140 



The Readers' Service is prepared to 

 advise parents in regard to schools 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



October, 1911 



4 TRIAL 

 OFFER 



THE HOUSE 

 BEAUTIFUL 



WITH 

 COMPLIMENTARY PORTFOLIO 



If you have ever wondered what color to 

 paper your dining-room — or what disposi- 

 tion to make of an attic chamber, or how 

 best to treat a staircase or veranda — then 

 you will find great assistance in the beau- 

 tifully illustrated pages of this charming 

 magazine. 



_ "The House Beautiful" tells you by word and 

 picture what others have done toward making 



Greatiy Reduced "House Bei 



their homes both distinctive and livable. Profit- 

 ing by their examples, you can go a step fur- 

 ther and achieve effects in your home that would 

 be impossible without the invaluable information 

 you receive month after month from "The House 

 Beautiful. 



30 Day Off 



ter 



The subscription price is $3.00 per year. But 

 to introduce The House Beautiful to new readers 

 we will send you for just $1.00, The House 

 .Beautiful tor five months beginning with the cur- 

 rent issue and make you a present of "The 

 Mouse Beautiful Portfolio of House Building 

 burnishing and Decorating." This Portfolio is 

 a collection of color plates picturing and describ- 

 ing homes and beautiful interiors which are un- 

 usually successful. The Portfolio alone is a 

 prize which money could not ordinarily purchase 



fo avail yourself of this offer, cut out the 

 attached coupon and after filling in your name 

 and address pm a one dollar bill to it and mail 

 1 o-Day to 



THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL, Room, 1713-315 4th Ave., N. Y. City 



I accept your 30 DAY OFFER and reaueat that ™',..J ma 

 The House Beautiful for FIVE month.,, aXfsVyolXtfolfo™ 

 House Building, Furmshmg and Decorating. Enclosed find SLOu! 



Name 



Street 



City. 



State 



" How to Grow 

 and Market Fruit" 



A brand new, thoroughly practical guide 

 book for master growers or beginners. Covers 

 soil handling, planting and feeding trees, frost 

 damage, spraying, pruning, thinning, varie- 

 ties, packing, marketing and other essentials. 



Explains, for instance, all about digging 

 tree holes, eub-soiling and giving new life to 

 old trees, with dynamite. Or, tells how to get 

 full crops of flawless apples every year — and $2 

 a bushel for them all. 



Brief, to the point, but complete; progres- 

 sive, but thoroughly reliable. Endorsed by 

 twenty of this country's foremost fruit men. 



Strongly bound, nearly 100 pages, 24 pages of 

 pictures that show how. A book to keep. Price 

 only 50 cents — and that amount returned to 

 you when you send us a $5 order. 



HARRISON'S NURSERIES 

 Main Avenue Berlin, Maryland 



Ten Valuable Farms for Sale 



"" "'■-■ % ''■■■;■ ■■'■'' '- - -. *~^**'~^-**?SL. "'-"■■• '""-'■ ■ - 



■S^jfftmt^. 



<?- --.. »,-.■„ ■■' tM ,i, A 



Don't Neglect Your Trees 



JpRUNING. This is the time when pruning 

 ■L can be done to best advantage. The tree 

 is no longer active, the leaves are no longer neces- 

 sary to the tree and yet because they still adhere 

 to its branches, they aid the pruner in distinguishing 

 between the dead and the live wood. The removal 

 of limbs from trees must be done sparingly and 

 judiciously. In fact, the tree that has been trained 

 and cared for in its youth will need but little at- 

 tention later. Dead and broken branches carry 

 decay and injurious insects into the trunk of the 

 tree and are danger- 

 ous and unsightly. 

 They should there- 

 fore be removed as 

 soon as observed re- 

 gardless of the prun- 

 ing season. But the 

 usual light pruning, 

 such as the removal 

 of low branches and 

 the shortening of 



overgrown ones, can 

 best be done in the 

 fall. The fundamen- 

 tal p r i n c i p 1 e s of 

 pruning frequently 

 described on pre- 

 vious occasions 

 should be strictly 

 adhered to. Close 

 cuts and removal 

 of stubs and diseased 

 limbs should be in- 

 sisted upon. 



Treat all wounds. 

 The importance of 



covering with coal tar all wounds caused by prun- 

 ing or by accident cannot be overestimated. This, 

 moreover, is an ideal month to do it in, as a prepara- 

 tion for the winter. If the wound is not covered 

 with tar, the exposed wood cracks, providing suit- 

 able quarters for germs of disease to develop. Coal 

 tar is by far preferable to paint and other sub- 

 stances for covering the wound. The tar pene- 

 trates the exposed wood, with an antiseptic as well 



Egg masses of trie tussock 

 moth, a common leaf-eating 

 insect 



A cluster of bag worms in their winter state 



Erected for Mrs. F. H. Loveu, Madison, N. J. 



$250 buys this Greenhouse 



Price includes everything, benches, boiler, 

 radiating pipes, ventilating rods and all. No 

 foundations needed, as it is bolted to iron posts 

 set in the ground. When you move take the 

 greenhouse with you. As easy to take down 

 as to put up. Goes together like a sectional 

 bookcase. No fitting to be done — shipped 

 all glazed, ready for immediate erection. 



It will save your flowers from frost. Give 

 you vegetables and blooming plants all winter. 

 Buy now and be ready. 



Send for booklet of complete information. 

 Also gives growing information. 



Hitchings & Company 



1170 Broadway 



NEW YORK 



USE the Ames Plow Company's farm and 

 garden implements when you seed or cultivate. 

 AMES PLOW COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS. 



HARDY PHLOX 



You never know the beauty of Hardy 

 Phlox unless you have some of your 

 own — then you want more. Over 250 

 varieties. The best in the market. 



W. L. SCHMEISKE 



BINGHAMTON, N. Y. 



Possess A Perfect Lawn 



Old England's historic estates are carpeted 

 with the most beautiful stretches of lawn. 

 Through centuries of careful study and 

 trial coarse, undesirable grasses have been 

 supplanted by a uniform durable species, 

 almost the texture of velvet. 



Let English lawns surround your own 

 home. 



>Rarweirs Imported English 



Lawn Grass Seed Mixture 



comes across the Atlantic in large quanti- 

 ties every season. It is literally the finest, 

 straight from its "Native Heath." It is 

 thoroughly hardy and grows luxuriantly 

 in sun or shade. 



Directions and information for seeding and making 

 a perfect lawn, free on application. Just mail lis 

 the measurement of your lawn space describing its 

 soil and situation. ^i™^"""^ - "™ 



Barwell's Agricultural Works 



Madison & Sand Sts., Waukegan, 111. 

 Established at Leicester, England, in 1800. 



