November, 1906 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



333 



utmrtmn Htfe 



Be sure and add it this year 

 to your hsl of magazines. 

 Many of you know it to be 

 a mosl delightfully gotten-up magazine of 52 pages or more, 

 12x14 inches, printed on coated paper and beautifully illus- 

 trated with often as many as 1 00 fine halftone engravings. 

 Each number breathes forth the spirit of country living. 

 It's the one essential magazine for the man — -- = 



l l m ' tl. L „.L PRICE. $1.50 A YEAR 



or woman whose home is in the suburbs. and worth d oub i c che pncc 



Read Our Two Special Offers 



I 



k, " The Garden of a Com- 



We have secured five hundred copies of that most popular and fascinating boo 



muter's Wife," written by "The Gardener," who, as you know, is Mrs. Mabel Osgood Wright. The volume 

 is bound in cloth; 354 pages; good, clear type; bears the imprint of the Macmillan Co., and is an addition to 

 any library. Until this edition is exhausted, we will send to any address, postpaid, a copy of this delightful volume 

 and a full year's subscription to SUBURBAN LIFE, the two for $1 .50. Just think of it ! 

 Suburban Life, One Year | The two for 



"The Garden of a Commuter's Wife" X 



$1.50 



We have made a special arrangement with the publishers, Messrs. McClure, Phillips & Co., whereby we are 

 enabled to furnish the readers of SUBURBAN LIFE with that most delightful personal experience of 

 E. P. Powell entitled " The Country Home." This is a volume of 383 pages, with 2 I halftone engravings. The 

 entire volume is printed on India tint paper, and is manufactured to sell for $1.50. For the next thirty days we 

 will send to any address, postpaid, a copy of this volume and a full year's subscription to SUBURBAN LIFE, 

 the two for $2.00. How could you invest $2.00 and get more for your money ? 



Suburban Life, One Year ~\ The two for 



Powell's "The Country Home" j $2.00 













, zr/r& GARDEN 



1 COMMUTERS 1 

 • <=>WIFEc=> ■ 











A 



for 



SAMPLE COPY of 

 SUBURBAN LIFE 



sent to any address 

 10 cents in stamps. 



Address all orders to 



PUBLISHERS SUBURBAN LIFE, 16 STATE STREET, BOSTON 



m ■ m ^^ -y JUST A PUBLISHED 



The New Agriculture 



By 



T. BYARD COLLINS 



8vo. Cloth. 376 Pages 

 100 Illustrations 

 Price, $2.00, Postpaid 



HIS new and valuable work sets forth the changes which 

 have taken place in American agricultural methods which 

 are transforming farm life, formerly so hard, into the most 

 independent, peaceful and agreeable existence. Farm life 

 to-day offers more inducements than at any previous period 

 in the world's history, and it is calling millions from the 

 desk. The present work is one of the most practical treatises on the 

 subject ever issued. It contains 376 pages and 100 illustrations. 



In brief, the Contents are as follows 



CHAPTER I. This chapter contains a general statement of the advantages of farm life. 

 CHAPTER II. Deals with the vast systems of irrigation which are transforming the great 



West, and also hints at an application of water by artificial means in sections of the country 



where irrigation has not hitherto been found necessary. 

 CHAPTER III. Gives the principles and importance of fertilization and the possibility of inocu- 

 lating the soil by means of nitrogen-gathering bacteria. 

 CHAPTER IV. Deals with the popular awakening to the importance of canals and good roads, 



and their relation to economy and social well-being. 

 CHAPTER V. Tells of some new interests which promise a profit. 

 CHAPTER VI. Gives a description of some new human creations in the plant world. 

 CHAPTER VII. Deals with new varieties of grain, root and fruit, and the principles upon which 



these modifications are effected and the possibilities which they indicate. 

 CHAPTER VIII. Describes improper methods in agricultural practice. 

 CHAPTER IX. Devoted to new machinery by which the drudgery of life on the farm is being 



eliminated, making the farm a factory and the farmer the manager of it. 

 CHAPTER X Shows the relation of a body of specialists to the American farmer, who can have 



the most expert advice upon every phase of his work without any expense whatever to himself. 



MUNN y CO., Publishers » 361 Broadway, NEW YORK 



