xviii AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS March, 1909 
>‘F ragrance 
The Only Sweet Scented Dalia 
in the World 
Glistening single white flowers of large size, 
borne on long stems, having the fragrance of the 
honeysuckle. Flowers in profusion from August 
until frost. 
Young plants $1.00 to readers of this magazine only ; 
regular $2.00 each. This ad. appears in no other magazine. 
Send for free copies of Rawson s Garden Manual for 1909 
and Special Dalia Catalogue 
W. W. RAWSON @® CO. 
SEEDSMEN BOSTON, MASS. 
fe A Garden of Hardy Flowers Three Months after we Planted it 
Write for 
our Book PLANTS AND PLANS FOR BEAUTIFUL SURROUNDINGS 
it is full of invaluable information, illustrations of flowers and beautiful lawns. It shows how the modest as well as the most extensive 
grounds can easily be made charming and attractive. There is nothing more pleasing and delightful to cultured taste than artistic and 
properly planted grounds. We grow andimport all of the choicest hardy plants, shrubs, trees, box and bay trees for creating beautiful 
landscape effects in formal or natural landscape gardening. Write now lest you forget. It is free. 
WAGNER PARK CONSERVATORIES, Box 424, SIDNEY, OHIO 
The Johnston‘'BEST’? Water System affords you every convenience and /| 
s+) comfort enjoyed by people in thecity, 
Itis an efficient fire protection, adds value to your property at small ex-3 
pense and cuts out water tax and labor. We deliver anywhere, freight | 
prepaid. H 
Write us for complete literature and let ussend you an estimate. 
LJ) JOHNSTON MFG. CO. 1— WALNUT, KANSAS CITY, MO. | 
NEW BOOKS 
Tue Way oF THE Woops. A Manual for 
Sportsmen in Northeastern United 
States and Canada. By Edward Breck. 
New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons. Pp. 
17+436. Price, $1.75 net. 
Printed in a convenient form, with pages 
of small size and on thin paper, Dr. Breck’s 
book is a veritable storehouse of useful 
knowledge for the practical guidance of the 
sportsman. It is, in fact, a practical field- 
manual, intended to form a part of the kit 
of every camper, fisherman and hunter. It 
contains concise yet thorough and authorita- 
tive information on every subject connected 
with life in the north woods, such as out- 
fitting, fishing, shooting, canoeing, tenting, 
trapping, photography, hygiene, the protec- 
tion of nature and many allied subjects. Its 
scope is, therefore, of the widest, and being 
based on extended personal experiences, it 
possesses the uncommon value of brevity and 
merit. A distinguishing feature is that the 
author not only tells his readers what they 
should have, but where to find it and what it 
costs. ‘The latter item is likely to vary from 
time to time and with different localities, but 
this information is always extremely useful 
and convenient, and is immensely helpful in 
determining the cost of a projected trip. The 
author has been markedly successful in con- 
densing his very broad subject without in- 
juring the scope of his book. It is a book 
of distinctly practical value that even the ex- 
pert sportsman will find helpful. 
THE House Dicniriep. Its Desicn, ITs 
ARRANGEMENT AND ITs DECORATION. 
By Lillie Hamilton French. New York: 
G. P. Putnam’s Sons. Pp. 13+157. 
just this book. Its aim is to tell the rich 
how they should design, furnish and dec- 
orate their houses, or rather how they should 
have all this work done for them. ‘To a lesser 
extent it tells them what they should not have 
done, but that is too delicate a subject for 
even the graceful pen of this writer. As it is 
she has seen a lot of fine houses and been 
measurably impressed by what she saw. No 
one could possibly visit many houses of the 
very rich without feeling that here was a vir- 
gin field for suggestive criticism, and that if 
these worthy folk had but known how to 
spend the fortunes they lavish on their dwell- 
ings something very good, instead of merely 
something rich and lavish, might have been 
produced. 
This book does not pretend to be a guide to 
house furnishing, although much of it is con- 
cerned with this subject. But it opens a 
welcome door, and the sane comments and 
suggestive criticisms of the author should go 
far in making rich people seriously consider 
their tables and chairs, their beds, candle- 
sticks, rugs, and bric-a-brac. “There are no 
complete descriptions of houses, but each chief 
room is considered by itself, and numerous ex- 
amples and illustrations given for each. Nor 
does the author leave any doubt as to the kind 
of houses she herself is here interested in, nor 
the people she hopes to reach.. Her book deals 
exclusively with the costly house, and it is as 
an exponent of the costly life that she regards 
it. The book is charmingly done, written in 
OlRicer: has long been urgent need for 
