January, 1 9 1 S 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



207 



AGardon o£ Gladioli 

 is NoVer Monotonous 



Day by day new beauties unfold, new shades 

 and tints appear, until you begin to think that 

 - the whole range of colors has been covered. 

 And these experiences will come to everyone 

 \ who begins a garden of Gladioli this year. 



-~. Here are ten varieties; the kinds an 



^ expert might choose, that will start 

 such a garden for you. They will begin 

 /"l blooming in early summer and will 

 continue until frost. 



^ 



Mary Fennell. Deep 



lavender. 

 Dawn. Rich pink. 

 Europa. Snowy white. 

 Canary Bird. Yellow. 

 Clarice. Pink. 



Golden West. Orange. 

 Goliath. Violet. 

 Pink Perfection. Pink. 

 Princeps. Scarlet and 



white. 

 Victory. Sulphur yellow. 



w 



One Bulb of Each Variety, d» "1 



Postpaid «pl 



(I have a plan whereby you may get twenty- 

 five bulbs for almost nothing. Ask me.) 



My 1918 "Glad" Catalogue is free 



to all readers of this magazine. Write 

 for it to-day. 



HODGSON 



Portable 



HOUSES 



fBi'rzf Ho use 



'Vp — 



HERE is the Hodgson way. All Hodgson 

 Houses are first thoughtfully planned. Then 

 each individual part is carefully made of best 

 lumber — finished, fitted and painted. After which 

 the house is completely erected at the Hodgson 

 plant. 



When you buy — your house is shipped in sec- 

 tions which can be put together by unskilled 

 workmen quickly and you have a house exactly 

 like the one you selected from the Hodgson cat- 

 alog. And at exactly the same price. 



r Hodgson Portable Houses include: bungalows, garages, cottages, 

 poultry houses, pla/ houses, dog houses, and many other kinds. 



If you order now, and pay 25 per cent of the price of your house we 

 will prepare and hold it until wanted. Send for catalog to-day. 



E. F. HODGSON CO. 



Room 228, 116 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. 

 6 East 39th Street, New York City 



DREER'S 



Garden 



Book 

 1918 



will help you 

 wonderfully to 

 reduce the high 

 cost of living. It 

 is read by tens 

 of thousands; professionals as well as amateurs as 



An Authoritative Guide 

 to all garden work, both for Vegetables and Flowers. 



256 pages, four full page color plates, and four full page 

 duotone plates, and hundreds of photographic illustrations. 



It lists all dependable varieties of vegetables, as well as 

 the worthwhile novelties. 



A copy free if you mention this magazine 



H ENRY A. DREER 



714-16 Chestnut St.. Phila. 



^ or ,&£ / \ 



^ .vSfisJ \U M- ' 



^Iwviiiii 



~~~ 5 



. | J— !| 





y *; 



Plan Now for Your Spring Vegetable Planting 



YOU will find just the helpful information you need in this new 

 and different magazine for the garden enthusiast. It teaches 

 the planting and growing of vegetables in the home garden. 

 Plain, truthful, understandable advice about vegetable planting and 

 growing is found each month in 



VEGETABLE LORE 



A Magazine for the Benefit of the Amateur Gardener 



What to Plant — How to Plant — What Seeds to Buy — it tells about just these things, 

 expertly but in plain words. Vegetable Lore teaches thorough cultivation. The 

 cooking of vegetables is also covered. Vegetable growing is a patriotic duty and 

 necessity. Full value to subscribers guaranteed in excess of claims or money re- 

 funded. Issued once a month — $1.00 per year. 



Send for Sample Copy. Edited and Published by 



MAURICE FULD 



1457 BROADWAY NEW YORK 



Advertisers will appreciate your mentioning The Garden Magazine in writing — and tee will, too 



