September, 1909 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



What is a jair rental jor a given 

 property/ Ask the Readers' Service 



85 



Rudyard Kipling's 

 Books 



* His is the lustiest voice now lifted in the whole 

 world, the clearest, the bravest, with the fewest 

 false notes in it." W. D. HotOells. 



With the Night Mail 



" Here, for example, is his 'With the Night Mail,' 

 a thrilhngly realistic account of a trip in a packet air- 

 ship carrying the mail from London to Quebec in the 

 year 2000, and covering the distance in a single night. 

 It is human and dramatic ; a vivid piece of imagina- 

 tive writing worked out in terms of the utmost plaus- 

 ibility." Cleveland Leader. 



" There is probably no man living who could pro- 

 duce so perfect an illusion upon such a subject." 



The Argonaut. 



Four illustrations in color by Leyendecker and 

 Reulerdabl. Fixed price, $1 .00 (postage I Oc.) 



Kipling Stories and Po- 

 ems Every Child Should Know 



Edited by Mary E. Burt and W. T. Chapin 



This is the first selection from the complete works 

 of Rudyard Kipling ever made for children. Some of 

 the most captivating stories and verse ever written in 

 the English language are included in this volume. 

 Illustrations. Fixed price, $1 .20 (postage 1 0c.) 



The Pocket Kipling. 



These books, printed 

 on thin but opaque pa- 

 per, and bound in ox-blood red leather, are a pleasure 

 to possess. Fixed price, $1 .50 (postage 8c.) 



NOW 



The Day's Work 



Kim 



Plain Tales from the Hills 



Life's Handicap 



Soldier Stories 



The Seven Seas 



The Naulahka 



Stalky & Co. 



Just So Stories 



Traffics and Dis- 

 coveries 



The Light that 

 Failed 



READY: 



Departmental Ditties and 

 Ballads and Barrack- 

 room Ballads 



Many Inventions 

 Soldiers Three 

 Puck of Pook's Hill 

 The Five Nations 

 The Just So Song 



Book 

 Under the Deodars, 

 The Phantom 

 'Rickshaw & Wee 

 Willie Winkie 



TheVorld'sVohk 



The Garden 

 Magazihe 



Double day Page &Co. New York. 



Koster's Blue Spruce 



and other Evergreens in variety 

 Rhododendrons 



Hybrids and Maximum 

 Pot-grown Strawberry Plants 



All for planting latter part of August or early 



September. 

 Write for prices. Catalogue mailed upon request. 



THE MORRIS NURSERY CO. 



Sales Office : Metropolitan Bldg., 

 1 Madison Avenue, - New York City 



If You Are Going to Have 

 a Greenhouse This Winter 

 Better Get Busy Now 



IT will take a little time for the prelimi- 

 naries, such as talking it over with us; 

 then your talking it over together. 



After you have ordered the house, per- 

 haps you won't be able to get a mason 

 right off; so before you know it September 

 will be half gone. Of course, you know the 

 earlier you get the house planted, the sooner 

 you will have your flowers in bloom — by 

 Thanksgiving seems late enough for them. 



Besides, there's your outdoor plants which 

 you feel so badly to leave to Jack Frost's 

 depredations every fall. If you have a 

 greenhouse, you can transplant them, simply 

 bringing your outdoors garden, indoors. 

 Along with the downright good fun of hav- 



ing such a winter garden, there's the health of 

 it. There seems to be something about work- 

 ing around growing things in a greenhouse 

 that works wonders for one, physically. See 

 what a healthy lot the floiists are! Live 

 to a ripe old age and all that sort of thing. 



There's nothing like it fortaking the kinks 

 out of life's little worries — and it's the wor- 

 ries they say that play hob with us mortals. 



So by all means have a greenhouse. 



This one is n feet wide and 33 feet long. 

 Can't you just see how it will look on that 

 spot you have long had in mind? 



Let's get together right now and talk 

 things over — or we can do it by correspon- 

 dence, whichever you like. 



Lord and Burnham Company 



IRVINGTON. 

 N. Y. 



NEW YORK 



BOSTON 



PHILADELPHIA 



CHICAGO 



An elaborately illustrated book on the home garden 



The Garden Week by Week 



By WALTER P. WRIGHT 



THIS is a practical handbook, by the author of " The Perfect 

 Garden," covering the gardening operations for every week 

 in the year. It is a handy guide to the culture of all important 

 flowers, vegetables and fruits — outdoors and in greenhouses 

 and cold frames — invaluable to the amateur who needs to be 

 reminded that this is the season for pruning grapes, and that for 

 planting half-hardy bulbs, etc. 



The illustrations, of which there are about two hundred 

 in color and in black and white, are very elaborate and beautiful. 



Net, $2.00 (Postage 20 cents) 

 Doubleday, Page & Co., 133 East 16th Street, New York City 



