BOOKS OF GENERAL INTEREST 
A Self-Supporting Home 
By KATE V. ST. MAUR Cloth, Mlustrated, remo, $1.75 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 with on the small farm. The 
book is especially valuable and simple for the beginner. ‘ 
“One of the most sensible, practical books of the kind ever published,” — 
Louisville Courier-Journal, 
How to Keep Bees for Profit 
By D. E. LYON Cloth, Illustrated, remo, $1.50 net 
Dr. Lyon is an enthusiast on bees. His work isa practical one. In it he takes 
up the numerous questions that confront the man who keeps bees, and deals with 
them from the standpoint of long experience, 
How to Keep Hens for Profit 
By C. S, VALENTINE Cloth, Illustrated, $1.50 net 
By the well-known writer on poultry raising in the New York Zribune Farmer, 
Manual of Practical Farming 
By DR. JOHN McLENNAN Coot, Illustrated, 12mo, $1.50 net 
A book “worthy of a hearty welcome,” says the New York Times, a help to 
orderly, practical farm management, an application of economic scientific. methods 
to the common matters of the farm. 
Manual of Gardening 
By L. H. BAILEY Cloth, Illustrated, remo, $2.00 net 
This new work is a combination and revision of the main parts of two other 
books by the same author, Garden Making and Practical Garden-Book, together 
with much new material and the result of the experience of ten added years, 
é ' 
The Book of Vegetables and Garden Herbs 
By ALLEN FRENCH Cloth, Illustrated, remo, Br.75 net 
A practical book “ from the ground up.” It gives complete directions for grow- 
ing all vegétables cultivatable in the climate of the northern United States. It 
represents a departure in vegetable-garden literature. It does not generalize. 
The illustrations, numbering about 1509, are all from original drawings, 
PUBLISHED BY 
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 
64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York 
