BOOKS OF GENERAL INTEREST 

 A Self-Supporting Home 



By KATE V. ST. MAUR Cloth, Ilhi.itrated, l^mo, ii.7-j net 



Each chapter is the detailed account of all the work necessary 

 for one month — in the vegetable garden, among the small fruits, 

 with the fowls, guineas, rabbits, cavies, and in every branch of 

 husbandry to be met witli on the small farm. The book is 

 especially valuable and simple for the beginner, who has no chance 

 to worry or grow confused about what he should do in each season. 



"One of the most sensible, practical books of the kind ever 

 published." — Lonhnlle Coarifr-.liinniiit. 



The Earth's Bounty 



By KATE V. ST. MAUR Cloth, Illash-ated, l^mo, $1.75 wt 



The present volume, though in no sense dependent on "A Self- 

 Supporting Home," is in a sense a sequal to it. The feminine 

 owner is still the heroine, and the new book chronicles the events 

 after success permitted her to acquire more land and put to 

 practical test the ideas gleaned from oliservation and reading. 



The Fat of the Land : The Story of an 

 American Farm 



By JOHN WILLIAMS STREETER Cloth, IJino, $1.50 net 



Tlie Flit of the Land is the sort of book that ought to be epoch- 

 making in its character, for it tells wh:it can be accomplished 

 through the application of business methods to the farming 

 business. Never was the freshness, the beauty, the joy, the 

 freedom of country life put in a more engaging fashion. PVorn 

 cover to cover it is a fascinating book, practical withal, and full 

 of common sense. 



Three Acres and Liberty 



By BOLTON HALL Cloth, Illustrated, 12mo. .^1.75 >i,-t 



Possibilities of the small suburban farm, and practical suggestions 

 to city dwellers how to acquire and make profitable use of them. 



l'rni,lsHF.l) ]!V 

 THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York 



