SCHOOL GARDEN BIBLIOGRAPHY lOI 
mittee of Public Works and Mines, Halifax, 
Nova Scotia. Pages 66. 
Fifty-second Annual Report of the Public Schools 
of the City of Worcester, Mass. Superintendent 
of Schools, Worcester, Mass. “Nature-Study 
and Garden Work. ” Pages 48. 
“School Gardens at the School of Horticulture, 
Hartford, Conn.” by H. D. Hemenway, 
Director of the School of Horticulture, read 
before Boston Meeting of the American Park 
and Outdoor Art Association. Published in 
Park and Cemetery, September, 1902, 324 Dear- 
born Street, Chicago, Ills. 
“ Boys Trained for Citizenship,” published in The 
World To-day, October, 1902. 153- 155 LaSalle 
Street, Chicago, Ills. 
“Garden Movement for Schools,” by Dick J. 
Crosby, Office of Experiment Stations, U. S. 
Department of Agriculture. Published in The 
World To-day, October, 1902, 1 53-1 55 LaSalle 
Street, Chicago, Ills. 
“Farming Industry in the United States,” pub- 
lished in The World To-day, September, 1902, 
1 53-1 55 LaSalle Street, Chicago, Ills. 
“School Gardening in the Boston Normal School.” 
Published in Modern Methods, April, 1902, 
New Eng. Pub. Co., Boston and Chicago. 
“Flower Gardens in Public Schools,” by Jessie M. 
Good. Published in “How to Grow Flowers,” 
October, 1900; the Floral Publishing Co., Spring- 
field, Ohio. 
“The School Garden, State Normal School, Hyannis, 
Massachusetts,” by Bertha Brown. Published 
in Journal of Education, April, 1902. Boston, 
Mass. 
