CULTURE UNDER GLASS 89 



time the violets will have almost finished 

 blooming, or at any rate their market price 

 will be low. This is the time to discard 

 the violets and to raise the temperature to 

 suit the sweet peas; and which will pres- 

 ently produce a splendid crop. Chrys- 

 anthemums or carnations (fig. 4) may also 

 be grown with sweet peas. In a house 

 with early varieties such as "Golden 

 Glow" and "Pacific," the chrysanthemums 

 will be all done by October 20th. If 

 sweet peas are sown in four-inch pots 

 about September lOth, they will be large 

 enough to be put in place by the time 

 the chrysanthemums are gone. The soil 

 should be prepared and the sweet peas 

 planted in place at once, so that they may 

 begin to bloom by the latter part of Janu- 

 ary. Other things may be grown between 

 the sweet pea rows, namely, all kinds of 

 bulbs and flats with small ferns. 



