October, 19 13 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



119 



Stained with Cabot's Shingle Stains. 

 H ollingsworth <V Bragdon, Arch'ts, Cran/ard, N.J. 



Cost Much Less Than Paint 

 Wear Longer— More Artistic 



"Your stains have proved most satisfactory. I have five 

 lakeside cottages finished with them. My one painted 

 cottage costs me almost as much as all the rest to keep 

 fresh looking. Mycottages are considered quite artistic. 

 Joseph H . Scranton, Washington, N.J, 



Cabot's Creosote Stains 



have proved their artistic effects and wearing and wood 

 preserving qualities in every climate for thirty years. You 

 are sure of them. Don't take substitutes made of kero- 

 sene and crude colors.-, 



You can gel Cabot's Stains everywhere. 

 Send for samples and 7iame of?iearest agent. 



Samuel Cabot, Inc., Mfg. Chemists, 1 Oliver St., Boston, Mass. 



Fine Stock of Flowering 

 Apples for Fall Planting 



Hardy Shrubs, Trees and Vines 



A large and fine stock of well-rooted plants grown 

 in sandy loam. Good plants; best sizes for plant- 

 ing, very cheap. Priced catalogue free on applica- 

 tion. Wholesale and retail. 



Old Colony Nurseries, Inc., 



T. R. Walson, Pres. 

 Established 1840 Plymouth. Mass. 



Baltimore Nurseries 



California Privet 



Any quantity, size and age. No better grown. 

 Shade and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs and Vines. 

 Full line of Fruit Trees and Plants. 



Get oar prices and catalog 



Franklin Davis Nursery Co. 



BALTIMORE, MD. 



Have You Some Friends? 



to whom this magazine 

 would appeal? A very lim- 

 ited number of copies have 

 been set aside for my use. 

 Send me the names and I 

 will mail sample copies — a 

 prospectus of coming fea- 

 tures and our best clubbing 

 offers. We are anxious to 

 extend the usefulness of the 

 magazine — will you help ? 

 Address W. H. EATON, 



Circulation Manager 

 The Garden Magazine 



GARDEN CITY NEW YORK 



WILSON 



CARNEGIE 



What $3.50 

 Will Do 



(C) Brown Bros. 



(Ci Pach Bros. 



THE four-volume set and this helpful and interesting magazine should be in the 

 library of every progressive home, not alone for the grown-ups but for the 

 f young folks. This set of books with The World's Work, an illustrated monthly 

 review of what is going on the world over, affords a decided aid along the line of 

 persona] efficiency — of success. For the key-note of success is efficiency in every 

 field of endeavor — and this is the note in 



The Master Workers' Library 



A CHAT WITH CARNEGIE 



Would you like a chat with Carnegie 

 in his library? Much better than a mere 

 interview is the reading of his book 

 4 *The Empire of Business." 



It is not alone interesting- but pro/ft- 

 able, for in it you will find more than 

 one hint that will help you in your 

 business. 



A VISIT WITH WILSON 



Wouldn't you like to visit President 

 Wilson and hear him talk along the 

 lineof his most effective speeches? The 

 next best thing (in some respects bet- 

 ter) is to read what he says in " The 

 New Freedom." You get the gist 

 of his addresses there and more too 

 and you are strongly impressed with 

 the spirit of progress which the pages 

 hold. 



^ No less important than what has been 

 distinguished men, is what is being done from 

 of world-enterprise and endeavor and all this 



A TRIP WITH HILL 



The next best J thing to a trip with 

 fames J. Hill in his private car is to 

 read his really great book "High- 

 ways of Progress." 



In it he sounds a note of warning 

 against National waste while standing 

 firmly for America's future. He sets a 

 lesson for us and aids us in learning it. 



A HALF-DAY WITH 

 ROCKEFELLER 



Would you like to spend a half-day 

 on the links with Rockefeller? Even 

 in that time he could not tell you a tithe 

 of the interesting things that you find 

 in his book— his ombook "The Diffi- 

 cult Art of Getting." 



In it also are business hints of actual 

 money-value to the alert reader. 



done and what is said by these four 

 month to month in the broad domain 

 is best reflected in the pages of 



The World's Work 



HOW TO GET THESE BOOKS FREE 



We are going to add 50,000 new yearly subscribers to The World's Work and in order to do 

 this quickly, we are making an oiler worth while (the best we've ever made) namely, 



HILL 



(C) Pach Bros. 



Only (THE WORLD'S WORK ($3 yearly) 1 Only 

 «■* K(\\ THE MASTER WORKERS' LIBRARY >*, rn 

 $3.dU I (Regular Price $5) J W 1 



With The World's Work you get the Library for only 50c 

 (average delivery cost). 



Send $3.50 (your check will do) and the set will be prpmptly 

 forwarded with The World's Work for a full year. 

 Or 



Send $1 and the balance of the installment price in 3 monthly 

 payments of $1 each ($4 in all). 



Or 



If you've any doubt whatsoever regarding the interest and value 

 of the set, we'll send it to you on 3 days' approval and you can 

 then pay all cash or on installments, as above. Address 



ff\ Garden City 

 W. New York 



ROCKEFELLER 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & 



(C)Geo. M. EdmoDdson Co. 



l\/[ADr CDI TIT from y° ur trees if you 

 lVIUIXEi rKUll keep them free from 

 San Jose Scale, Aphis, White Fly, etc., by spraying with 



GOODS^SFISH OIL 



SOAP N?3 



Kills all tree pests without injury to trees. Fertilizes 

 the soil and aids healthy growth. 



rprP Our valuable book on Tree and 

 rixCEi Plant Diseases. Write today. 

 JAMES GOOD, Original Maker, 931 N. Front Street, Philadelphia 



Make the Farm Pay 



Complete Home Study Courses in Agriculture, 

 Horticulture, Floriculture, Landscape Gardening, For- 

 estry, Poultry Culture, and Veterinary Science under 

 Prof. Brooks of the Mass. Agricultural College. Prof. 

 Craig of Cornell University and other eminent teachers. 

 Over one hundred Home Study Courses under able 

 professors in leading colleges. 



250 page catalog free. Write to-day 



THE HOME COKRESPONOENCE SCHOOL 



Dept. 8, Springfield, Mass. 



pay big profits if bought right and handled right. Let us help 

 you. Long experience in marketing fruit, as well as in selling trees, 

 has taught us which varieties are most dependable under various condi- 

 tions. Our stock of peach, pear, apple, cherry and plum trees is numbered 

 by the hundreds of thousands, but it embraces only practical proven varieties. Send 

 for the COLLINS ORCHARD GUIDE today— it is free. 

 ARTHUR J. COLLINS Box 23 Moorestown, N.J. 



What is a fair rental for a given property? Ask the Readers' Service 



