January, 1911 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



// you wish information about dogi 

 apply to the Readers' Service 



283 



Bigger Fruit Profits 



Here is a spray pump invented by fruit 



growers. It was our endeavor to secure 



the best spray pump to use on our 300 



acre fruit farm that produced the 



ECLIPSE -m 



SPRAY PUMP 



It overcomes every defect found in other 

 makes — it has proved itself best in actual 

 work. Put an Eclipse to work on your trees 

 and earn bigger profits. Write for our fully 

 illustrated catalogue. It tells why you should 

 sprav — and whv you should do it with an 

 Eclipse. It's free. Write to-day. 



MORRILL & MORLEY MFG. CO., Benton Harbor, Mich. 



4 A4 = LAWN FENCE 



'ojniMMMhi: 



ManyStyles. Sold on trial at 

 wholesale prices. Save 20 

 to 30 per cent. Illustrated 

 Ci.taloguefree. Write today. 



KITSELMAN BROS. 

 Box 350 M uncle, Indiana. 



RATS 



Killed by Science 



DANYSZ 



VIRUS 



Send for particulars. 1 tube 75c., 

 3 tubes $1.75, per dozen $6.00 



INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL COMPANY, 72 Front St., N.Y. 



$1 or $2 per Acre per Month 



Buys a Sanford celery farm. Flowing artesian well 

 guaranteed. Sub-irrigation, fine drainage, good sub- 

 soil, proven district, no interest; water and rail transpor- 

 tation. Our liberal contract allows six years to pay out. 

 TITLE BOND & GUARANTEE CO., Sanford, Fla. 



of"es s h Mushrooms 



at all seasons 

 Growing in your Cellar 



AO rf« in postage stamps together with the name of your 

 i|V i,l>. dealer will bring; you, postpaid, direct from the 

 manufacturer, a fresh sample brick of 



Lamberts Pure Culture MUSHROOM SPAWN 



the best hitjh-grade spawn in the market, together with large illustrated book 

 on Mushroom Culture, containing simple and practical methods of raising, 

 preserving and cooking mushrooms. Not more than one sample brick will 

 be sent to the same party. Further orders must come through your dealer. 



Address: American Spawn Co., Dept. 2, St. Paul, Minn. 



LOOK OUT 

 FOR SPARKS 



No more danger or damage from flying 

 sparks. No more poorly fitted, flimsy fire- 

 place screens. SeDd for free booklet 

 "Sparks from the Fire-side." It tells about 

 ;|| the best kind of a spark guard for your in- 

 -001 dividual fireplace. Write to-day for free 

 •^ booklet and make your plans early. 



The Syracuse Wire Works 

 107 University Avenue, - Syracuse, N. Y. 



Largest SiJIS Stock of 

 HardyPlants in America 



Catalogue on application 



ELLIOTT NURSERY 



Pittsburg, Pa. 



STRAWBERRIES 



Hants by the dozen or by the million 

 120 acres planted in 103 varieties. .Al 

 the standards and the most promising ol 

 the new ones. Largest grower " 

 America. Every plant true to name. 

 Also Raspberry, Blackberry, Goosebei 

 and Currant Plants, Grape Vines, Cali- 

 fornia Privet and other Shrubbery. 

 Cultural directions with each ship- 

 ment. Beautiful Catalogue PKKE. Sen 

 a postal today. Sly personal guarantee IjVft)] 

 jback of every sale. 10 .! 



W.F.ALLEN ' M^ 



54 Market Street, Salisbury, Md 





Mrs. Humphry 



WARD'S 



a 



The Case of Richard Meynell" 



AND THE REVIEWERS 



"There is much of dramatic interest. The 

 contentions in which Meynell engaged were 

 many and they were not at all of a pale 

 and sluggish character.'''' — N. Y. Sun. 



"Mrs. Ward has brought all of her ri- 

 pened art to the making of this novel, and 

 it stands out as an appealing story, one 

 of great sympathy for women. She does 

 not build her characters in haphazard 

 fashion, and because they are so human and 

 so possible, even outside the pages of fiction, 

 Mrs. Ward has doneherwork thoroughly and 

 comprehensively ." — Springfield Union. 



"Mrs. Ward is now in the full maturity of 

 her powers. She has seen life, she has lived 

 it, and the humanities, rather than the petty 

 differences of men, are now the big things 

 with her. There is no denying the power 

 with which she writes. Her bishops, her 

 lords, her clergymen, her ladi-es are arresting 

 personalities and there is no degree of auth- 

 ority, intellectual or spiritual, which Mrs. 

 Ward does not succeed in conveying. She 

 has a pomp and circumstance in her novels 

 really unequaled since the days when Dis- 

 raeli wrote. Her intellectual courage in at- 

 tacking a question of such import is tremen- 

 dous, but she has proved herself adequate. She 

 will draw her most appreciative readers from 

 the very class which she depicts with so much 

 dignity and power." — Chicago Tribune. 



"Distinctly superior to the author's other 

 work of recent years." — N. Y. World. 



"Years have not robbed Mrs. Humphry 

 Ward of any of her intellectual power, but 

 they have mellowed her emotional nature and 

 deepened the human appeal of her fiction. 

 ''The Case of Richard MeyneW is, in this 

 latter respect, a finer and greater novel than 

 ''Robert Elsmere.' The character drawing is 

 wonderfully perfect. Meynell 's simple and 

 lofty figure dominates the book, but around 

 him revolve a dozen diverse characters, good, 

 bad and indifferent, each vividly alive." 

 — Chicago Record-Herald. 



The story is told with delicacy and dis- 

 tinction. In this volume are fine touches 

 and noble thoughts worthily expressed. 

 Here and there is a subtle phrase which 

 carries expression into the realm of music 

 none will question the truthful- 

 ness and vividness of the picture of a 

 spiritual struggle, or be oblivious to the 

 excellence of the workmanship and the 

 nobility of the motives of the writer" 

 — London Times. 



" No one has ever denied Mrs. Ward the 

 courage of her convictions or the power 

 to express her views. 'Richard Meynell ' 

 challenges one conviction after another. It 

 is extraordinarily provocative of disputa- 

 tion, a gauntlet thrown into the arena of in- 

 tellectualism." — London Daily Chronicle. 



Six photogravure illustrations. Fixed price, $1.35 {postage 15c.) 

 Garden City DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. New York 









Pennsylvania School of Horticulture for Women 



Ambler, Pennsylvania 



A school for theoretical and practical instruction 

 in gardening and other branches of horticulture. 

 Special attention given to the practical side of 

 the work. Spring term opens February 7, 1912. 



Miss Jane B. Haines, President Miss M. 0. Collins, Principal 



FLORICULTURE /^t\ 



Complete Home Study Course in practical Floricul- /Mk ^ft 

 ture under Prof. Craig and Prof. Beal, of Cornell /£■ ^P% V\ 



Course includes Greenhouse Construction and ^k^tfl 



Management and the growing of Small Frjics iud i ^^^^E^^B/ 



Vegetables, as well as Flowers Under Glass. \^^^/m^^W 



Personal Instruction. Expert Ad% ice. ^[Ikr 



THE° HOME 1 CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL p^^-1 

 Dept. G. F., Sprfnefield, Mors. 



We grow a general line of Nursery Stock; everything 

 required in this Northern latitude. We spend our time 

 and money growing the best stock possible, and very little 

 in advertising it. We have always depended upon satis- 

 fied customers to do our advertising and have never been 

 disappointed. Send for our catalog and price list. HHHBHHHHBHHHHI 



The Bay State Nurseries, North Abington, Mass. 



TREES 



