286 



The Garden Magazine, July, 1922 



Prize- Winning 



TULIPS 



We are delighted to report that our custo- 

 mers continue to score extraordinary results 

 with our bulbs. The majority of first prizes 

 offered at New York, Boston, Glen Cove and 

 other shows were cap- 

 tured by Zandbergen 

 patrons. Our bulbs are 

 not especially selected, 

 but constitute uniform- 

 ly regular stock sup- 

 plied all our customers, 

 on all orders, large or 

 small. 



To be a Prize Winning 

 tulip, a variety need 

 neither be new nor ex- 

 pensive. Among our 450 

 May flowering kinds are 

 sorts for every purse and fancy. You 

 can take our word for it that the 3 col- 

 lections offered herewith are the greatest 

 value in highest class Bulbs ever offered. 



COLLECTION A 



Darwin Clara Butt, Salmon Pink. 



" Baron de la Tonnaye, bright rose, mar- 

 gined blush. 

 Darwin La Candeur, pale rose. 



" La Tulipe Noir, maroon black. 



" Dream, mauve. 



Popular Sorts at a Modest Rate 



Darwin Professor Rauwenhof, cherry red. 



" Suzon, buff rose, black at margin. 



Cottage Gesneriana Spatulata, bright 



scarlet. 

 Cottage, Moonlight, light yellow. 

 Breeder, Cardinal Manning, wine red, blush rosy 

 bronze. 



25 bulbs of each of above varieties, 

 250 bulbs in all, for $10.00 



COLLECTION B 



Darwin Farncombe Sanders, rosy red. 



Darwin Prince of the Netherlands, cerise-scar- 

 let, edged rose. 



Darwin Mdm. Krelage, lilac-rose, margined pale 

 rose. 



Darwin Princess Elizabeth, deep pink. 



Darwin L'Ingenue, blush. 



Superior Sorts at a Modest Rate 



Darwin Faust, satiny purple. 



Darwin, Melicetti, soft 

 lavender. 



Darwin Blue Amable, pale 

 lavender, shaded steel blue. 



Breeder Bronze Queen, soft buff, inside tinged 

 golden bronze. 



Cottage, Mrs. Moon, deep yellow. 



25 bulbs of each of above varieties, 

 250 bulbs in all, for $15.00 



COLLECTION C 



Breeder Panorama, deep orange, shaded ma- 

 hogany. 

 Breeder Louis XIV, dark purple, flushed bronze. 



" Godet Parfait, purple. 

 Cottage Avis Kennicot, golden yellow. 

 " Sir Harry, soft lavender pink. 



A Great Value in Really Superb Creation 

 Cottage Idyl, beautiful vivid rose. 

 Darwin Duchess of Hoenberg, lilac-mauve. 



" Centinaire, violet-rose. 



" Valentine, heliotrope. 



" Louis de Valliere, bright cherry rose. 



25 bulbs of each of above varieties, 250 bulbs in all, for $25.00 



Please ask 

 for Catalogue 



Pronounced by connoisseurs 

 the most accurate catalogue 

 of Dutch Bulbs. Brief, but 

 absolutely truthful descrip- 

 tions and the use of differ- 

 ent type for sorts of vary- 

 ing merit make it a most 

 valuable guide to Tulipdom. 

 If you do not find a variety 

 listed in our catalogue 

 (novelties excepted), we as- 

 sure you that it isn't worth 

 growing. 



In order to effect above worth-while sav- 

 ing on your bulbs, all orders must reach us 

 not later than August 1st. Delivery of first 

 class bulbs, in first class condition during 

 September. All orders filled and packed in 

 our own bulb farm at Valkenburg, Holland. 



Come to see our Show Garden, 

 "Tulipdom," where, during May 

 you'll find about 450 rare kinds of 

 Tulips and hundreds of unusual 

 Daffodils. 



ZANDBERGEN BROS. 



OYSTER BAY, LONG ISLAND, N. Y. 



Bulb Farms: Valkenburg (near Leiden) Holland 



& 



JULY, 1922 



THEGARDEN 



MAGAZINE 



CONTENTS 



COVER DESIGN: "OVER THE GARDEN GATE" 



/. Paul Verrees 



PAGE 



A WELL-PLACED SEAT IN THE GARDEN 291 



Photograph by Mattie E. Hewitt 

 PHLOX IN A JULY GARDEN 292 



HOLLYHOCKS AS ACCENT POINTS IN THE GARDEN - 293 

 Photograph by Mattie E. Hewitt 



THE MONTH'S REMINDER— WHEN TO DO WHAT YOU 



WANT TO DO 294 



TWO HISTORIC CENTURY-OLD CYCADS 



Samuel N. Baxter 

 Photographs by the author 



PLANTING FOR COLOR IN THE LANDSCAPE 



William Robinson 297 

 Photographs by Leonard Barron and others 



PLANTING STRAWBERRIES NEXT MONTH? A. Rutledge 300 



DECORATIVE IRONWORK 



Arthur W. Colton & Amy Richards Colton 301 

 Illustrations supplied by the Metropolitan Museum of 

 Art and the Gothic Shop 



"COMFORT ME WITH APPLES" - - - John L. Doan 306 



Photograph by Mattie E. Hewitt 

 ORCHARD FACTS FOR READY REFERENCE .... 308 



DIVERSIFIED GARDENS OF CLEVELAND, OHIO 



Kate B. Burton 309 

 Photographs supplied by the author 



THE SINS AND VIRTUES OF THE MOLE 



Charles D. David 312 

 Drawing by the author 



THE AUTOGRAPH OF AN ASH TREE D. T. MacDougal 313 



Illustrations supplied by the author 

 TEMPERING THE SUNSHINE - - - Eloise Roorbach 316 



Photographs by the author, David Fairchild, and others 

 THE CLUBS IN COUNCIL 318 



III. In the Doldrums but Heading Out 



Julian Hinckley 318 



IV. The South Speaks Constructively 



.„.„,., Hattie W. Carter 319 



THE RIGHT WAY TO CUT A ROSE BLOOM 



S. C. Hubbard 320 



"LADIES IN THEIR SUMMER FROCKS"— Poem 



Louise Driscoll 322 



AMONG OUR GARDEN NEIGHBORS 323 



THE OPEN COLUMN 324 



APPRAISING THE NEWER IRISES - - R S. Sturtevant 329 



THE UNFORTUNATE MR. WEED 330 



Photograph by Paul Thompson 



WHAT SHADING DOES - - - - 332 



APHIS IN THE ORCHARD ^ - - 332 



Leonard Barron, Editor 



VOLUME XXXV, No. 5 

 Subscription #3.00 a Year; for Canada, fe-35; Foreign, $3.65 



COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY 



GARDEN CITY, N. Y. 



Chicago: Peoples Gas Bldg. Boston: Tremont Bldg. 



Los Angeles: Van Nuys Bldg. New York: 120 W. 32nd St. 



F. N. DOUBLEDAY, President 



ARTHUR W. PAGE, RUSSELL DOUBLEDAY. 



NELSON DOUBLEDAY, Secretary 



Vice-Presidents S. A. EVERITT, Treasurer 



JOHN J. HESSIAN, Asst. Treasurer 



Entered as second-class matter at Garden City, New York, 

 under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879 



?^t)WM 



