38 



II i;t 1 (' V l.T U R E 



•luly 10, 1929 



THE 

 BOLER UF 



l)ne4]ualled Fuel Ecnnomy 



KrMMbell Bollen. tbr bMt by 

 IIT*. Forty yean' aXT' 



THE QDAUTT PL.ACB OF BOSTON 



BaaATdlnc tk« Kroe*eh«ll, It la the 

 k«t w« kar* rrar had and aatlataiv 

 lary b«7(B4 anr axpMtatJaiia. It hcata 



Ray aapMlallr anlck and baa aaTed bi 

 „ aaaaldatablr alraadr la tlie prlc« •( 

 iBal Wk«B we are ta need at aaotbar 

 b«S«' wa win rlT« tht Kro«actaan tta* 

 lr«t eaBalderatToa 



(■Iraed) WM W. BDQAR CO.. 



WATERLBT. MASS 



When You Buy -Get a Kroesdieil 



tjtMJM aq. ft. at (laaa ma aqvlppad wtik 

 Kroaarhell BoUara dorlAv tha yaar af 1*I«. 



L 



Kroecchell Bros. Co., 



tM W. Brla St. 

 OHIOAOO 



ORIO'B Cm..KnRATEP OTC: 

 SPBCIAUST 



After nalns jeor No. U Kroaaekall 

 Boiler I came to tha eeaelaalea tkai 

 bad I to Inatall mora boUm it w««I4 

 be the KraeaefaaU and »o etkar. It 

 really la a pleaaura to beat, na traabla 

 to (et the daalred heat la a T«7 akatt 

 time. 



(SIcnad) CHRIST. WINTEBICH. 

 DrariANCB. OBIO. 



=jl 



THRIP JUICE 



REGISTERED 



A Contact Insecticide. Useful and Reliable, Used for 30 Years in Green- 

 houses, and on Plants, Grape Vines, Trees and Shrubs 



Some common Sucking Insects, magnified 



HAMMOND'S PAINT & SLUG SHOT WORKS, Beacon, N. Y. 



ECTICIl 



J%* R«corBla<4 BtJuidard InsrcxXfllda. 



A apra7 remedj for green, black, wblta tj, 

 thrlpa and lOft acale. 



FUNGINE 



For mildew, mat and other bllghta affeet- 

 lof flowera, fralta and Tegetablea. 



VERMINE 



For eel wormfl, anele wormi and other 

 worms working Id tbe soil. 



Qiiarts, $1.00; Gallon, $3.00 



SOLD BT DEAI^ERB 



Apbine Manufacturing Co. 



MAniSON. N. J. 



Bare year planta aad trtea Jaat tba 

 tklag for freeahaaaa aad aatdaar aaa. 

 Deitra7a Uralj Boc, Itrawa aad WUta 

 Scale, Thripa, Red Spider, BUck aad 

 Oreea Fl;, Ultaa, AaU, etc., witbaat 

 Isjary ta plaata aad wlthaat odor. 

 Uatd aceordlnc to dlrectlaaa, oar ataad- 

 ard Inaectlctdo will prereat raTaffoa aa 

 year cropa b7 iaiecta. 



NoB-palaoBoua and haraaleaa ta aaar 

 aad plant. Leadlac SaedaHoa aad 

 Plorlita baTo aaed It with woaderfal 

 resalti. 



Deatraya Lleo la Paaltry Hoaaaa, 

 rieaa aa Deca aad all DaBOiUe Pata. 

 Eicclleat aa a weak far doga aad atkar 

 anlmali. RelleTea aiaafe. Dilate wltk 

 water 30 te CC parti. 



H Pint, tOc.; Pint, S««.; Qaart, Ma.; 



H Oallen, «1.M); GslUa, «7.M; f 0«1- 



lon (aa, flO.M; 1* OalUn Can, f2a.««. 



Dlre«ttaB aa package. 



LEMON OIL COMPANY 

 l^pt t. 411 W. ll*ftN It, 



second vice-president, Mrs. .John A. 

 Stewart, Short Hills Garden Club; 

 third vice-president, Mrs. Samuel H. 

 Taft, Cincinnati Garden Club; fourth 

 vice-president. .Mrs. Francis B. Crown- 

 inshield. North Shore Garden Club of 

 Massachusetts; treasurer. Mrs. Hugh 

 D. Auchincloss, Newport Garden As- 

 sociation; secretary, Mrs. Harold 

 Irving Pratt. North Country Garden 

 Club of Long Island. 



GENERAL NEWS NOTES. 



The Kverett R. Peacock Co. of Chi- 

 cago has just taken over the Oshkosh 

 Seed Co., a large corporation doing a 

 mail order business. A large building 

 has also been purchased at Rochelle, 

 111., by the Chicago concern, to be used 

 as a storage house. 



Samuel Smith's Sons of Jamestown. 

 R. I., are making extensive additions 

 to their business. They have pur- 



( ha.sed the large iron frame green- 

 houses formerly on the Hodson estate 

 in Newport, and will set them up at 

 .Jamestown, where twelve greenhouses 

 are being constructed. Cut flowers 

 will be grown in the new range while 

 the old plant on .Narragansett avenue 

 will be devoted to pot plants and lilies 

 of the valley. Last year this concern 

 Mowered more than half a million 

 bulbs and 100.000 valley. 



It is understood that Gallivan Bros , 

 the Springfield florists, are to erect a 

 new greenhouse at Smith's Ferry in 

 the near future. 



THE AMERICAN ROSE SOCIETY. 



The Garden Days at the Hartford 

 and Cornell Rose Test Gardens were 

 delightful ones. At Hartford on June 

 L'.".. while the roses were not fully in 

 flower there were enough attractive 

 varieties to make an interesting ex- 

 hibit. The attendance was disappoint- 

 ing. However, the majority of rosa- 

 rians near Hartford are frequent vis- 

 itors in the garden and doubtless will 

 visit it when the varieties are at their 

 best. The hospitality of the park de- 

 partment in the entertainment of the 

 g\iests was all that could be desired. 

 A bountiful lunch was provided by G. 

 \V. Parker. Supt. of Parks, and Alex. 

 Cuiiimin.e, Chairman of the Hartford 

 Rose Test Garden Committee, did 

 everything possible to make the day 

 profitable and enjoyable. 



.\t Ithaca the rose day on June 30th 

 was planned to coincide with the first 

 of three days set for Farmers' Field 

 Days at the College of Agriculture. 

 Aside from the delegates from the Au- 

 burn, Syracuse and Rochester Rose So- 

 cieties hundreds of !Vew Yorkers 

 thronged the rose and peony gardens 

 during the three days and many re- 

 marks appreciative of the beauty of 

 both areas were heard. Surely this 

 was a splendid object lesson to the 

 visitors of the beauty of the rose. De- 

 tailed reports of these two meetings 

 will be made by the chairmen of the 

 rose test garden committees. 



E. A. wiiTTK. Secy. 



