884 



State Hortimdtural Society. 



Pineliurst, 

 Tine Bluff. 

 Pine Ridge, 

 Riverside Farm, 

 Rose Cottage, 

 Roadside, 

 Rosedale, 

 Rocky Point, 

 Summit Hill, 

 Sunnyside, 

 Sliady Lane, 

 Spring Valley, 

 Sleepy Hollow. 

 Shadeland, 

 Shady Nook. 

 Shadyside, 



Sunshine Cottage, 

 Sunny Heights, 

 Sugar Grove, 

 Stony Brook, 

 Sunset Lodge, 

 Sweetbrier, 

 Silverdale, 

 Slab Sides, 

 Springside, 

 Spring Hill, 

 Springdale. 

 Shady Lawn, 

 Sunny Slope. 

 Sunny Peak, 

 The Elms, 

 The Cedars, 



The Pinery, 

 The Daisy Farm, 

 The Bee Hive, 

 The Crest, 

 The Evergreens, 

 Three Hills, 

 Tall Cedar. 

 Twin Oaks, 

 Uplands, 

 Valley Home. 

 Valley View, 

 Willow Dale. 

 Woodland, 

 Woodside, 

 Walnut Grove. 



One more suggestion, please : When the right name is chosen, 

 let's use it. What's the good of a name if nobody knows we have 

 it? Have it painted on a board, in neat letters, and nail it up 

 somewhere in plain sight from the road. Or have it lettered on 

 your rural mail box. And while you are about it, why not have 

 the name printed on letter paper and envelopes ? 



Brookdale. Paul Plowshare. 



— Farm Journal. 



Avilion : 



"Deep meadowed, happy, fair with orchard lawns."— Tennyson. 



Another form is Avilanio. 



The Italians often use the word Villa, followed by the name of 

 a mother or wife or daughter, as Villa Maria, Villa Anna. 



Cairn — a Scotch word, meaning pile of stones or hill or moun- 

 tain, is used with the family name, as Cairn-Warren. 



STICKING TO THE OLD VARIETIES. 



To make a success, we have to start right, says H. M. Dunlap, 

 Champaign county. 111. Start with good varieties. A man listens 

 to the talk of the tree agent who has the new varieties that he 

 wishes to sell, varieties that cannot be found fault with, because 

 they have no record, and all the recommendation they have is that 

 of the man who wishes to sell the trees, and none can dispute him, 

 because no one knows anything to the contrary. The man who 

 starts out to sell trees finds that the people want something better 

 than their neighbors have; they do not want the old varieties. 

 They know the old varieties, they know their faults; they are 



