The Leading Gardening Newspaper for Amateur and Professional Gardeners. PRICE ONE PENNY WEEKLY
Since "The Garden" has been reduced from threepence to one penny, its success has been extraordinary. It meets the requirements of both PROFESSIONAL and AMATEUR GARDENERS. It is circulating rapidly amongst BEGINNERS IN GARDENING, and the great feature of helping readers by greatly extending the ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS has been much appreciated. All branches of gardening are fully considered, and descriptions and illustrations in colour and black and white of new plants, the Flower Garden, Rose Garden, Kitchen Garden, Fruit Garden, and Wall and Water Garden are given. "The Garden" is THE gardening paper wherein to learn the best ways of making a success of the smallest and largest gardens. It is a paper for all to study who wish to thoroughly master the art of gardening. Gardening for Beginners and Answers to Correspondents a Special Feature Valuable Prizes Offered for Competition CONSULT THE ADVERTISEMENT PAGES TO BE HAD OF ALL NEWSAGENTS AND BOOKSTALLS Specimen Copy post free from the Manager, "The Garden," 20 Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, London, W.C. The "Country Life" THE CENTURY (SECOND EDITION) Edited by E. T. COOK. A comprehensive Work for every Lover of the Garden. 624 pages, with about 600 Illustrations. 21s. net; by post, 21s. 10d. Times.—"No department of gardening is neglected, and the illustrations of famous and beautiful gardens and of the many winsome achievements of the gardener's art are so numerous and attractive as to make the veriest cockney yearn to turn gardener." GARDENING FOR BEGINNERS (FOURTH EDITION) A Handbook to the Garden. By E. T. COOK. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 13s. Spectator.—"Full of information about both the useful and the ornamental, and as far as we have been able to test it, eminently practical. The beginner, by the way, will have gone a long way before he has assimilated the contents of this stout volume of nearly five hundred pages; but then alia aliis curÆ, and the wider the choice that is offered by a volume of this kind the better." TREES AND SHRUBS By E. T. COOK, Editor of The Garden. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 11d. Gardeners' Chronicle.—"A good book on trees and shrubs is a real want. Few books are more often enquired for, and until now we have had a difficulty in replying to our correspondents who have asked for information on the point. In these days of trashy gardening books, it is a pleasure to come across one which bears the stamp of original observation, judicious inference, and industrious research." ROSES FOR ENGLISH GARDENS By Miss GERTRUDE JEKYLL and Mr. E. MAWLEY. Illustrated with 190 full-page Plates. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 11d. Daily Chronicle.—"All the roses of England, blossoming in a counterfeit summer of black and white, seem to be gathered together into Miss Jekyll's charming book. The pictures are really pleasant to look at; near or far a rose photographs quite as well as a beautiful face, and carries with it its own individual look. No one can fail to be captured by Miss Jekyll's enthusiasm and fine discrimination." LILIES FOR ENGLISH GARDENS Written and compiled by Miss GERTRUDE JEKYLL. 8s. 6d. net; by post, 8s. 10d. Westminster Gazette.—"'Lilies for English Gardens' is a volume in the 'Country Life' Library, and it is almost sufficiently high commendation to say that the book is worthy of the journal. Miss Jekyll's aim has been to write and compile a book on Lilies which shall tell amateurs, in the plainest and simplest possible way, how most easily and successfully to grow the Lily—which, considering its great beauty, is not grown nearly so much as might be expected. We certainly think that in the future there will be less neglect of this flower, for after looking at some of the illustrations (all admirable and admirably produced), there will not be many garden owners who will be content to be Lilyless." WALL AND WATER GARDENS By Miss GERTRUDE JEKYLL. Containing instructions and hints on the Cultivation of suitable plants on Dry Walls, Rock Walls, in Streams, Marshpools, Lakes, Ponds, Tanks and Water Margins. With 133 full-page Illustrations. 186 pp., 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 10d. Times.—"'Wall and Water Gardens.'