THE NEW EARTH 



A Recital of the Triumphs of Modern Agriculture in America 



By W. S. HARWOOD 



With Joriy-nine full page illustrations. 

 Cloth, 12mo, $L76 net 



Aside from tlie practical information it conveys and tlie light it sheds 

 upon the new era that agriculture has entered upon, ' * The New 

 Earth'' is suggested to cityites as a chastening work for their 

 arrogance. A perusal of it will not only be interesting but ben- 

 eficial and admonitory, for it will teach the urban man that the 

 earth and the fulness thereof is not all his. The farmer has 

 always been the essential factor in the development of mankind 

 and his needs, and Mr. Harwood makes it very plain that in the 

 future he is going to be still more important. * ' The New Earth ' ' 

 is a most entertaining disclosure of what scientific agriculture 

 has accomplished and what it promises to do. . . , It is a book 

 that deserves wide circulation and serious consideratioUj es- 

 pecially in agricultural communities. 



— Evening Telegraphy Philadelphia. 



Mr. Harwood, author of ^^New Creations in Plant Life," has written 

 in ^' The New Earth " an important work, which deserves wide 

 circulation for the public welfare. It is a book which should 

 find its way to the ranches of the west, for it carries information 

 of economic value. . . . Education should come to the help of 

 the farm, and more and more aid in the public welfare. Mr. 

 Harwood' s book is a wise leader. — News -Times ^ Denver, Col. 



"WPTir ri'DT? A irtTATCrC! Tier "DT A "KTfn t T-riTni 



An Authoritative Account of the Life and Work of 



Luther Burbank. 



By W. S. HARWOOD 



With fifty full-page illustrations. 

 Cloth, Mmo, p.7S net. 



This volume, prepared by one who is in hearty sympathy wath Mr. 

 Burbank and who realizes some of the peculiar difficulties under 

 which a good deal of his work is carried on, is by far the most 

 satisfactory account we have yet seen of Burbank' s successful 

 labors. — The Evening Fast, New York. 



To the great majority of readers, especially those who love plants and 

 flowers, there are few books among the thousands issued this year 

 that will hold such interest and attraction as the fascinating vol- 

 ume dealing with the life and work of Luther Burbank. 



— Christian JEerald, 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



64-66 Fifth Avenue, - - - New York 



