The Garden Magazine, March, 1923 
87 
“Horticulture is, next to music, 
the most sensitive of the fine 
arts. Properly allied to Archi¬ 
tecture, garden-making is as 
near as a man may get to the 
Divine functions.” 
—Maurice Hewlett. 
Gardener's Books 
The Complete Garden 
by Albert D. Taylor, M. S. A. 
Fellow, American Society of Landscape Architects 
“It tells what plants to use in every conceivable condition of soil and en¬ 
vironment. . . . Mr. Taylor leaves nothing to the imagination; that 
is the chief reason why his book should be in the possession of all amateur 
gardeners.”—The New York Evening Post. Many Illustrations. 
Price, $6.00 
Colour In My Garden 
by Louise Beebe Wilder 
Probably the most distinctive book ever published on American flower 
gardening—certainly the most beautiful. Illuminated with a series of 
richly colored illustrations, the text describes the succession of color 
harmonies that may be obtained by careful planning and planting. 
In a limited edition, Price, $10.00 
The Amateur’s 
Book of the Dahlia 
by Mrs. Charles H. Stout 
“The chapters of this book, based as they are on sound knowledge, spiced 
with humor, fortified by experience and by experiment will, I am con¬ 
vinced, do much for the progress of dahlia growing and hybridizing.”— 
Mrs. Frances King. Price, $3.00 
Gardening Under Glass 
by F. F. Rockwell 
A book inviting the amateur to the pleasures of taking the garden indoors. 
A commonsense treatment of the advantages of the new field of green¬ 
house cultivation. A practical book. Many Illustrations. Price, $3.50 
The Book of Building 
and Decorating 
edited by Reginald T. Townsend 
Many helpful hints for the house and grounds may be had from the many 
illustrations and the text of this at once delightful and practical book. 
Price, $1.50 
Doubleday, Page & Co. Garden City, New York 
In Canada: 25 Richmond Street, West, Toronto 
