GARDENING FOR LITTLE GIRLS 
Agriculture are anxious to help this kind of work. 
The former gives you all the seeds you need, free 
of charge. Write to some well-known seed houses 
for catalogues, and you will get particulars about 
all the different varieties. Go to your Public Li- 
braries, and you will find the most fascinating 
books, many written especially for children, tell- 
ing you just what to do. ‘‘When Mother Lets Us 
Garden,’’ by Frances Duncan, is one of the best 
and simplest, while ‘‘Little Gardens for Boys and 
Girls,’ by Higgins, ‘‘Mary’s Garden and How It 
Grew,’’ by Duncan, ‘‘Children’s Library of Work 
and Play Gardening,’’ by Shaw, and ‘‘The School 
Garden Book,’’ by Weed-Emerson, are all intensely 
interesting. 
If you find yourself so successful in your work 
that you have more flowers and vegetables than you 
can use, remember that there are always plenty of 
poor people in your own town who would gladly 
accept your gifts, and any church organization 
would tell you how to reach them. If, however, 
you are trying to earn some money for yourself, 
you can always find regular customers glad to buy 
things fresh from the garden. 
For a meeting place during the summer, why not 
plan a flower club-house? Perhaps some of the 
dear old grandmothers will give you a few holly- 
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