196 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



November, 1905 



Poultry, Kennel and Live Stock Directory 



Information about the selection or care of dogs, poultry and live stock will be gladly given. 

 Address INFORMATION DEPARTMENT, The Garden Magazine, 133 East 16th St., New York 



GEDNEY FARM POULTRY YARDS 



S. C. Buff Orpingtons White Wyandottes 

 S. C. Black Minorcas 



Yards stocked with birds of the most noted prize-winning strains in America. Old and young stock 

 for sale, of all varieties for breeding or exhibition. 2,000 to select from. 



FRANK W. GAYLOR, Manager, White Plains, N. Y. 



Wmnetka Collie 

 Kennels 



MEADOW FARM 

 Winnetka, Illinois 



The home of 

 present and future 



COLLIE 

 CHAMPIONS 



They have taken 



146 



First and Special Prizes 

 since January, J902 



PUPPIES and GROWN STOCK 

 FOR SALE 



SQUABS 



How we raise and prepare 

 squabs for market. Prices. 

 Profits. Care of Breeders. 



Details of management in the most perfectly equipped 



Squab Plant in the world. Ten cents. 



ROYAL SQUAB CO. Box 10 NORWALK, CONN. 



EAT SQUABS g 



For Sale— Rough Collies 



Dogs and bitches, grown and puppies, will be 



sold cheap. For further particulars address 



M. Bullocke, 85th St. and 2nd Ave., Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N.Y. 



Cairnsmuir Fox Terriers 



Major G. M. Carnochan 

 New City, Rockland Co., New 

 YORK (N.Y. office 44 New St. ). offers 

 youn? puppies either wire or smooth 

 haired to lie shipped as soon as weaned. 

 DOGS Slo, BITCHES $10. This is an 

 excellent opportunity to obtain the 

 Cairnsmuir blood at very reasonable 

 prices. Purchasers should send cheque 

 with order, stating sex and variety. 

 Grown dogs and older puppies for sale 

 at all times. Also Welsh terriers. 



AIREDALE TERRIERS 



The ideal dog for the home — as a watch dog, as a compan- 

 ion and for sport. Noted for intelligence. Larger than a 

 fox terrier, rough coated, wiih a constitution of iron. The 

 hardiest dog alive. Death to rats and other vermin. We 

 ship to all parts of the country and guarantee safe delivery. 

 For further particulars address 

 BURNLEY KENNELS, Box 272, NEW YORK CITY 



KENNELS AT NETHEKWOOD, N. J. 



AIREDALE TERRIERS 



Send for illustrated, descriptive cir- 

 cular of the handsomest, gamest, and 

 most reliable of all breeds of dogs, the 

 AIREDALE TERRIERS. 



ALEX. SMITH, Superintendent 



COLNE KENNELS 



Petite Cote, near Montreal Canada 

 BRIDGEMAN'S CATALOGUE OF 



HIGH GRADE BULBS and SEEDS 



for Fall Sowing. Mailed Free 

 BRIDGEMAN'S SEED WAREHOUSE, 37 East 19th St.. New York City 



V 



id when ynu buy them ask for PLY- 

 MOUTH ROCK SQUAIfS, which are the 

 largest and best. Squabs are raised in 

 Oftfz ^ft^a 4 weeks, sell for $9.50 to #6.00 doz. Good money breed- 

 ing" them everywhere; women do well. - We were the Jlrst — 

 oks. breeding methods and famous Plymouth Rock 



?© 



jYT , • Tf , fTW ) big thoroughbred Homers revolutionized the in- _ _ 

 \^J\*b^\ : bj dustry. Visitors welcome at farm; correspondence (TJqO 

 fttf\ffi(\ fftw^ invited. First send for our Free Book, "How to s^y 7^7 



ness. Ask also for new printed matter. C^ O C/ C7 C2 C=/ 



PLYMOUTH ROCK SQUAB CO., 331 Howard St., Melrose, Mass. © 



GERALD HOWATT 

 Expert Judge of Domestic Animals 



Professional assistance in the selec- 

 tion of Live Stock. 



