Home Gardens 



111. A combination garden of vegetables and flowers. Such a garden is unri- 

 valed for interest when successfully worKed out. It is for the connoisseur 



112. An evergreen formal garden. Such a garden lacKs the color, variety and 

 gaiety that flowers give, but it is stately, permanent, and relatively economical 



113. A formal garden in which flowers are more prominent than architecture, 114. A passageway garden. Showing how service paths and out-of-the-way parts 

 sculpture or evergreens. Perennial phlox at the right, China asters at the left can be beautified by planting a few strong-growing plants 



A modest fruit garden, showing the simplest possible pergola. It may not 

 cost a thousand dollars, but it spreads out the grapes to the sun 



116. A bacK-yard garden. This enormously productive garden, occupying two 

 city lots, has received twenty cartloads of manure yearly for twenty years 



