GOOD FARM AND GARDEN BOOKS 
Tomato Production ™ e m ™,° e ^ 
account of tomato culture, in all its 
nhases that has ever been gotten to¬ 
gether. No g;ardener or farmer can af¬ 
ford to be without the book. Whether 
growing for home use or commercial pur¬ 
poses, the reader has here suggestions 
and information nowhere else available. 
Ilustrated, 128 pages, 5x7 inches. Cloth 
$1.50. 
Popular Fruit Growing 
i;.v S. B. Green, Professor of Horticulture 
and Forestry in the University of Minne¬ 
sota. This book gives full information in 
regard to planting and taking care of all 
kinds of fruit trees, also a complete 
spraying calendar, with necessary 
recipes. 328 pages. Price, well bound. 
■ •loth cover, $1.50. 
Sweet Clover J w 'S%SSS r,n f M Ii i 
weed, but a valuable crop. Practical ex¬ 
periences of farmers, who are growing 
and feeding Sweet Clover. A book which 
every farmer should have. 32 pages of 
practical information on the agricultural 
value of Sweet Clover. Illustrated, 6x!) 
nches, paper cover. Price, 25c. 
Home Canning '™? s 8 f 0 u ? 1?? or b Z k 
tion in regard to canning all kinds of 
iruits, vegetables, meats, also the hot 
and cold-pack methods. It also gives 
many recipes for canning all kinds of 
fruits and vegetables, as well as making 
jellies and pickles. Price. 30c each, 
postpaid. 
A Little Book on Perennials 
By Alfred C. Hottes. This is a 170-page 
book, which gives full information for the 
growing of perennials from seed; also 
bulbs and cuttings. Everyone who owns 
a home should have one of these books. 
It will help you arrange your flower gar¬ 
den so that it will be permanent. Price, 
$2.00, postpaid. 
Cultivation of the Mushroom 
Everyone growing mushrooms should 
have one of these books, in order to get 
the best results. This is a 24-page hook 
with paper cover and it gives full in¬ 
structions about growing mushrooms. 
Price, 50c, postpaid. 
Make Your Garden Pay 
This little book gives full information 
about the planting and growing of all 
kinds of vegetables. It also has many 
illustrations as well as other information 
that is valuable to anyone growing vege¬ 
tables. Price, per copy, with paper cover. 
30c, postpaid. 
Grow Your Own Fruit one 6 who 
is interested in growing fruit should have 
one of these 81-page fruit books. The\ 
give full information about planting and 
taking care of your fruit trees. They 
also give many helpful illustrations. 
This book has a paper cover, but is a 
wonderful buy for the money. If this 
book is not satisfactory, money will be 
returned. Price, 30c, postpaid. 
A Little Book of Annuals 
By Alfred C. Hottes. This little 116-page 
book gives more information in regard to 
the growing and care of annual flowers 
than any other book I have ever seen. It 
gives full information about starting 
plants from seed, as to their care and 
time of blooming, etc. It also has many 
illustrations showing how seeds should be 
started, as well as illustrations of flow¬ 
ers, etc. Every loyer of flowers should 
have one of these little books. Cloth 
bound. Price, $1.90, postpaid. 
Hampel’s Gardenbook p Q h J k 
is printed in the German language. 
Many of my customers ask for a good 
garden book printed in that language. 
The “Hampel’s Gartenbuch fur Jeder- 
mann” has just been completed and I 
can highly recommend it as the best gar¬ 
den book in German print for everyday 
use. It will be found satisfactory. The 
book is well illustrated, well bound. 
These books are imported from Germany. 
Price, $3.25, postpaid. 
The Flower Grower £ h o s n t s h - 
ly magazine, published by a man who 
knows flowers. I have been reading it 
for a number of years and find it to be 
the best magazine on flowers of any I 
have ever read. Every lover of flowers 
should read it. It gives much valuable 
information about what to plant, where 
to plant and how to plant it. Single 
copy, 25c; six months, $1.25; year, $2.00. 
Send me your subscription and I will see 
that you get this magazine. 
