"It is the best paper of its class in the language."— -./V. Y. Sun. 



Garden and Forest. 



BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED. WEEKLY. FIFTH YEAR. 



Devoted to the scientific, practical and beautiful in Horticulture, Land- 

 scape Art and Forestry. Its contents are of the highest literary character, 

 and include descriptions of new plants, information and advice for indoor 

 and outdoor planting and cultivation, descriptions of country-seats, parks 

 and rural scenery, with vigorous editorial discussions of all subjects em- 

 braced in the scope of the paper. 



" The foremost journal of its class, keep- 

 ing in touch with every advance in the sci- 

 entific, artistic, and practical phases of 

 horticulture and arboriculture." — Boston 

 Herald. 



"It has been influential to a marked de- 

 gree on the press of the country in behalf 

 of the serious issues now pressing for the 

 salvation of forests at the head of water- 

 courses. — Springfield Republican. 



$4 a year. Send for specimen copy and net clubbing' 



rate with other periodicals. 



Address 



GARDEN AND FOREST PUBLISHING COMPANY, 



Tribune Building, New York. 



I M I I I H I II I inilllHIIH I IH I HIII I Iim il lH I IIHHIItHt l H It tl l MH II t l HIIIIMUmHH 



OTHET STANDARD BOOKS OF THE 

 RURAL PUBLISHING CO. 



THE BUSINESS HEN.— Breeding and Feeding Poultry for Profit. The pat title of a 

 unique book is The Business Hen. A condensed and practical little enclycopedia of 

 profitable poultry-keeping. P. H. Jacobs, Henry Hale, James Rankin. J. H. Drevenstedt 

 and others equally well-known have written chapters on their specialties, the whole being 

 skillfully arranged and carefully edited by H. W. Collingwood, managing editor of The 

 Rural New-Yorker. Starting with the question, "What is an Egg?" the book goes on 

 step by step to indicate the most favorable conditions for developing the egg into a " Busi- 

 ness Hen." Incubation, care of chicks, treatment of diseases, selection and breeding, 

 feeding and housing, are all discussed in a clear and simple manner. Two successful egg- 

 farms are described in detail. On one of these farms the owner has succeeded in develop- 

 ing a flock of 600 hens that average over 200 eggs each per year. 

 Price, cloth, 75 cents ; paper, 40 cents, 



rlRST LESSONS IN AGRICULTURE. {2nd Edition, Revised and Enlarged.)- By Fy 

 A. Gulley, M. S., Dean and Director of the Agricultural College and Experiment Star 

 tion University of Arizona, This book discusses the more important principles which un-- 

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 ers who have not studied chemistry, botany, and other branches of science related to agril- 

 culture. It supplies a much-needed text-book for common-schools and is useful forthe, 

 practical farmer. Includes all the latest developments in agricultural science as applied 

 to the subject. I 



Price, cloth* $1. Special Prices for Schools and Colleges. i 



(48) ' i 



