102 



What ts a fair rental for a given 

 properly? Ask Ike Readers' Service 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



Masch, 1909 



^ Two-year=old, field=grown 



ROSES 



with from three to seven stout 



branches cut back to about two 



feet. Big bushes for immediate 



perfectly hardy 

 Continuous bloomers, 



^T blooming 

 everywhere, 

 as follows : 



Hugh Dickson, new, Flaming scarlet crimson, 

 Frau Karl Druschki, the White American beauty, 

 Mrs. John Laing, Best hardy free-flowering pink, 

 Solcil d'Or, or Golden Sun, Best hardy yellow rose, 

 Baron Boristettin, Deep rich crimson, 



All for $1.25 delivered in the U. S. Free 

 on Rose Culture " with each orde 



H 



Send for our superb 130 page catalog, a complete guide for 

 selecting and growing all that is newest and best in Flowers, Vegetables, 

 Hardy Perennials, Roses, Shrubs, Trees, Fruits, Strawberries, etc. Hand- 

 somely embellished with colored covers and plate and lavishly illustrated 

 with hundreds of photogiaphic reproductions. We will send it free 

 to all who write. 



LIVINGSTON SEED CO. Famous for Tomatoes 



459 N. HIGH STREET 

 COLUMBUS, OHIO 



44 



SCALECI DE 



55 



will positively destroy all soft bodied sucking insects, 

 including all forms of San Jose scale. It is simple, 

 cheap, easily applied and wonderfully effective. 

 Endorsed by government experiment stations, agri- 

 cultural schools and thousands of fruit growers. 



PRICES — 50-gal. bbl., 525. Freight paid if east of the Mississippi and north of the 

 Ohio rivers and N. C. state line. 30 gal., $15; 10 gal., $0; 5 gal., $3.25; 1 gal., $1, 

 F. O.B. Hackensack, N J. Booklet I tells the whole tale. Pocket Diary and 

 Spray Calendar for 1909 sent free. Mention this paper. 



B. G. PRATT CO., Mfg. Chemists, Dept. "I," SO Church Street, New York, N. Y. 



I RHODES DOUBLE CUT 

 PRUNING SHEAR 



THE only pruner made 

 that cuts from both 

 sides of the limb and does 

 not bruise the bark. Made 

 in all styles and sizes. We 

 pay Express charges on 

 all orders. Write for cir- 

 cular and prices. 



More Corn in the Crib 



is the result of the vigorous, thrifty plant growth insured immedi- 

 ately upon the application (at planting time) of 



Nitrate of Soda 



Test it for Yourself Entirely Free 



Let us send sufficient Nitrate of Soda for you to try, asking only that 

 you use according to our directions, and let us know the result. To the 

 twenty-five farmers who get the best results, we offer, as a prize, Prof. Voor- 

 hees' most valuable book on fertilizers, their composition, and how to use 

 for different crops. Handsomely bound, 327 pages. 



Apply at once forNitrate of Soda by post-card as this offer is necessarily 

 limited. " Grass Growing for Profit," another book of useful information, 

 will be sent free to farmers while the present edition lasts, if paper is men- 

 tioned in which this advertisement is seen. 



Send na?ne and complete address on post-card 

 WM, S. MYERS, Director, John Street and 71 Nassau, New York 



The hoop petticoat, a pale yellow daffodil with 

 an extraordinarily wide crown and small narrow 

 petals. It is easily grown from seed and blooms 

 in three years (Narcissus Bulbocodium) 



hoop petticoat is easily grown from seed, and 

 blooms in three years instead of six or seven. 

 Use a gritty or sandy soil, and put plenty of 

 drainage material into the pot. 



There are two varieties of the hoop petti- 

 coat — one a light lemon color, and the 

 other a deep yellow or orange color. The 

 leaves are almost round, instead of being flat. 



Ohio. D. P. H. 



The Shell Book. By Julia Ellen Rogers. 



Doublcday, Page & Co., New York, 1008; pp. 485; illus- 

 trated with half tones and color plates. Price S4.00 net. 



This is the first popular book on shells 

 and is the latest addition to the Nature 

 Library Series. It is written in the form of 

 a popular guide to the families of living 

 mollusks, and by a successful arrangement 

 of the text will help anyone toward the iden- 

 tification of any shell that he may be likely 

 to find. Instructions are also given for the 

 making and maintaining of aquaria without 

 the aid of running water. The illustrations 

 are made directly from actual specimens and 

 this is true even of the color work. Children 

 are always interested in the beautiful colors 

 and forms of the shells and, equally with 

 the flowers, they may be made stepping 

 stones toward a keener and deeper appre- 

 ciation of the things in, nature. 



