188 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



November, 1905 



TURE 



^••g^,' 



Make Your Spare Time Count 



by taking our 



Correspondence Course 



in Horticulture under Prof. John 

 Craijr, ot Cornell University. Treats of 

 Vegetable Gardening, Fruit G; owing. Flori- 

 culture and the Ornamentation of Grounds. 

 We also offer a course in Modern Agri- 

 culture under Prof. Krooks, of Massachu- 

 setts Agricultural College. Full i 'ommer- 

 cial, Normal and Academic departments. 

 Tuition nominal. Text-books free to our 

 students. Catalogue and particulars free. 

 Write to-day. 

 THE HOME CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL 

 Dept. 8, Springfield, Mass. 



The Way to be a Thinker 



is to get in touch with thinkers. All the world's prizes are 

 captured by those who have seasoned their energy with the spice 

 of originality— and originality means the habit of clear and 

 fresh thinking. Even the best of us have a tendency to fall 

 into mental ruts, to go plodding on year after year, in the same 

 track, to do things without knowing precisely why. The way 

 to keep alive, the way to be original, the way to be a success, is to 

 talk with brainy people and to read books that make you think. 

 That's the reason 



The New Science Library 



is a cure for mental paralysis. It contains the best work of 

 Darwin, Huxley, Spencer, Tyndall and great leaders of modern 

 thought. It will tell you what the famous Darwinian theory 

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 and enjoyed, for it is written in a clear and interesting style — not 

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 handsomely printed and bound. 



84-Pa^e Book FREE 



If you mail us the coupon below at once, we will send full 

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 it at half price and on the Individual Payment Plan, by means of 

 which you can arrange the payments to suit yourself. At the same 

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 science dry and dull. There is an edition of a thousand copies. 

 Each copy is beautifully illustrated and printed. As long as the 

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PUBLIC OPINION 



44-60 E. 23d Street NEW YORK 



Gar. m., n-o S . EXCHANGE COUPON 



Good for one complimentary copy of "Some Wonders of Science," 

 if mailed at once to Public Opinion, 44-60 East 23d Street, New York. 



Name 



Street. 



City and State. 



We 



Librai 



'ill send, at the same time, full particulars of our New 

 1 and our Introductory Half-Price Offer. 



ture, which represents a white form of M. 

 botryoides, gives a fair idea of the various 

 species, which have clustered bell-shaped 

 flowers constricted at the throat. They vary 

 as to size of clusters, leaves and stems, and in 

 coloring. The most common form, M. bot- 

 ryoides, has, in the type, dark blue flowers, as 

 have also M. Armeniacum and various other 

 species. 



The handsomest species, in my judgment, 

 is M. Szovitsianum, whose flowers are of a 

 light' "bird's-egg" blue, a color not common 

 among flowers, nor is the species plentiful. 



There is an attractive species of Muscari, 

 the "feathered hyacinth," with feathery in- 

 florescence. 



These easily obtainable bulbs are attrac- 

 tive and well worth growing. 



Culture ? Simply open soil, fairly rich. 



New Jersey. J. N. Gerard. 



Five Dollars Easily Earned 



TN this department we offer $5 for the best 

 -*- short narrative or personal experience 

 in gardening received every month. We 

 cannot award these prizes for suggestions 

 of things to be done by someone else; each 

 idea must have been worked out by the 

 writer. Crowd all the facts and figures 

 into 300 or 400 words if possible. A photo- 

 graph or diagram is necessary. 



Record-breaking achievements are espe- 

 cially desired, e.g., "Sweet Peas on May 

 4th," "Tomatoes for 101 Days," "A Green- 

 house for $124," "Apples that Weigh a 

 Pound." This offer is made only to 

 amateurs who are subscribers to The 

 Garden Magazine. Please write at the 

 top of every manuscript: "Personal Experi- 

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RECORD-MAKING ACHIEVEMENTS 



We offer five dollars for every photograph 

 and short article showing how any idea 

 described or illustrated in this number of 

 The Garden Magazine has been worked 

 out in a better manner than you find it in the 

 magazine. 



If longer articles and more pictures are 

 necessary, they will be paid for at regular 

 rates if acceptable. If you are interested 

 read carefully the twenty suggestions which 

 are given on page 180. 



For Fall Planting 



Our Descriptive Catalogue is now ready and 

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Hyacinths Tulips Lilies 

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Ii including a magnificent collection of the 



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ESTABLISHED 1802 



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HARDY ROSES, PEONIES 

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and next year be ahead of him who waits 'til spring. 



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mailed FREE to prospective patrons. 



G. H. PETERSON, Rose and Peony Specialist 



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We furnish plans and estimates by an experienced 

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Shatemuc Nurseries, Barrytown, Dutchess County, N. Y. I 



