4 Gardening Under Glass 



Sweet Corn and Table Peas, for instance, may 

 be grown perfectly well under glass. That 

 usually they are not so grown is because they 

 occupy so much space in proportion to the re- 

 turns. 



Most of the ordinary flowens and shrubs can 

 be transferred to, or grown in, the glass garden. 

 The favorites of your hardy border and your 

 beds of annuals you may have inside as well as 

 out, and very often of a greater luxuriousness of 

 growth. The standard "greenhouse plants," 

 as they are called, are only a small part of what 

 may perfectly well be grown if one wishes to go 

 outside the lists of the usually grown. 



As to skill and knowledge, it is not necessary 

 to start all over again when you begin under 

 glass. All that has been learned in the outside 

 gardening may be brought into play inside. 

 Of course, if you are progressive, you will pick 

 up new methods and details as you go on; but 

 the point is that, as a start, your experience with 

 outside gardening will enable you to begin gar- 

 dening inside, with every prospect of having it 

 go satisfactorily. 



The Essentials of Success 



Now any gardening, even the growing of a 

 row of Radishes or a bed of Petunias, cannot be 



