 

 attention a day. We won FIRST PRIZE 

 WORLD'S FAIR, and will win you tor a 

 steady customer if you will only buy ours on trial. 

 Our large catalogue will cost you five cents and 

 give you $100 worth of practical information on 

 poultry and incubators and the money there is in 

 the business. Plans for Brooders, Houses, etc., 

 25c. N. B. — Send us the names of three persons 

 interested in poultry and 25 cents and we will 

 send you "The Bicycle: Its Care and Repair/' 

 a book of 180 subjects and 80 illustrations, worth 

 $5 to any bicycle rider. 



VON CUXXN INCUBATOR CO., 



Box 206, Delaware City, Del. 



PRIVATE GARDENERS. 



We have on our register the names of reliable, expe- 

 rienced Gardeners. Write us at either address — 

 VAUGHAN'S SEED STORE, 14 Barclay St., New 

 York, or 84 and 86 Randolph St., Chicago. Cata- 

 logues Free. 



GARDEN AND FOREST 



$4.00 a Year, in advance. 



MAILING TUBES. 



The issues of Garden and Forest will be mailed in 

 paste-board tubes to any subscriber, on request, for 

 seventy-five cents in addition to the regular subscrip- 

 tion price. 



BINDER FOR FILING. 



A specially prepared binder for the convenient filing 

 and preserving 01 the current issues of Garden and 

 Forest will be sent, postage prepaid, to any address 

 in the United States, on receipt 01 Fifty Cents. Each 

 issue can be inserted in such a manner as to allow of 

 the pages being opened perfectly flat, and of one or 

 more papers beang taken out and replaced at any time 

 without disturbing the other parts. 



SPECIMEN COPIES. 



The publishers will appreciate the cooperation of sub- 

 scribers who will send them the addresses of persons 

 likely to subscribe for Garden and Forest, and speci- 

 men copies will be sent. 



DISCONTINUANCES. 



A large majority of our subscribers prefer not to have 

 their subscriptions interrupted and their files broken, 

 and it is, therefore, assumed, unless notification to dis- 

 continue is received, that the subscription shall con- 

 tinue. 



Advertising rates on application. 



GARDEN AND FOREST PUBLISHING CO,, 



Tribune Building, New York. 



