The planting and transplanting of vegetables are simple problems if you have 
Home Vegetable Gardening to guide you. 
TWO IMPORTANT NEW GARDENING BOOKS 
Home Vegetable Gardening The Landscape Gardening Book 
By F. F. ROCKWELL 
T HERE are many books that treat of vegetable gar¬ 
dening, fruit growing and the like in an encyclo¬ 
paedic way. They tell what vegetables there are, 
what pests are liable to attack them, and so on, but they 
usually give far too much information for the man who 
wants to establish a vegetable garden on his own country 
place or suburban plot for the family use. The author, F. F. 
Rockwell, is a practical gardener himself. He realizes from 
long experience just what the average layman wants to 
know in order to raise a successful and varied crop of vege¬ 
tables. Exactly this information is presented in this practical 
volume. While not fulsome, this book covers every essential, 
from preparing the soil to the last cultural directions for the 
proper maturing of the crop. The author has treated the 
subject in an amazingly concise and entertaining manner. 
HOME VEGETABLE GARDENING is the one com¬ 
plete yet concise book on home vegetable gardening. It in¬ 
cludes as well the equally important subjects of growing ber¬ 
ries and fruit. The book is uniform in size and binding with 
THE GARDEN PRIMER, but with many more pages. 
Cloth, 12 mo, $1.00 net. Postage 8 c. 
By GRACE TABOR 
T HERE have been many books published within the 
past few years on the various branches of gardening, 
but most of these have dealt with the cultural side 
exclusively. The larger subject, embracing the whole site 
of the country home, particularly one of moderate size, has 
apparently been ignored. The author of THE LAND¬ 
SCAPE GARDENING BOOK, a well-known landscape 
architect, has written the one book that solves the whole 
problem of making a home out of a house and plot. The 
book shows just how to plan the home grounds, whether they 
consist of a suburban plot or a large estate—how to plan the 
entrance walks and driveways; how to plant trees so that 
they will give the most value in shade and beauty; how to 
group and plant shrubbery for a harmonious mass as well 
as a succession of bloom; how to make the grounds attrac¬ 
tive in winter—in short, this is the one essential book for 
the man who would have his home something more than a 
mere building set on the earth. Planting tables, lists of 
plants and cultural instructions are added in condensed form 
at the end of each chapter. The illustrations are superb 
half-tone reproductions of representative gardens and homes, 
together with practical diagrams and planting plans adapt¬ 
able to any sized place. 
Bound in dark blue cloth, stamped in gold with a garden 
inlay in full color. 8 vo, $2.00 net. Postage 20c. 
McBRIDE, WINSTON (£L CO., Publishers, 449 FOURTH AVE.,NEW YORK 
May, 1911 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
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