I have bought and sold fine animals 

 in almost every State in the Union. 



Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Swine, Poultry 



LAKE STREET, WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. 



Poultry Supplies 



The right supplies go a long way toward making poultry! 

 more profitable. You'll find our various "Vigor"' Foods 

 great helps. All other leading foods and supplies and 

 Cyphers' Incubators and Brooders. 



Write for our free Illustrated Poultry Supply Book— 

 a very helpful book. 



JOHNSON & STOKES, Dept. A 8 



.217=21° Market Street PHILADELPHIA 



J. S. WOODHOUSE, l S£ffir c &' 



Agricultural Implements for Field and Garden 



SEND NAME AND ADDRESS FOR 1906 CATALOGUE 



Your Dwn Electric Light Plant. 



We have complete outfits for residences of any size, summer homes, camps, hotels, schools, launches, 

 yachts, etc. Every detail included; very best material; absolutely practical. So simple no electrician 

 required. I.itrht all the Time, as storage battery included. Gns, Gasoline- or St.-am engines used give 

 plenty of power for pumping water, sawing wood, refrigeration, etc. We would HVe to send every 

 reader of THE GARDEN Magazine who is likely to be interested our new 6o-page Catalogue describ- 

 ing over 130 different outfits. Address J. i(r h t i„ e department 



RICHARDSON ENGINEERING CO., Hartford, Conn. 



Two Good Hardy Vines 



VINES offer the best means of getting 

 quick effects near buildings, and make 

 a garden look more really worth while the 

 very first season. Plant annual vines at first 

 until the permanent vines grow up sufficiently. 

 For screens, too, where some unsightly object 

 is to be hidden, use vines on trellises while 

 the permanent shrubbery is attaining proper 

 size. For temporary hedges use vines. 

 Long stretches of green are never monotonous 

 and some of our vines have showy flowers 

 besides. There are very few buildings which 

 are not improved by having vines planted 

 lavishly about them. The same amount of 

 luxuriant growth cannot be had in any other 

 class of plants at sq little cost. Vines are for 

 everybody. A five-cent packet of morning 

 glory seed will accomplish wonders. 



The most popular rapid-growing vine is 

 Boston ivy (Ampelopsis Veitchii). No other 

 hardy climber seems so perfectly adapted to 

 the covering of brick walls. Its clinging 

 tendrils find easy anchorage on any masonry. 

 It has wonderful variety of leaf — ranging 

 from tiny heart-shaped leaves half an inch 

 in length to huge trefoils three inches across. 

 The young shoots. and the undivided leaves 

 they bear are so different from the woody 

 stems and fissured leaves of older growth 

 that the effect is that of two vines of different 

 habits springing from the same root. For 

 frame houses, Boston ivy is almost too luxuri- 

 ant unless used on trellises. The dense 

 blanket of its foliage, shutting out the sun r 

 may even keep the walls damp. In the fall 

 it changes from green to bright scarlet. 



The native Virginia creeper {Ampelopsis 

 quinquejolia) is as well suited for use on 

 wooden walls as is Boston ivy to masonry. 

 In some respects, the Virginia creeper — or 

 woodbine, as is better known throughout the 

 North Central States — is more picturesque 

 in this growth than the Boston ivy. The ten- 

 drils of the latter catch on every projection 

 within reach and draw the stems down to 

 form as flat a surface as the wall beneath. 

 The tendrils of woodbine, fewer in number 

 and demanding more obvious anchorages, 

 allow the vine to assume all sorts of charac- 

 teristic and irregular forms. 



Woodbine and Boston ivy seem to be 

 equally hardy north of the Ohio River. Both 

 are showy in the fall and retain their red 

 foliage until well into November. Between 

 them there is little to choose save that the Vir- 

 ginia creeper requires support, where the Bos- 

 ton ivy finds or makes its own way. Boston 

 ivy spreads its mantle of green over the walls 

 almost from its roots, while woodbine is more 

 capricious in some cases, flinging out creepers, 

 only at intervals until it is well up the walls. 