—He who will consent to follow Miss Jekyll aright will find that under her guidance the old walls, the stone steps, the rockeries, the ponds or streamlets of his garden will presently blossom with all kinds of flowers undreamed of, and become marvels of varied foliage. More than a hundred photographs help to enforce Miss Jekyll's admirable lessons." GARDENING MADE EASY Price 1s. net; by post, 1s. 3d. By E. T. COOK, Editor of The Garden. An instructive and practical gardening book of 200 pages and 23 Illustrations, all showing the way certain gardening operations should be performed. Every phase of gardening is included. The beginner will find this a most helpful guide in the cultivation of flowers, vegetables and fruits. It is the A B C of gardening. A NEW AND CHEAPER EDITION OF THE FRUIT GARDEN By GEORGE BUNYARD, V.M.H., and OWEN THOMAS, V.M.H. Price 12s. 6d. net; by post, 13s. Royal Horticultural Society Journal.—"Without any doubt the best book of the sort yet published. There is a separate chapter for every kind of fruit, and each chapter is a book in itself—there is, in fact, everything that anyone can need or wish for in order to succeed in fruit growing. The book simply teems with illustrations, diagrams, and outlines. The diagrams on pruning are particularly admirable; we cannot speak too highly of them, and from them anyone should be able to teach himself to be an expert pruner. The book winds up with 100 pages of outline drawings, which should be a wonderful aid to identification." Manchester Courier.—"If in England fruit culture ever receives the attention which is imperatively demanded, the present volume will undoubtedly be looked back upon as a notable contributory factor to that result. It is not merely that the writers are men of the highest experience who are also clear and capable wielders of the pen, but they have laid under contribution the experiments, achievements, and lessons of other nations.... It would be impossible to find elsewhere, under one cover, such a mass of useful, stimulating, well-arranged and up-to-date information regarding fruit culture." Tablet.—"It is a compilation by men who know their work, and deals with the whole question in the most practical manner. None of the writers waste words in mere description or exhortation. Plain directions are given for the cultivation of the different sorts of fruits, their planting, pruning, and cropping, and the best sorts indicated." SWEET VIOLETS AND PANSIES, AND VIOLETS FROM MOUNTAIN AND PLAIN Written by several authorities, and Edited by E. T. COOK, Editor of The Garden, Author of "Trees and Shrubs," &c. Price 3s. 6d. net; by post, 3s. 10d. This interesting subject has never been treated in the same way as set forth in this illustrated book. There are chapters upon the culture of sweet violets in winter and in the open garden, upon Heartsease and the Tufted Pansies (Violas), and upon the Wild Violets that have been introduced from America and elsewhere. The information is thoroughly practical. It is a dainty gift-book to gardening friends. THE BOOK OF BRITISH FERNS By CHAS. T. DRUERY, F.L.S., V.M.H., President of the British Pteridological Society. Price 3s. 6d. net; by post, 3s. 10d. St. James's Gazette.—"Has been most carefully done; no fewer than seven hundred choice varieties are described. The book is well and lucidly written and arranged; it is altogether beautifully got up. Mr. Druery has long been recognised as an authority on the subject." CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, AND PINKS Edited by E. T. COOK. Price 3s. 6d. net; by post, 3s. 10d. The border Carnation, the Picotee, the Malmaison, and the Tree Carnation. Carnations for Exhibition and for town gardens, diseases of the Carnation, and the garden Pinks and Wild Pinks are all fully considered, and thoroughly practical information by experts is given on each subject. Manchester Courier.—"There is little left unsaid on the subject of Carnations and Pinks in Mr. E. T. Cook's interesting book on the subject.... All lovers of those popular flowers should purchase Mr. Cook's volume, the illustrations to which are not its least admirable feature." MY GARDEN By EDEN PHILLPOTTS. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 10d. The World.—"It is a thoroughly practical book, addressed especially to those who, like himself, have about an acre of flower garden, and are willing and competent to help a gardener to make it as rich, as harmonious, and as enduring as possible. His chapters on irises are particularly good." Westminster Gazette.—" ... will attract no less for its literary charm than for the varied and interesting experiences which it details.... Mr. Phillpotts is a gardener every inch of him, whatever else he may be, and his book is not only a sound contribution to the literature of gardens, but withal a very captivating one." Scotsman.