November, 1915 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



103 



itfllfalf£li]ttl] 



With sunken path 

 2% ft. deep 



With side walls 2% ft. high 

 ready for roof and side sash 



Every Home Needs aGarden 



And Every Garden Worth While Needs Hot-Beds and 

 Cold -Frames; or Joy, a Small Greenhouse! 



TO BE most efficient and to cost the least 

 to operate, the hot-beds and cold-frames 

 must be covered with the Sunlight Double- 

 Glass sashes. They need no mats and shutters 

 — they are complete in themselves and everlast- 

 ingly profitable. 



The small, ready-made, inexpensive Sunlight 

 Greenhouse is covered with these sashes. It is 

 easy to heat and sure to give the most satisfac- 

 tory results. 



Get our free Catalogue. If you want Prof. 

 Massey's Booklet on hot-bed and Greenhouse 

 Gardening, enclose 4 cents in stamps. 



Sunlight Double- 

 Glass Sash Co. 



927 E. Broadway 

 Louisville Kentucky 



[or Hot-beds 

 and Cold-frames 



KING'S 



HardyOld-Fashioned Flowers 



Such as — Columbine, Foxglove, 

 Hollyhocks, Larkspur, Phlox, 



and many others. 



SPECIALOFFERGOODTONOVEMBER30th, 



until this date you can buy these hardy old-fashioned 



flowers in good strong plants at prices greatly reduced. 



WRITE TODAY for catalog, and full particulars 



W. E. King, Box 386, Little Silver, N. J. 



WILL MORE MONEY HELP ? 



As a member of our agency organization, securing subscribers 

 for The World's Work, Country Life in America and The Garden 

 Magazine, you can increase your earnings — many are doing it. 

 Send your name to the Circulation Dept. 



Garden City 



Doubleday, Page & Company 



New York 



SCHOOL OF HORTICULTURE FOR WOMEN 



[18 Miles from 'Philadelphia) 



Fall Term of regular two-year 

 course begins Sept. 14th. Practical and 

 theoretical training in the growing of 

 fruits, vegetables and flowers. Simple 

 carpentry. Bees. Poultry. Preserving. 

 School Gardening and the Principles of 

 Landscape Gardening. Constant de- 

 mand for trained women to fill salaried 

 positions. Write for Catalogue. 

 Jessie T. Morgan. IHreetor 

 Ambler, Pa. 



TOBACCO 



BY-PRODUCTS 



Use the by-products of a tobacco factory in the soil of your 

 lawn and garden You will find them to be the best "Lawn 

 Grass Grower" and Insecticide ever yet discovered. 



FALL IS THE TIME TO USE 



Our mixed ground tobacco stems and tobacco siftings are 

 packed in cases of 400 lbs. each for convenient and safe 

 shipping. 



A few pounds of this product allowed to stand a few days 

 in a vessel of water, will make the best spraying solution 

 (tobacco water) for all kinds of insects, you ever used. 



Order early as the supply is limited. $4.00 per case of 400 

 lbs. or $18.00 per ton, f. o. b. Bethesda, O. A ton will cover 

 an acre of lawn or garden, and will produce satisfactory 

 results for 3 succeeding years. Mail all orders and inquiries to 



BUCKEYE TOBACCO MFG. CO. Bethesda, Ohio 



G 



m^t. i vl-.^: . «£ sasscsffi wssn wmmmmssmi 



.*&■ 





m 





v f 



$0M 



3 ••***• W i ?--::Jt- 



You Can Enjoy the Cool Shade that Moons' Trees Afford 



Some Hardy Tree or Plant for Every Place and Purpose in 

 Moons' inclusive collection. A wide range of sizes to choose 

 from ; the quality is superior in shapeliness of form and vigor 

 of growth. 



October and November are spendid months for Tree plant- 

 ing; embrace this opportunity for setting out Shade Trees on 

 the lawn or to line streets and driveways with them ; use them 

 to screen ugly views. 



Every lawn needs a Tree and Moons have a Tree for every lawn. 



Ask for catalog and inquire about the Shrubbery and other 

 Hardy Plants for general landscape use that we have. 

 The "Wm. H. Moon Company 



NURSERYMEN 

 Makefield Terrace MORRISVILLE, Pa. 



Philadelphia Office 

 21 S.12th Street 



The Moon Nursery 



Corporation 

 White Plains, N. Y. 



A Cheering Tree Thought 



YY7HEN the leaves are all off and Nature's naked 

 " spots look glaringly harsh, then it is we regret 

 our postponed planting of some Pines and Spruces, 

 with their cheery, all year greenness. 



Then we regret we had not early in the fall used 

 them to screen some annoyingly unsightly spot. 



But here is a cheering thought. It is not too late 

 to do that planting right now. In fact, it is a partic- 

 ularly advantageous time for such planting- 

 We have the trees — 5 feet high or 20 feet high — 

 and we will do all the work for you, if 

 you wish. 



We guarantee them to live, or they 

 will be replaced. 



Send for our literature. Let us come 

 and talk it over. 



Turnpike 



fficks lre^5 



Isaac Hicks &>Son 



"westburu . Lonj Island 



The Readers' Service gives information 

 about poultry 



THREE GARDEN BOOKS 



The Well- 



Considered 



Garden 



By 

 MRS. FRANCIS KING 



President of the Women's 

 National Agricultural and 

 Horticultural Association. 



Illustrated. $2.00 net. 



Continuous 



Bloom 

 in America 



By 

 LOUISE SHELTON 



When, Where and What to 

 Plant, With Other Garden- 

 ing Suggestions. 



Illustrated. $2.00 net. 



NEW VOLUME IN PREPARATION 



Beautiful Gardens in America 



AND THE EFFECT OF CLIMATE IN VARIOUS SECTIONS 



Beautifully illustrated with more than 170 photographs and full 

 page illustrations in color. $5.00 net. 



CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 



are neither highest nor lowest in price. To pay less wastes 

 your best land and your efforts- — to pay more wastes ycur 

 money. For no more dependable fruit trees, nor small fruits 

 can be secured anywhere, at any price. 

 Collins' Guide tells how, when and what to plant for bigger yield of 

 more profitable fruits. It is FREE — get your copy today. 

 New Berry Book, now on press — edition limited. Write today 



ARTHUR J. COLLINS 4 



Box 23, Moorestown, N.J. s# 



If you wish information about dogs apply to the Readers' Service 



