BOOKS FOR THE C OUNTRY 



NATURE STUDIES IN BERKSHIRE 



By John Coi<Eman Adams. With i6- illustrations in photogravure from 

 original photographs by Arthur ScoTX. 8°, gilt top. 



A collection of prose pictures of skies and woods and fields, intermingled 

 with the reflections of a writer who is at once a philosopher and a poet, one 

 who enjoys profoundly the beauties of the Berkshire Hills, and who possesses 

 the art of enabling his reader to share in his enjoyment. 



LANDSCAPE GARDENING 



Notes and Suggestions on Ivawns and Lawn-Planting, Laying out and Ar- 

 rangement of Country Places, Large and Small Parks, Cemetery Plots, and 

 Railway-Station Lawns ; Deciduous and Evergreen Trees and Shrubs, The 

 Hardy Border, Bedding Plants, Rockwork, etc. By SamuEi< Parsons, Jr., Ex- 

 Superintendent of Parks, New York City. With nearly 200 illustrations. 

 Large 8°, I3.50. 



"Mr. Parsons proves himself a master of his art as a landscape gardener, and this superb 

 book should be studied by all who are concerned in the making of parks in other cities," — 

 Philadelphia Bulletin. 



LAWNS AND GARDENS 



How to Beautify the Home Lot, tbe Pleasure Ground, and Garden. By 



N. JoNSSON-Ros:e> of the Department of Public Parks, New York City. With 



172 plans and illustrations. Large 8°, gilt top, I3.50. 



' ' Mr. Jonsson-Rose has prepared a treatise which will prove of genuine value to the large 

 and increasing number of those who take a personal interest in their home grounds. It does 

 not aim above the intelligence or sesthetic sense of the ordinary American citizen who has 

 never given any thought to planting and to whom some of the profounder principles of gar- 

 den-art make no convincing appeal."— 6^arrfif« and Forest. 



ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS 



For Garden, Lawn, and Park Planting. With an Account of the Origin, 

 Capabilities, and Adaptations of the Numerous Species and Varities, Native and 

 Foreign, and Especially of the New and Rare Sorts, Suited to Cultivation in the 

 United States. By Lucius D. Davis. With over loo illustrations. 8°. 



This volume is addressed to both scientific men, and that large class of 

 persons who, though interested in plants, have no knowledge of Botany, and 

 neither time nor inclination to acquire it. The phraseology is plain and the 

 descriptions are easily comprehensible ; yet the book contains material never 

 before presented, relating to varieties of plants developed under cultivation. 



THE LEAF COLLECTOR'S HANDBOOK AND HERBARIUM 



An aid in the preservation and in the classification of specimen leaves of 



the trees of Northeastern America. By Chari,ES S. Newhaxi^. Illustrated. 



8°, J2.00. 



"The idea of the book is so good and so simple as to recommend itself at a glance to 

 everybody who cares to know our trees or to make for any purpose a collection of their leaves. ' ' 

 —TV. Y. Critic. 



THE WONDERS OF PLANT LIFE 



By Mrs. S. B. HERRick. Fully illustrated. 16°, ^1.50. 



The only thing aimed at is to give the more important types in a popular 

 way, avoiding technicalities where ordinary language could be substituted, and, 

 where it could not, giving clear explanations of the terms. 



" A dainty volume . . . opens up a whole world of fascination . , full of infor- 

 mation." — Boston Advertiser. 



G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, 27 & 29 West 23d St., New York 