—"A charming addition to a beautiful series, the 'Country Life' Library." IN ENGLISH HOMES VOLS. I. AND II. The internal Character, Furniture, and adornments of some of the most notable houses of England depicted from photographs specially taken by CHARLES LATHAM. These large and handsome volumes measure 16 in. by 11¼ in., each contains about 200 full-page plates and 150 smaller plates, illustrating "Our goodly English Dwelling-places, those houses which have been sanctified by the passing of centuries." £2 2s. each net; by post, £2 3s. Scotsman.—"A veritable revelation of the wealth of internal adornments, architectural and other, contained in the great country mansions of England. To turn over the pages of the volume is to obtain keen pleasure, as well as enlightenment, concerning a treasury of domestic art and archÆology which to a large extent is kept closed from the common eye." Morning Post.—"Such a work as In English Homes comes as something of a revelation. One may have a general idea, or even some particular knowledge of the splendours of architecture, decoration, furniture, and works of art appertaining to our country mansions, and yet be astonished at all the taste and magnificence represented in the profusion of excellent photographs. The abundant illustrations are well designed to exemplify the elaborate details of carving and plaster work, as well as the bold architectural schemes that characterise the interiors and exteriors of the house." VOLS. I. AND II. NOW READY GARDENS OLD AND NEW (The Country House and its Garden Environment.) Over 450 Superb Illustrations in each Volume, printed on treble thick Art Paper, portraying in a manner never before attempted the greatest and most interesting Gardens and Homes in England. 2 Vols., £2 2s. net each; by post, £2 3s. each. Scotsman.—"'Gardens Old and New' is a pictorial and descriptive record of some of the finest gardens in England. Each is illustrated by numerous photographs, which are not only on a considerable scale, but are reproduced in a most sumptuous fashion. In each case there is a descriptive article, which tells when the house was built, what have been the fortunes of its owners, and when and how its gardens have been laid out. It is a book from which those who are fortunate in the possession of a garden may learn much of garden-craft, while those who are not thus fortunate can derive much pleasure from the contemplation of the magnificent views with which the book is adorned." THE GARDENS OF ITALY Being a series of illustrations, from photographs specially taken by CHARLES LATHAM, of the most famous examples of those magnificent features of garden arrangement and architecture for which Italy, pre-eminently the earliest home of the garden, is noted. The same care and fastidious selection which distinguished Mr. Latham's previous work, In English Homes, has been exercised in these volumes, and the spirit and atmosphere of the scenery have been caught with entire success. This most important work, which forms a handsome companion to In English Homes, contains about 300 plates, and is issued in two volumes, handsomely bound in cloth. £3 3s. net the Two Volumes; by post, £3 4s. Westminster Gazette.—"The natural and artistic beauties of the famous palace or villa gardens of Italy are most admirably illustrated, and with such variety and success as must be reckoned among the triumphs of photographic work." Globe.—"The illustrations are among the best of their kind that we have seen, especially in their rendering of distances of contrasted effects of light and shade. The grouping of architectural subjects—often an insurmountable difficulty—is managed with skill, the artist's feeling for composition enabling him frequently to make a good picture out of the material which is hardly within the photographer's customary limits." Yorkshire Post.—"In the two handsome volumes a clear idea is given by illustrations and letterpress, of the wonderful beauty of places to which the ordinary tourist seeks admittance in vain." A GARDEN IN VENICE By F. EDEN. An account of Mr. Eden's beautiful garden on the island of the Guidecca at Venice. With 21 collotype and 50 other illustrations. Parchment limp, 10s. 6d. net; by post, 10s. 11d. Glasgow Herald.—"Written with a brightness and an infectious enthusiasm that impart interest even to technicalities, it is beautifully and rarely pictured, and its material equipment is such as to delight the lover of beautiful books." ECONOMIES IN DAIRY FARMING A New and Important Work on Dairying, by Mr. ERNEST MATHEWS (the well-known Judge and Expert). 7s. 6d. net; by post, 7s. 10d. The Journal of the Bath and West of England Society.