SCIENCE. -ADVERTISEMENTS. 



vii 



Valuable help in planning your out-door work 



Barbara's The Garden of a Commuter's Wife 



RECORDED BY THE GARDENER. 



On its publication the C'lmmercial Advertiser said: " As a book for genuine lovers of 

 gardens to consult when planning one, perhaps uo volume in this Elizabethan era 

 of treatises on fioriculture is better than " The Garden of a Commuter's Wife." 



Mrs. Alfred Ely's Another Hardy Garden Book 



gives simply the results of years of her own experiences in raising vegetables, flowers, 

 fruits, transplanting trees, etc. The New York Tribune describes Mrs. Ely as "the 

 wisest and most winning teacher of the fascinating art of gardening that we have met 

 in modern print." With 49 full-page plates. f 1.75 net (postage 12c.) 



By the Same Author A Woman's Hardy Garden 



Fullif illuitraled from photographs. Sixth Edition. Cloth, 12mo, gilt tops, ^1.75 net [postage 13c.) 

 It was of this book that Mrs. ALICE MORSE EARLE wrote: "Let us sigh with 

 gratitude and read the volume with delight. For here it all is — what we should plant 

 and when we should plant it ; how to care for it after it is planted and growing ; 

 what to do if it does not grow and blossom; Avhat will blossom, and when it will 

 blossom, and what the blossom will be." (From an extended review in The Dial.) 



Mrs. Theodore Thomas's Our Mountain Garden 



" One cannot help liking the unspoiled personality revealed in its pages, nor can any 

 one with an iota of nature-love fail to respond to its unforced enthusiasm. It has in 

 it the tonic of mountain breezes." — Chicago Record- Herald. 



Cloth, ^1.50 ne'. {Postage 13c. ) 



Dr. John W. Streeter's The Fat of the Land 



" The importance and value of such a book is incalculable. . . . The story of an Amer- 

 ican farm is told with a frankness, a vivacity, a good-humor, and a practicality 

 which make it more interesting to the nature-loving reader than if it were a modern 

 novel of the most exciting kind." — Boston Transcript. 



Eighth Edition. Cloth, 12mo, ^1.50 net. ( Postage 12c.) 



The Practical Garden Book 



Containing the Simplest Directions for tlie Growing of the Commonest 

 Things about the House and Garden. 



By C. E. HUNN, Gardener to the Horticultural Department of Cornell University, 

 and L. H. BAILEY. Second Ed.— 2.50 Pp.— Many Marginal Cuts— f 1.00. 



It is the book for the busy man or woman who wants the most direct practical in- 

 formation as to just how to plant, prune, train, and to care for all the common 

 flowers, fruits, vegetables, or ornamental bushes and trees. It has articles on the 

 making of lawns, borders, spraying, fertilizers, manures, lists of plants for particular 

 purposes, hotbeds, window-gardening, etc. It is all arranged alphabetically, like a 

 miniature cyclopedia. 



Garden Making Suggestions for the Utilizing of Home Grounds. 



By L. H. BAILEY, aided by L. R. TAFT, F. A. WAUGH. and ERNEST WALKER. 



Sixth Ed.— 417 rages—250 llllus'rations—§1.00. 

 It gives in simple language such information as every man or woman who buys a 

 single packet of seed or attempts to grow a single plant is in need of. No other 

 modern American work exists which covers this important field. — Botton Tia script. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, 64-66 Fifth Ave., N. Y. 



