D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



PAMILIAR FLOWERS OF FIELD AND 

 -*- GARDEN. By F. Schuyler Mathews. Illustrated with 

 200 Drawings by the Author, and containing an elaborate Index 

 showing at a glance the botanical and popular names, family, 

 color, locality, environment, and time of bloom of several hun- 

 dred flowers. i2mo. Library Edition, cloth, $175 ; Pocket 

 Edition, fi3xible covers, $2. 25. 



In this convenient and useful volume the flowers which one finds in the fields are 

 identified, illustrated, and described in familiar language. Their coDnection with gar- 

 den fioweri is made clear. Particular attention is drawn lo the beautiful ones which 

 have come under cultivation, and, as the tide indicates, the book furnishes a ready 

 guide to a knowledge of wild and cultivated flowers alike. 



"I have examined Mr. Mathews's little book upon 'Faiftiliar Flowers of Field and 

 Garden,' and 1 have pleasure in commending the accuracy and beauty of the drawings 

 and the fi-eshness of the text We have long needed some botany from the hand oi an 

 artist, who sees form and color without the formality of the scientist. The book deserves 

 a reputation.'" — L. H. BaiUy, Professor of Horlicidture, Cornell University. 



" I am much pleased with your ' Familiar Flowers of Field and Garden.' It is a 

 useful and handsomely prepared handbook, and the elaborate index is an especially 

 \-aluable part of it. Taken in connection with the many caietul drawings, it would 

 seem as though your little volume thoroughly covers its subject." — Louis Prang. 



"The author describes in a most interesting and charming manner many familiar 

 wild and cultivated plants, enlivening his remarks by crisp epigrams, and rendering 

 identification of the subjects described simple by means of some two hundred draw- 

 ings from Nature, made by his own pen. . . . The book will do much 10 more fuUy 

 acquaint the reader with those plants of field and garden treated upon with which he 

 may be but partly famdiar, and go a long way toward correcting many popular 

 errors existing in the matter of colors of their flowers, a subject to which Mr. Mathews 

 has devoted much attention, and on which he is now a recognized authority in the 

 trade." — Xeiv York Florists' Exchange. 



"A book of much value and interest, adminbly arranged for the student and the 

 lover of flowers. , . . Thetext is full of compact information, well selected and interest- 

 ingly presented. ... It seems to us to be a most attractive handbook of its kind." — 

 New York Sun. 



"A delightful book and very useful. Its language is plain and familiar, and the 

 illustrations are dainty works of art. It is just the book for those who want to be 

 familiar with the well-known flowers, those ihat grow in the cultivated gardens as well 

 as those that blossom in the fields." — Newark Daily Advertiser. 



"Seasonable and valuable. The young botanist and the lover of flowers, who have 

 only studied from Natiu-e, will be greatiy aided by this work." — Pittsburg Post. 



" Charmingly written, and to any one who loves the flowers — and who does not ? — 

 will prove no less fascinating than instructive. It will open up in the garden and the 

 fields a new world full of curiosity and delight, and invest them with a new interest in 

 his sight." — Christian Work. 



" One need not be deeply read in floral lore to be interested in what Mr. Mathews 

 has written, and die more proficient one is therein the greater his satisfaction is likely 

 to be." — New York Mail and Express. 



"Mr. F. Schuyler Mathews's careful description and graceful drawings of our 

 ' Familiar Flowers of Field and Garden ' are fitted to make them familiar even to those 

 who have not before made their acquaintance." — Nevj York Evening Post, 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



