Two Parallel Columns >- 



that should command the attention of every reader of this book.. 



New, 

 Revised 

 and Enlarged 

 Edition. 



by T. GREINER. 



READY FEBRUARY 15th, 1805. 



PRICE, POSTPAID, 



$2.00. 



For sale by all the Leading Booksellers in the United 

 States and Canada. 



NO book ever published on Gardening has excited so much 

 favorable comment as this work. Ten thousand copies 

 of the first edition have been sold at $2.00 each, during 

 the last few years by the book trade of America, and the de- 

 maud steadily increases, hence this new and enlarged edition. 



"How to Make the Garden Pay" contains more 

 than 100,000 words, is finely printed in large, readable type, is 

 handsomely bound, copiously dllustrated at great expense, 

 with almost 200 practical illustrations, and is in all respects, 

 both as to the matter it contains and the manner in which it 

 has been printed, bound and published, superior to any work 

 of its kind ever issued. Whether the reader is a farmer who 

 cultivates a garden to supply only his own table, a resident of 

 a town or village with one or more village lots which he culti- 

 vates for both pleasure and profit, or a market gardener who 

 makes truck farming his regular business, he will find "How 

 to Make the Garden Pay" equally valuable to him. The 

 book has been written with special reference to all these 

 points. The professional and amateur gardener will alike 

 find solid meat in this work. 



• • TABLE OF CONTENTS. • • 



PART ONE— Gardening in General. 



Chapter I. Home Gardening. 



Chapter II. Market Gardening and Trncls Farming. 

 Chapter III. Former's Kitchen Garden. 



Chapter IV. Requirements of Success In Market Gardening. 



Chapter V. Hints In Marketing. 



Chapter VI. Manures for tlie Garden, No. 1. 



Chapter VII. " " " No. 2. 



Chapter VIII. " " " No. 3. 



Chapter IX. Garden Implements. 



Chapter X. Cold Frnmes. 



Chapter XI. Manure Hot Beds. 



Chapter Xir. Fire Hot Beds. 



Chapter XIII. Cold Vegetable Houses. 



Chapter XIV. Forcing Houses or Pits. 



Chapter XV. Early Plants for the Home Garden. 



Chapter XVI. Drainage. 



Chapter XVII. Irrigation. 



Chapter XVIII. Insects and Otker Foes. 



Chapter XIX. Fungus Diseases of Garden Plants. 



Chapter XX. Seeds and Seed Sowing. 



Chapter XXI. Novelties. 



Chapter XXII. System and Rotation of Cropping. 



Chapter XXIII. Weeds and How to Manage Them. 



Chapter XX I V. Thinning and Transplanting. 



Chapter X X V. Means of Protection against Drought and Frost. 



Chapter XXVI. Hired Help. 



Chapter XXVII. Monthly Memoranda. 



PART TWO— Growing Special Crops. 



Chapter XXVIII. Cultural Directions. 

 Chapter XXIX. Strawberry Culture. 

 Appendix. Electro Horticulture. 



"Our Farming," 



by T. B. TERRY. 



Pronounced by the American Press and 

 Public the Greatest, Best and Most 

 Readable Work ever published on Ag= 

 ricultural Topics. 



A S interesting as a novel. At tlie same time so plainly 

 written as to be thoroughly understood by the merest 

 novice in farming matters. Contains 368 pages, printed 

 with new, large type, on fine white paper. An excellent, 

 finely engraved portrait of the author, and numerous full-page 

 and smaller illustrations. Handsomely bound in cloth covers. 

 PRICE, POSTPAID, - $2.00. 



For sale by all the Leading Booksellers in the United 

 States and Canada. 



The following table of contents fully illustrates 

 the scope of this excellent work : 



Chapter I. How I Came to be a Farmer. 

 Chapter II. What the Farm was. 

 Chapter III. How We Started. 

 Chapter IV. Mixed Farming. 

 Chapter V. What We Have Done. 

 Chapter VI. Special Farming. 



Chapter VII. Clearing of Trees, Stumps and Stones. 

 Chapter VIII. Laying out the Farm. 

 Chapter IX. Tile Draining. 



Chapter X. Tile Draining, Swales, Cat Swamps, etc. 

 Chapter XI. How to Tile Drain. 

 Chapter XII. Other Points In Draining. 



Chapter XIII. Tillage. 



Chapter XIV. Tillage— The Earth Mulch. 

 Chapter XV. Clover as a Fertilizer. 

 Chapter XVI. Treatment of Clover. 

 Chapter XVII. Manure Saving. 

 Chapter XVIII. Manure, continued. 

 Chapter XIX. Preparing for Potatoes. 

 Chapter XX. Potatoes, the Seed. 



Chapter XXI. Planting and Culture of Potatoes. 

 Chapter XXII. Harvesting the Potato Crop. 

 Chapter XXIII. Other Points In Potato Culture. 

 Chapter XXIV. Preparing for Winter Wheat. 

 Chapter XXV. Other Points In Wheat Culture. 

 Chapter XXVI. If Everyone Should Do So? 



Chapter XXVII. Sowing Clover, Timothy and Hungarian 



Grass Seed. 

 Chapter XXVIII. Care of Implements. 

 Chapter XXIX. Our Barn. 

 Chapter XXX. The Care of Stock. 

 Chapter XXXI. Big Loads. 

 Chapter XXXII. Muck. 



Chapter XXXIII. Knowing What Yon Are About. 



Chapter XXXIV. Not All Work. 



Chapter XXX V. A Farmer's Home. 



Chapter X X X V I. Our Home. 



Chapter XXXVII. The Small Fruit Garden. 



Chapter XXXVIII. Wife's Share. 



Chapter XXXIX. Insurance. 



Chapter XI.. Buying at Wholesale. 



Chapter XI, I. Inducements Offe' v«l by Farming. 



Chapter XI. II. A Short Sermon. 



Without exception these two books, Greiner's "How to Make the Garden Pay" and 2 

 Terry's "Our Farming" are the greatest additions to agricultural literature in the last ten years. | 



Both have been adopted as text books in almost every Agricultural College in the land; have been discussed at the Farm x 

 Institutes, read aloud at Farmers' Reading Clubs, etc. Almost 20,000 copies of both books have been sold at $2.00 each S 

 by the book trade throughout the country. These books are not to he compared with the pamphlets published by many ? 

 seedsmen for free distribution among their customers. Both are handsomely bound in cloth, and will prove an ornament on g 

 any centre tabic or in any book case. For the advancement of American agriculture, I take pleasure in making my custo- x 

 mers the following liberal offer: I will present a cloth-bound, S2.00 copy of either one of these books absolutely free £ 

 to any one sending in an order for $10.00 or over from this catalogue. Sf'if°M your order amounts to $20.00,-? 

 I will send a copy of BOTH BOOKS. This is in addition to every other discount offered. *s 



If your cash remittance amounts to $10.00, you will receive a copy of whichever book you 



desire; if to $20.00, you will receive a copy of both books. 



«* IF WANTED, HOWEVER, YOU MUST STATE THE FACT WHEN SENDINC IN YOUR ORDER. ~& 