—"The author of this book is so well known among farmers, especially those interested in the selection and judging of cows, that his name and experience alone will go far to ensure that his views receive the attention they deserve. He has for many years past been judge in all the most important butter tests which have been held at our principal agricultural shows." WHERE THE FOREST MURMURS By FIONA MACLEOD, being a Series of Nature Essays. 6s. net; by post, 6s. 4d. Morning Post.—"No other than Fiona Macleod could so have transfigured Nature into dream, no other writer could have expressed with such unity of spirit the Celtic attitude in terms of country things. She finds the charm of the mountain in their contemplation from the valley, the forest most vividly itself when the twigs are bare and the mosses shrouded in snow, the most luminous moment of the cuckoo's year in its first days of silence, and her love of all things greatest when they have just been taken away." Daily Telegraph.—"There is everywhere a sense of the haunting mystery of the processes of the world viewed through the eyes of a simple unsophisticated nature, which, from perpetual brooding upon the face of the deep, has caught something of the misty air and broken music of the waves. Suggestion, rather than doctrine, is the atmosphere of the work; and in a certain vague, but beautiful suggestiveness, the strange but eager-hearted prose of this writer abounds to the very brim." SEASIDE PLANTING OF TREES AND SHRUBS By ALFRED GAUT, F.R.H.S. An interesting and instructive book dealing with a phase of arboriculture hitherto not touched upon. It is profusely illustrated, and diagrams are given explaining certain details. Those who have gardens and estates on exposed coasts will find the book of immense assistance, and, judging by the remarks of the writer, it is astonishing what beautiful results may be achieved on such coasts when sufficient protection is afforded. 5s. net; by post, 5s. 4d. THE UNHEATED GREENHOUSE By Mrs. K. L. DAVIDSON. Containing full and clearly-written instructions as to the management of a cold greenhouse, together with a list of plants that may be grown therein. 8s. 6d. net; by post, 8s. 10d. "COUNTRY LIFE" LIBRARY OF SPORT Edited by HORACE G. HUTCHINSON A Series devoted to Sport and Pastime, each branch being dealt with by the most qualified experts on the subjects which they have made peculiarly their own. A special feature has been made of the reproduction of old sporting prints. Illustrated. Demy 8vo, Cloth. CRICKET With over 80 Illustrations taken from the most interesting of the old Cricketing prints. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 11d. SHOOTING In Two Volumes, 12s. 6d. each net; by post, 12s. 10d. each. Pall Mall Gazette.—"Will prove a welcome and valuable addition to Standard Sporting Literature.... The subject is treated from a thoroughly practical and modern standpoint; in its views and information it is entirely up-to-date." FISHING With Coloured Plates of Salmon and Trout Flies. Over 250 Full Page Illustrations with various diagrams. In Two Volumes, 12s. 6d. each net; by post, 13s. Morning Post.—"Few books on any sport, and perhaps none on fishing, have ever deserved better the description 'thorough.' To its title-page might well have been added the motto of the Royal Agricultural Society, 'Science with Practice,' and to the title itself, 'The Angler's EncyclopÆdia.' From Cornwall to John o' Groats, from Wales to Norway, from Florida to India and Burma—here you may find what there is to be caught and how to catch it. And no detail seems to have been overlooked. Localities, baits, tackle, choice of rods, methods of casting, likely times—all are fully covered by experts who write from long experience, and not because they spend odd days of the week going a-fishing and resolved to write a book about it.... The book is profusely, delightfully, and usefully illustrated. The salmon flies are excellent, and so are the prints showing right and wrong methods of casting, bringing in a fish, and gaffing.... 'Fishing' has fully achieved its stated object of providing such information as may make a man an intelligent and a successful angler if he has an average brain and a love for craft." BIG GAME SHOOTING With over 200 Illustrations from Photographs showing Animals in their actual habitat and natural environment. In Two Volumes, 12s. 6d. each net; by post, 12s. 11d. each. Manchester Courier.—"EncyclopÆdic in its scope, the work becomes by its value and interest a standard authority on the subjects treated." GOLF GREENS and GREEN KEEPING 10s. 6d. net; by post, 10s. 10d. Yorkshire Daily Post.—"The practical worth of the volume is nearly equal to the combined worth of all the books that have been written on the theory and practice of golf." Pall Mall Gazette.