March, 1906 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



4yu 



Are You Interested in Photography ? 



THEN YOU SHOULD READ 



THE PHOTOGRAPHIC TIMES 



America's Oldest Photographic Magazine 



THIS publication furnishes a greater variety of interesting pho 

 tographic matter for a dollar than any other magazine in its 

 class. 



Nicely printed, finely illustrated, and valuable to any one who 

 follows the many phases of photography. 



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THE PHOTOGRAPHIC TIMES 



PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION 



39-G. Union Square NEW YORK 



THE GARDEN 

 MAGAZINE 



Prevent Mislaying numbers of 



The Garden Magazine 



The New Temporary Binder 



Is very convenient and will hold 

 copies until volume is complete 

 and ready for permanent binding. 

 It is worth its cost several times 

 over each year. You will have the 

 copies together when you need 

 them, and it will last for years for 

 succeeding volumes. Black cloth 

 neatly stamped in gold. Made on 

 an improved pattern. 



Price, $1.00 prepaid 



Doubleday, Page & Company, 



133-137 East 16th Street, New York. 



Practical Books for the Garden 



Ferns and How to 

 Grow Them 



By G. A. Woolson. 



An authoritative little hand-book, dealing 

 with the growing of hardy ferns both in 

 the garden and indoors, j Profusely 

 illustrated. Net, $1.10. (Postage 10c.) 



Roses and How to 

 Grow Them 



A very practical volume, uniform with 

 the above. Profusely illustrated. Net, 

 $1.10. (Postage 10c.) 



How to Make a 

 Vegetable Garden 



By Edith L. Fullerton. 

 A real necessity for a suburban or a 

 country home. 250 beautiful photo- 

 graphic illustrations. Net $2.00. (Post- 

 age 20c.) 



How To Make a 

 Flower Garden 



A charming and practical book by ex- 

 perts on every branch of the subject. 

 219 beautiful photographic illustrations. 

 Net, $1.60. (Postage 16c.) 



How To Make 

 School Gardens 



By H. D. Hemenway. 

 Illustrated. $1.10 postpaid. 



How To Plan the 

 Home Grounds 



By Samuel Parsons, Jr. 

 Illustrated. $1.10 postpaid. 



A Vlea for Hardy 

 Tlants 



By J. W. Elliott. 

 Beautifully illustrated. 



$1.76 postpaid. 



THE GARDEN 

 MAGAZINE 



C0Vy\TRY LIFE 

 \N AMERICA 



THE WORLD'S 

 WORK. 



DOVBLEDAY PAGE * CO AEW YORK 



A TIMELY BOOK 



We will send it free, postpaid, to each reader of the 'QTfjt (BarDm 

 StPagajittr who sends us too yearly subscriptions at one dollar each 

 (one of them should be new, not a renewal ; the other subscription may be 

 your own paid for another year.) 



REMEMBER THE DOUBLE SPRING PLANTING NUMBER and THE GREAT FALL PLANT- 

 ING NUMBER are two of the most important gardening publications issued during the year in this 

 country. They are indispensable. When purchased separately they cost twenty-five cents each. Altogether regular subscribers for one 

 dollar get twelve numbers that would otherwise cost $1 .50. Some friend of yours cannot afford to miss the April Planting Number. 



This is 

 the Book 



HOW TO PLAN THE HOME GROUNDS. 



Samuel Parsons, Jr., the author, is a Fellow of the Society of American Landscape 

 Architects, and was for years Superintendent of the New York Parks. He gives practical 

 directions not only for laying out the home grounds, selection of site, the care and making of 

 roads and paths, lawns, woodlands, hedges, gardens, selection of plants and trees, etc., 

 but also in a second section he treats of the village improvements, designed to 

 elevate public taste, as it concerns the highways, the schoolhouses, the stations, 

 and the village outdoor life generally. 



Size, 5x7^; pages, 249; illustrations, 56; 

 binding, cloth; price, net, $1.00. 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY, 



133 EAST SIXTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK 



