BAR RY'S 
FRUIT GARDEN. 
BY 3? . B A R R Y. 
NOTICES BY THE PRESS. 
" Barry's Fruit Garden " is one of those practical, profusely illustrated, and com- 
prehensive manuals which Orange Judd is: Co. delight to publish. It seems to tell 
almost everything which one book can tell about the ins and outs and ways and means 
of fruit culture.— The Advance, (Chicago.) 
This volume of 490 pages, as its title implies, is devoted to the culture of fruits 
of every variety in orchards and gardens. It describes the diseases incident to the 
various fruit trees, the kinds of insects that prey upon them, and the remedies for 
ridding trees of the evil.— Scientific American. 
Barry's Fruit Garden strikes us as about as complete a manual of the kind as 
could be desired. Nearly everything, in fine, needed seems to be provided in this 
compact volume, and its abundant illustrations render everything intelligible to even 
the unitiated.— The Methodist, (.-V. J'.) 
The author writes from his own practical experience j and that experience is of no 
ordinary character, being the result of more than thirty years' work at the head of the 
largest Nursery in America, where every operation is conducted with eminent skill.— 
The Country Gentleman. 
It explains all the minutiae of fruit gardening, even to the implements, copiously 
illustrated by engravings, so that the merest novice need not err; gives descriptions 
of all the different kinds of fruit that can be raised in our climate in every stage of 
their lives, from the germ to the fruit-bearing period, with instructions in pruning and 
grafting, in a most satisfactory manner. The chapter on grapes alone is worth more 
than the price of the book. — Jersey City Times. 
It is a rich mine of information upon fruits of all kinds and their proper culture. 
— Providence Press. 
Mr. Barry has long been known as an authority upon fruit culture, and this volume 
of 490 pages, with a full and carefully prepared index, gives the latest results of his 
study and experience. — Springfield Republican . 
This beautiful volume of nearly five hundred pages, will be cordially welcomed 
by every lover of nature. It is the most perfect work we have seen on the whole 
subject, and well deserves a wide circulation.— United Presbyterian, {Pittsburgh.) 
PRICE, POST-PAID, $2.50. 