—"Each article is written by a man who knows his subject, and the book is brightened by a number of most admirable and helpful photographs. It will be useful to secretaries of links already established, and even more so to gentlemen who are thinking of pegging out a new course; and we have no hesitation in saying that it should be on the library shelves of every golf club pavilion in the kingdom as a valuable practical treatise." Irish Times.—"This is the first book on the subject. It is an excellent book, and one which every member of every green committee should read and re-read." HALF A CENTURY OF SPORT IN HAMPSHIRE Being Extracts from the shooting journals of JAMES EDWARD, second Earl of Malmesbury, with a prefatory memoir by his great grandson, the Fifth Earl. Edited by F. G. AFLALO. 10s. 6d. net; by post, 10s. 11d. Liverpool Daily Courier.—"The book is of great interest, and an important contribution to the literature of sport and natural history. It is charmingly illustrated." POLO—PAST AND PRESENT By T. F. DALE. 12s. 6d. net; by post, 12s. 11d. Scotsman.—"A work than which there could be no better document of a man's claim to speak with authority. This treatise is learned in the ancient history of the game, well informed and exact in its directions as to how it is played in the various quarters of the globe, and broad minded in its suggestions of an international code for the furtherance of its future prosperity. It has many admirable illustrations, and a delightful chapter of personal reminiscences, discusses all the practical business of the game with a knowledge which the most expert will be the readiest to value highly, and brings together into a well-stocked appendix a collection of rules and regulations and a list of clubs which materially increase the usefulness of the book for purposes of reference. The volume promises at once to take rank as a book of first importance in the literature of its subject." COUNTRY LIFE THE JOURNAL FOR ALL INTERESTED IN COUNTRY LIFE AND COUNTRY PURSUITS Subscription Prices per annum (Post free): Inland, 29s. 2d.; Foreign, 47s. Weekly, Price, 6d. Country Life is a weekly journal addressed to all interested in country life and country pursuits. One of its main features is the celebrated series of Country Homes and Gardens Old and New; in each number a country seat, remarkable either for its beauty or something peculiarly instructive in the architecture of the house, gardens or grounds, is elaborately illustrated in a manner that has proved of high service to those engaged in building and laying out or improving their estates. Other features of rural life are dealt with in an equally thorough manner. The methods pursued on our most famous estates and farms are minutely described, and photographs of the finest pedigree stock and the best machinery are given. All forms of healthy outdoor sport are described and illustrated in their season. In no case, however, are the facts set forth dry, as the journal numbers among its contributors some of the most graceful and accomplished writers of the present day. New books are also described and discussed by competent critics, so that altogether the journal is calculated to give the best news and views on all subjects that are of interest in cultivated circles, and the wholesomeness and fine open-air feeling that pervades its pages have almost become proverbial. Country Life has, in fact, become indispensable. Dally Telegraph.—"'Country Life' is generally admitted to be the most beautifully produced of all the weeklies. Its process illustrations are unmatched, and the letterpress is always carefully selected and good in quality." Westminster Gazette.—"To say of 'Country Life' that it is one of the best of our illustrated productions is stating only half a fact, inasmuch as in some of its features it stands alone. Its splendid gallery of stately mansions, beautiful interiors, and grand old gardens are incomparable." Daily Mail.—"'Country Life' has established itself as the most beautifully produced weekly journal in the world." Daily News.—"There is no feature of life in the country that is untouched, and a bound volume of 'Country Life' is a real joy to possess and frequently to turn over." Spectator.—"'Country Life' amply fulfils its promise of being 'the journal for all interested in country life and country pursuits.'" Liverpool Daily Courier.—"There is scarcely a number without one or more contributions of literary or other interest which will stand reading, re-reading and study." LONDON: PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICES OF "COUNTRY LIFE," LTD., TAVISTOCK ST., COVENT GARDEN; AND BY GEORGE NEWNES, LTD., SOUTHAMPTON ST., STRAND, W.C. |