

» » & 



NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 



Here is a book that will interest not only those who follow gardening for profit, tmt 

 also the hoys and the matrons upon the farm. Every minutiae of garden management is 

 plainly given and illustrated. There are a hundred things told and described in this book 

 that any wide-awake cultivator would give five times the cost to know. It interests 

 the enterprising boy, because from it he can learn how much a small patch of grouud can 

 be made to yield. It interests the farmer, because he can learn from it how well good 

 cultivation and the proper management of soils will pay, and how an unkindly soil can 

 be ameliorated. He can learn much of what every farmer needs to know of the treat- 

 ment of soils. — Farmers'' Advertiser (St. Louis). 



All the vegetables that thrive in the open air iu our latitude are described, together 

 with the best methods for growing them. The author also imparts practical instructions 

 on the subjects of drainage, and the formation and management of hot-beds. Numerous 

 well-executed wood-cuts tend to make clearer the instructions of the author. — Phil. Inq. 



The author has had long experience, and is well qualified to give lessons in this 

 department of labor. All kinds of vegetables are described, and the whole subject so 

 treated as to point out the way to the surest and largest profit. — Christ. Press (New York). 



There are marvels of transformation and rapid reproduction recorded therein, which 

 might well shame the dull fancy of the author of Aladdin or of Kaloolah. There is no 

 theory about it. The author plainly tells ouryoung men how they can get rich without 

 wandering to California or Montana for it either. — Horace Greely, in the iV". T. Tribune. 



It was with great satisfaction that we opened this treatise, encouraged by its intro- 

 duction to believe it a really valuable work : and such it is. Its rules and directions 

 are clearly and intelligibly stated. Any one can work by them and under them, if he 

 chooses. It is full of matter relating to the essentials of successful gardening. — Christian 

 Intelligencer (New York). 



The directions apply mainly to the market-garden, yet the amateur or private gar- 

 dener will experience no difficulty in applying them to a more limited area. The amount 

 of valuable practical information condensed into this volume makes it one of tin- 

 most desirable books of the kind that have been published. — The Evangelist (New York). 



It is unquestionably the most thorough and the best work of the kind we have yet 

 had from the pen of an American aitthor. It is written in a clear, concise style, and thus 

 made more comprehensive than works which smack more of the office than the farm or 

 garden. — Daily Evening Times (Bangor, Me.) 



By Mail, Post Paid, 



$1 50. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR, 



Descriptive of the modes of Commercial Floriculture, as practiced in the vicinity 

 of New York, the subjects on which it mainly treats are : Landscape Gardening; Designs 

 for Flower Gardens; Planting of Flower Gardens; Green-house Structures ; Mode of 

 Heating ; Cold-Frames ; Hot-beds ; Soils for Potting ; Temperature and Moisture ; Cul- 

 ture of the Rose, Tube-rose, Verbena and Violet; Propagation of Plants by Seeds, Cut- 

 tings, &c. ; Parlor and Window Gardening ; Hanging Baskets ; Packing Plants ; Plants 

 by Mail ; Formation of Rock Work ; Construction of Bouquets. Baskets, etc. ; Culture ' 

 of Winter Flowering Plants ; Insects; Profits of Floriculture ; Diary of Operations, et- ' 

 Price by Mail, Post-paid, . . . . $1 50. 



PETER HENDERSON & CO., 35 Cortlandt St., > T 





■ 