INDEX 
A 
Achillea .32 
African Golden Daisy.55 
Ageratum .53 
Alfalfa .62 
Almond .24 
Alsyke Clover . 62 
Althea .24 
Alyssum .53 
Ameranthus .53 
American Elder .14 
American Linden .20 
American Sycamore .21 
Ampelopsis .28. 59 
Anchusa .32 
Anise .45 
Antirrhinum .53 
Aphicide .60 
Apple .4, 5 
Apricot .9. 19 
Aquilegia .33, 53 
Arabis .53 
Arbor Vitae .22 
Arctotis .53 
Armeria .53 
Artemesia .32, 45 
Artichoke .40 
Asclepia .32 
Ash .18. 20 
Asparagus .16, 40 
Asperula .53 
Aster .32. 53 
Austrian Pine .22 
B 
Baby’s Breath .32, 56 
Baby Rambler Roses.31 
Bachelor’s Button .54 
Balm .45 
Balsam .54 
Barberry .17, 24 
Barley . 62 
Basil Sweet .45 
Basswood, see Linden.20 
Beans .40. 41 
Beets . 41 
Bermuda Onion .48 
Birch .18. 20 
Bittersweet .28 
Blackberries .15 
Black Hills Spruce.22 
Black Leaf 40.60 
Black Locust .19 
Black Walnut .16. 19 
Bleeding Heart .32 
Blue Cedar . 22 
Blue Grass .62 
Blue Spruce . 22 
Rolleana Poplar .20 
Books .63 
Borage .45 
Bordeaux Mixture .60 
Borecole .40 
Boston Ivy .28 
Box Elder .18. 20 
Bridal Wreath, see Spirea.27 
Bromus Inermis .62 
Broom Corn .62 
Brussels Sprouts .40 
Bull Pine .22 
Bush Beans .10, 41 
Bush Honeysuckle .25 
Buttercup .32 
Butterfly Bush .24 
Butternut .16 
C 
Cabbage .42 
Caladium .36 
Calendula .54 
California Poppy .55 
Calliopsis . 54 
Campanula .33, 54 
Canary Bird Vine.59 
Candytuft .54 
Cane .62 
Cannas .37, 54 
Cantaloupe .47 
Canterbury Bell .33 
Caragana, see Siberian Pea Tree. 
i n i o oi *)a 
Caraway .45 
Cardinal Climber .59 
Carnation .54 
Carrots .43 
Castor Beans .58 
Catalpa Bungei .20 
Catalpa Speciosa .18. 20 
Cauliflower .42 
Celeriac .43 
Celery . 43 
Celery Cabbage ..42 
Celosia . 54 
Centaurea .54 
Chamomile .45 
Cherry .7 
Chicory .44 
Chinese Bellflower .33 
Chinese Cabbage . 42 
Chinese Elm .IN. 20 
Chinese Wool Flower.54 
Chives .16 
Choke Cherry .24 
Chrysanthemum .32. 54 
Clematis .28 
Climbing Plants .59 
Climbing Roses .29 
Climbing Shrubs .28 
Clover .62 
Coboea .59 
Cockscomb .54 
Coleus .54 
Columbine .33, 53 
Compass Cherry Plum. 7 
Coralberry .26 
Coreopsis .33 
Coriander .45 
Corn .62 
Corn Salad .44 
Cornus .24 
Cosmos .54 
Cottonwood .18 
Cowpeas .62 
Crab Apple . 5 
Cress .42 
Crimson Clover .62 
Cucumber . 45 
Currants .14 
Cutleaf Weeping Birch.21 
Cypress Vine .59 
D 
Dahlia .37, 55 
Daisy .55 
Day Lily .35 
Delphinium .33, 55 
Desmodium .25 
Dewberry .14 
Dianthus .33, 55 
Dicentra .32 
Digitalis .33, 55 
Dill .45 
Dogwood ..24 
Douglas Fir .22 
Dried Leaves .45 
Dusty Miller .54 
Dwarf Blueberries .14 
Dwarf Pear . 6 
E 
Elephant’s Ear .36 
Elm, White .18, 20 
Elder .14, 25 
Eggplant .46 
Endive .42 
Eschscholtzia .55 
Eskimo Roses .31 
Evening Glory.59 
Evergreens .22 
Evergreen Seedlings .22 
Everlastings .59 
F 
False Dragon Head .33 
Farm Seeds .62 
Fennel .45 
Ferns .33 
Fertilizer .62 
Field Seeds .62 
Fir .22 
L886—Sonderegger Nurseries and Seed House.Beatrice, Nebraska—1936 
