PRAY, HUBBARD, AND WHITE 



and the Phlox are all blooming together. It is, 

 however, not necessary, as it is not possible, to have 

 so much bloom all the time to make the small 

 garden effective. A little bloom goes a long way. 

 When I saw it in early July with the Hemerocallis 

 just beginning to bloom and the Larkspurs in 

 flower, the garden was quite charming with its 

 delicate touch of blue and gold. Even when it 

 gets too cold to sit out-of-doors, the garden has 

 lost little of its attractiveness. The Rhododen- 

 dron foliage, the fragrant Box bushes, the pyrami- 

 dal Arbor Vitae, and the red brick of the paths 

 provide much winter interest. 



The enclosure, the architectural details, the 

 design, the flowers, each has an important part to 

 play. It is not in their separate parts but in 

 their interrelated action toward garden effective- 

 ness that their complete worth lies in the art of 

 garden making. 



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