November, 1910 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



For injormation about popular resorts 

 ■write to the Readers' Service 



163 



NOVEMBER, 1910 



Cover Design — chrysanthemum 



/I. R. Coleman 



Prepare for First Frosts 165 



How Big Chrysanthemums are Grown . . . I. L. Powell 166 



Photographs by H. E. Angell, N. R. Graves and others 



Personalities or Fruits, II John Craig 168 



Photographs by N. Y. Experiment Station and Others 



Practical and Impractical Ideas from England 



Wilhelm Miller 171 



Photographs by A. G. Eldredge and F. M. Good 



Planning the Garden Picture W. S. Rogers 174 



Bringing the Window Box Indoors . . . Luke J. Doogue 175 



Photographs by the author 



What the Cocoa Palm Means to the Tropics John Gifford 176 



Photographs by J. A, Dimock and others 



The Latest Discovery — Plant Sweet Peas Now 



Leonard Barron 178 



Photograph by Nathan R. Graves 



Readers' Experience Club 179 



Children's Gardens Everywhere . . . Ellen Eddy Shaw 180 



Photographs by F. F. Rockwell and others 



Keeping Celery Over Winter .... W. C. McCollom 182 



Photographs by the author and A. G. Eldredge 



A "Don't" for Gardeners U.S.A. 182 



Making More Geraniums C. L. Meller 183 



Photographs by the author 



Increasing Plants by Root Cuttings Sydney B. Mitchell 183 

 Pruning, Planting and Getting Ready for Winter 



W . H. Jenkins 184 



Protecting Trees from Rabbits . . . Frank C. Pellett 184 



Photograph by the author 



Money from Rhubarb Julie Adams Powell 186 



Photograph by the author 



November on the Pacific Coast . . Sydney B. Mitchell 188 

 Plant Some Trees Now Thomas J. Steed 190 



Photograph by the author 



Cider as It is Made F. E. Valentine 192 



Attractive Flowers, Fruit and Foliage Daniel A. Clarke 194 



Garden Gossip 194 



Shrubs for Shady Situations A. B. Cutting 196 



An Unusual Hydrangea Daniel A. Clarke 198 



Photograph by Nathan R. Graves 



How TO Ship Flowers in Quantity .... Carl Purdy 200 

 How I Installed The Drains Harry E. Scott 202 



Photograph and drawing by the author 



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REWARDS AND FAIRIES 



By RUDYARD KIPLING 



A new series of adventures of Dan and Una with Puck of Pook's Hill and it has all the witchery of Mr. 

 Kipling's first collection. There is the story of " Cold Iron " and the lad who left the People of the Hills 

 for the folks that live in housen, "A Doctor of Medicine," who read in the stars the secret of the Great 

 Plague, and many others. Even Philadelphia and several American heroes appear in these new-old 

 Saxon fairy tales. The stories shimmer in that wondrous halfway place between reality and dream. A 

 tremble and it is world of Flesh and Blood ; a flutter and you are with Puck and the People of the Hills. And 

 you slip into it all as if it were the customary thing. Mr. Kipling has omitted nothing of his old 

 skill. Illustrated. $1.50. 



COLLECTED VERSE. By Rudyard Kipling. Illustrated Holiday Edition 



Mr. Kipling has here definitely placed the poetical work by which he wishes to be represented. It is a worthy holiday presentation 

 of this definitive work. Beautifully illustrated by W. Heath Robinson. Cloth, net, $3.50 (postage 35c); Leather, net, $10.00 (post- 

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They. Special Holiday ELdition. Illustrated in 

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 "Just So Stories. Fixed price, $1.20 (postage 

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 Kipling Stories and Poems Every Child 

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••The Ught that FaUed. $ 1 .50. 



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