11 



Garden and Forest. 



[Number 467. 



PRACTICAL POPULAR. SCIENTIFICALLY EXACT. 



-V "*"' '"-" 



G.A R D E.N 



•/\ N D 



FOR. EST. 



•AOOURNAbOF'HoRTICULTURE 

 -LANDSCAPE-ART-AND'FORESTRY 



?5 "A.IXKYI 15 



TREATS of the science and 

 the art of gardening, and 

 is a trustworthy record of 

 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, dew York. 



APPLETONS' 



Popular Science 

 Monthly. 



PROSPECTUS FOR 1897. 



DURING the last few years science 

 has been unusually fruitful in im- 

 portant and striking discoveries. He- 

 lium and argon, the electric furnace, and 

 the X-ray are but a few of the more start- 

 ling results in the physical sciences. 

 Similarly important if less sensational 

 advances are being made in the fields 

 of medicine and sanitation. Students of 

 society and politics are coming to see 

 the necessity for a scientific study of 

 sociology, if we are to corJe successfully 

 with the increasing difficulties of modern 

 civilization. We have always insisted 

 thatsuch astudy was the only one which 

 promised any satisfactory solution of 

 social problems, and that many of so- 

 ciety's worst evils were due simply to 

 ignorance of elementary scientific prin- 

 ciples. It is very gratifying to observe 

 the unmistakable signs of a growing ac- 

 ceptance of this view that have become 

 manifest during recent years. In our 

 issues for 1897 we shall endeavor, as 

 heretofore, to help on this movement 

 by giving to the general public month 

 by month a summary, in simple words, 

 of what is going on in the various fields 

 of scientific research, and of the applica- 

 tions of the principles thus worked out. 

 Among the features of special interest 

 will be a series of papers by Professor 

 William Z. Ripley, on the Racial Ge- 

 ography of Europe, the subject of the 

 last course of Lowell lectures delivered 

 by him. The articles will be freely illus- 

 trated. David A. Wells's interesting 

 papers on Taxation will continue, and 

 there will be a series of carefully pre- 

 pared illustrated articles on science at 

 the universities, which is to include 

 accounts of the leading scientific insti- 

 tutions and societies of the country. 

 Education and child psychology will be 

 given considerable space, and sanitary 

 questions, especially in connection with 

 household economy, will receive atten- 

 tion. Timely single articles may be 

 expected from our usual contributors, 

 among whom may be named : 



Andrew D. White, David A. Wells, Apple- 

 ton Morgan, James Sully, Frederick Starr, 

 William G. Sumner, William T. Lusk, M.D., 

 Garrett P. Serviss, David Starr Jordan, T. C. 

 Mendenhall. Herbert Spencer, Edward S. 

 Morse, T. Mitchell Prudden, M.D., C. Han- 

 ford Henderson, Charles Sedgwick Minot, 

 G. T. W. Patrick, M. Allen Starr, George M. 

 Sternberg. 



Fifty Cents a number. $5.00 per annum. 



D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers, 



NEW YORK. 



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$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 of the current issues of Garden and 

 Forest will be sent, postage prepaid, to any address 

 in the United States, on receipt or 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 being 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. 



