February, 1911 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE "^SSS 



Ij you wish injormalion about dogs 



51 



A new home before planting the grounds. 



The same home 2 years later. 



GLEN BROTHERS Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, 



glenwood nursery Hedges — Hardy Perennial Plants 



Let Us Send You Our Valuable Catalog— 68 Interesting Pages— Post-paid 



Here is an object lesson. 



In 6 months the value of the property above pictured enhanced 5 

 times the value of the planting. 



Trees, shrubs, flowers correctly planted are an investment, not an 

 expense. 



They are a source of endless pleasure besides. 



But results like the above are obtained only from perfect 

 plants — healthy, sturdy, honest nursery stock must be used. 



Here at Rochester are rare natural advantages in climate and soil 

 for growing healthy trees and plants. 



And our effort is to produce only the best stock — the inferior, the 



weak, the unhealthy, whether tree, shrub or flower stock, have no place 

 in our groves, gardens or hot houses. 



Then, in removing and packing our products, we use the utmost 

 care that your shipment may arrive in perfect condition. 



Fifty years of experience back of our methods. 



Our catalog contains a complete nut department. It classifies 

 and describes deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs — vines, hardy 

 perennial roses and thousands of other plants. It is a valuable hand- 

 book — free on request, postage prepaid. Address Dept. B. 



GLEN BROTHERS **?£?* Rochester, N. Y. 



Sole Agents for Sober Paragon Mammoth Sweet Chestnut. 











Stewart 

 Edward White 



gives the best broad interpretation 

 of American out-of-door life. His 

 outdoor novels and adventurous 

 narratives sound the deep call of 

 the free, wide spaces. 



"The Rules of the Game." Fixed Price, $1.40 



(postage 15c.) 



The Riverman . . $1.50 



Arizona Nights . . 1.50 



The Blazed Trail . 1.50 



The Silent Places . 1.50 



Conjurer's House . 1.25 



The Claim Jumpers 1.50 



The Westerners . 1.50 



Blazed Trail Stories 1.50 



The Forest . . Net, $1.50 (postage 20c.) 



The Mountains Net, 1.50 (postage 20c.) 



The Pass . . . Net, 1.25 (postage 14c.) 



Camp and Trail Net, 1.25 (postage 14c.) 



The Mystery (With Samuel Hopkins Adams) 



$1.50 





DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 



GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK 









^ 



eNewBerr 

 llpGiant Himalaya 



A distinct new fruit. Plant resembles Blackberries, but caries do 



not die. Old wood bears every year — sprouts all come from one 



root. Grows forty feet in a year — two feet some weeks. Lives as 



long as an apple tree. Berries jet black, an inch long, thick, meaty, 



melting, sweet, with little core and unusually rich. Borne in immense 



clusters. Perfectly adapted for any use. Ripens over a period of two 



months. Our 1910 yield was ten hundred and forty-two sixteen quart crates 



to the acre (a thousand plants). Three year old plants will bear five to ten 



tons to an acre — two year plants a fourth of this. 



Our Free Book Tells About Money- / 

 Making New Berries 



We go all over the world for new standard Berries. Our un- 

 usual catalogue describes Giant Himalaya Berry, Berrydale Rasp- 

 berry, and many other Berries. This book will 



prove to you that Berry Growing yields more jms J 



, net profit from equal acreage, with no more — ^ A - * ^"*** 



work, than any other fruit. We get more from 

 one acre of Berries than from three acres in 

 any other crop. Tree fruits require eight years 

 before crops— Berries two years. Market de- _ 

 mand for Berries has never been met. Think a Pfinw^W-i IJS 

 about these things — and get our catalogue. 



BERRYDALE EXPERIMENT 

 GARDENS, 



Garden Ave., HOLLAND, MICH. 



*l.l 



