NOTICES TO FELLOWS. 



Ixiii 



16. R.H.S. PUBLICATIONS FOR THE ASSISTANCE OF 

 COTTAGE AND ALLOTMENT GARDEN SOCIETIES. 



To assist Allotment Holders and Cottage Gardeners the Society has published 

 the following, to be obtained post-free from the Secretary at the price offered : — 



6. d. 



Rules and Regulations for Allotment Societies . .... 2 



Rules for Judging Cottage and Allotment Gardens .... 2 



Companion Judges Sheet for ditto ...... 3 



Rules for Allotment and Vegetable Exhibitions ..... 2 



Vegetable Bottling and Fruit Preserving without Sugar, by Mr. and Mrs. 



Banks (including valuable recipes for Jams and Jellies) . . .18 



Printed lectures, illustrated with lantern slides, have been prepared for the 

 use of Societies of Allotment Holders. For particulars apply to the Secretary, 

 R.H.S. , Vincent Square, S.W. 1. 



17. R.H.S. POPULAR PRACTICAL PAMPHLETS. 



The following pamphlets can be ordered from the Royal Horticultural Society, 

 Vincent Square, London, S.W. 1. They will be found eminently practical. 

 The increase in the cost of paper and printing has necessitated revision of the 

 price of these Pamphlets, which until further notice will be 6d. each, or by 

 post yd. 



Food Pamphlets : — 



(e) Vegetables and How to Grow Them. 



(J) Vegetables from Seed sown in July and August. 



(q) The Cultivation and Manuring of the Garden. 



(r) Potatos in Gardens and Allotments. 



(w) Potato Growing — Spring work. 



(x) Potato Growing — Autumn work. 



(y) Potato Growing, Some Experiments in. 



(v) Cropping Allotments and Small Gardens. 



(a) List of Hardy Fruits, with Cultivation. 



(c) The Pruning of Fruit Trees. 



(b) The Training of Fruit Trees. 



(d) Keeping Fruit Trees Clean. 



(k) Fruit and Vegetable Botthng and Storing. 



(m) Vegetable Cookery. 



(w) Salads and Salad Making. 



Other Garden Pamphlets : — 



(g) The Herbaceous Garden. 

 (A) The Rose Garden. 



(i) Flowers for Small Gardens, Window Boxes, &c. 



(J) Hardy and Half-Hardy Annuals in the Open Air. 



(o) War-time Economy in Gardening. 



(p) Medicinal Plants and their Cultivation. 



(s) Fruit Cultivation under Glass. 



(t) The Pruning of Hardy Shrubs. 



(«) The Children's Garden. 



18. THE MOST DESIRABLE VARIETIES OF FRUIT. 



Drawn up by the Fruit Committee (Price 2s. post free). 



Contains nearly 200 pages, and besides the list drawn up by the Committee^ 

 gives lists of varieties recommended by nearly 100 expert growers all over the 

 country for their respective parts of Great Britain. It shows the result of a 

 ballot of varieties to be preferred for such characters as vigour of constitution, 

 and for various purposes, as, e.g., in the case of Apples — Bush, Standard, 

 Espalier; Pears — Bush, Standard, Espalier, Wall. It also shows the best 

 varieties for cooking as distinct from dessert, the best for markets, and much 

 similar detail of great value now that the desirability of planting more fruits is 

 so widely recognized. 



