214 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



The Newest Outdoor Books 



How to Make a 

 Vegetable Garden 



By EDITH L. FULLERTON 



For a suburban or a country home, 

 large or small, this book will be found 

 a real necessity; its illustrations, of 

 which there are more than 200, make 

 it most beautiful. 



Net, $2.00. {Postage 20 cents.) 



Roses, and How to 

 Grow Them 



Volume Tin "The Garden Library'' 



This book devotes itself to rose-growing 

 from the home point of view, and a 

 more beautiful volume it were hard to 

 find. Profusely illustrated. 

 {Ready early in June.) 

 Net, $1.00. (Postage 10 cents.) 



Our 

 Native Orchids 



By WILLIAM HAMILTON GIBSON and 

 HELENA LEEMING JELLIFFE 



A charming volume illustrating prac- 

 tically all the 5 1 species of our native 

 orchids. Nearly 100 illustrations from 

 drawings by Mr. Gibson. 



(Ready about June 8th.) 

 Net, $i-JJ. (Postage 14 cents. ) 



The 

 Dog Book 



By JAMES WATSON 



Part I of this important work has al- 

 ready met with much favor, and the 

 second part, devoted to setters, speaks 

 for itself. The valuable information in 

 the text, the fine illustrations, and the 

 beauty of the dogs themselves, combine 

 to make an unusually attractive part. 

 To be in 10 parts. Each, $1.00 tiet. 

 (Postage 10 cents.) 



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THE GARDE/* /&& COWTRY LIFE fW\ THE WORLDS 

 MAGAZINE ^gp IA AMERICA \g/ WORK 



DOVBLEDAY PAGE * CO ^EW YORK 



How to Make a Flower 

 Garden 



Uniform with "How to Make a Vegetable Garden " 



A charming and practical book by 

 experts on every branch of the subject. 

 More than 200 beautiful photographic 

 illustrations. 



Net, $1.60. (Postage 16 cents.) 



The First Book of 

 Farming 



By CHARLES L. GOODRICH 



An extremely valuable work telling 

 how to conduct a farm with the least 

 expense and largest return. Sixty- 

 three full-page pictures. 



Net, $1.00. (Postage 10 cents.) 



How to Keep Bees 



By ANNA BOTSFORD COMSTOCK 



Few people appreciate the pleasures to 

 be derived from keeping bees, and it is to 

 the uninitiated that Mrs. Comstock 

 makes her special appeal. Outfit, first 

 steps, and methods are clearly described, 

 and the author treats her subject with 

 rare charm. Many photographic illus- 

 trations. 



Net, $1.00. (Postage 10 cents.) 



The Poultry Book 



When begun in co-operation with Eng- 

 lish publishers three years ago, it was 

 found necessary to make an entirely 

 new work to suit American readers. 

 This was done from beginning to end 

 by the ablest American experts (under 

 the general editorship of Prof. W. G. 

 Johnson and George O. Brown), and 

 now, after these years of work, it forms 

 the only authoritative book on the subject. 

 Complete in three volumes ; 672 illus- 

 trations from photographs and from 

 drawings by Harrison Weir. 



Net, $12.00. {Postage go cents.) 



