January, 1912 
AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS xi 
: =F : : 
‘ : = ne Setivonit Mbentaes Ca 
Send for This FREE BOOKLET Telling 
How to Get and Install Any Design 
The fireplace is the heart of the home. No house 
is really ahome without its cheery blaze on winter even- 
ings. If you are building or thinking of remodeling, you owe it 
to yourself to send for our beautiful booklet, *‘Home and the Fire- 
place.” It tells all about Colonial Fireplaces—the only real ad- 
vance in fireplace construction in the last century—all about the 
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COLONIAL FIREPLACE CO., 1661 W. 12th St., CHICAGO 
a STOKES SEEDS 2 
“Seed Catalog Time” 
is here and I have a beauty with colored illustrations 
and a free proposition with cash prizes which you 
will be interested in. : pee ; 
Send for a copy today—free ifyou mention ‘‘American 
Homes and Gardens. 
WALTER P. STOKES, Seedsman 
Department 44 Philadelphia, Pa. 
Ss U N A Beautiful Illustrated Book- 
let, ‘‘ WHERE SUN DIALS 
D IALS ARE MADE,” sent upon re- 
quest. Estimates furnished. 
Any Latitude : 
E. B. MEYROWITZ, 108 East 23d St., New York 
Branches: New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, London, Paris 
SAVE They are too precious to lose. Getexpert tree surgeons 
to examine them and advise you as to what they need. 
YOUR Avoid tree fakers and tree butchers, Our free booklets 
explain tree surgery, the science founded by John Davey. 
TREES Write forthem. The Davey Tree Expert Co., Inc., 
121 Ash Street, Kent, Ohio 
[E47  ~Farr’s Hardy Plants”—A book ~> 
OF that tells about the wonderful Irises, Peonies, Poppies and 
C= Anemones that have made Wyomissing famous, besides numer- 
Q ous other garden treasures. More than a mere catalogue—Free. 
Bertrand H. Farr, Wyomissing Nurseries, 643 E Perm St, Reading, Pa, Fa 
SS 
The Wizard 
Lawn Producer 
Mixed seed and fertilizer that comes up even where everything else 
failed. Allit needs is soil and moisture. Cheaper than common 
seed. 51b. box express prepaid east of Missouri river $1.00, or 
west of the river for $1.25. Our instructive booklet ‘How to 
Make a Lawn’ FREE. Written by experts; solves evety grass 
problem. Send for it tonight. It will prove interesting and valuable. 
The Kalaka Co., ®*%,2xcbanse Ave Chicago, Ill. 
oe 
SHEEP MANURE 
; Dried and pulverized. No waste and no 
ONE | weeds Best fertilizer for lawns—gardens— 
Bapor. ; : 15 trees—shrubs—vegetables and fruit. 
RREL EQUA 44 00 Large barrel, freight prepaid East of 
2 WAGON LOA? °UU' Missouri River—Cash with order. 
STABLE Write for interesting booklet and quantity 
t prices. 
MANURE THE PULVERIZED MANURE CO. 
21 Union Stock Yards Chicago, Ill. 
WIZARE 
BRAND 
The Giant Himalaya Berry 
Like a blackberry, but mot a blackberry. Vine grows 
‘orty feet a year unless trimmed. ill stand the winters 
anywhere in the United States. Bears enormous crops 
of berries. Berries ripen early and continue late; are 
nearly an in ong, sweet and melting; delicious as 
dessert; superior to other berries 
for jams or preserves. 
Strong plants 20 cents each, 
$2.00 a dozen, $5.00 a hundred, 
$40.00 a thousand. Add 10 per 
cent. when wanted by mail. 
Get a Berrydale Berry Book. 
Tells about several other good 
erries, and is sent free. Write 
for it now. 
Berrydale Experiment Gardens 
American Avenue Holland, Mich. 
were decorated with these plants, most of 
which were in bloom by July 1. With the 
Garden Club acting as intermediary, every 
vacant lot on Hennepin Avenue, one of the 
principal thoroughfares of Minneapolis, was 
cleaned and planted to grass and flowers. 
About 600 vacant lots in other parts of the 
city were cleared of rubbish. 
The total cost of all the cleaning, seeds, 
instruction, supervision and machinery was 
$4,000, while, with the experience gained, 
it is said, the same work could be accom- 
plished another season for about $1,800. 
MARKET-GARDENING FOR TWO 
By CRAIG S. THOMS 
“lee carry on garden work for market 
trade is comparatively easy. One sim- 
ply raises all he can of the vegetables that 
will sell at the greatest profit. Gardening 
is complicated when one does not desire to 
sell his yield and has only two mouths to 
feed, or to waste vegetables, or to feed all 
his neighbors, or to let any ground go to 
waste, but does desire to have “garden 
stuff” on his table all the year round. 
I have been wrestling with the problem 
of gardening for two on a garden plot of 
about fifty by a hundred feet for several 
years, and possibly my experience may be 
of interest, at least to newly-wedded couples. 
Many a man, when beginning housekeeping, 
feels the necessity of having a garden to 
supply his table, and also that his work in 
cultivating the ground is in a way equivalent 
to his wife’s performance of household 
duties. 
I begin each year, about January first, 
by holding a detailed and exhaustive family 
conference on the subject of seeds, and then 
immediately send to some reliable house for 
a full supply, so that there will be no delay 
in planting on account of the rush of Spring 
orders. 
In order to raise the utmost from the 
space available, I] next lay out my garden 
plot, assigning to each vegetable its place 
and amount of ground, using as a basis those 
kinds that take longest to mature, such as 
tomatoes, potatoes, corn, celery, carrots, 
parsnips, onions, etc. When this has been 
done, I plan how many of the short-season 
vegetables can be raised on the same ground 
that has been selected. For example, one 
can raise all his early radishes on the space 
awarded to tomatoes. Last year I matured 
three plantings of the Early French Break- 
fast radishes before the tomato plants were 
large enough to need the ground. Early 
lettuce may be raised on tomato ground in 
the same way, and even the first transplant- 
ing of celery. The space between tomato 
rows is necessarily wide, and the plants do 
not begin to spread much until radishes and 
lettuce are out of the way and the small 
celery plants have been removed to another 
place. 
The “other place” for my celery I arrange 
as follows: On the east side of my garden 
space I run four rows of sweet corn 
north and south. In the middle of these 
rows, space is left for a fifth row, but in- 
stead of planting corn I there put in my 
early peas. By the time the peas are off the 
ground the corn is so tall that I can dig my 
celery trench where the row of peas stood, 
and scatter the soil among the two rows of 
corn on either side. In the trench the celery 
is planted in a double tow if the temporary 
half-shade of the corn, although, since the 
rows run north and south, the celery re- 
ceives the benefit of the full sunlight for 
several hours each day, and, since the row 
of corn on either side nearest to the trench 
is of the earliest variety, and therefore short, 
the celery enjoys a sort of half-shaded sun- 
PATENTED 
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the world. 
ELLWANGER & BARRY 
Mount Hope Nurseries 
Box 23, Rochester, N. Y. 
AN INVALUABLE 
FREE BOOK. 
Write for a copy of our 72nd 
Annual Catalogue. ft 
is a standard guide 
in ali matters per- 
taining to lawn 
and garden dec- 
oration. IT IS 
FREE. Just 
mail us a 
postal, and 
wewillsend 
you a 
copy at 
S BERRIES| 
V4 Plants by the dozen or by the million. 
4120 acres planted in 103 varieties. Al) 
the standards and the most promising ol 
the new ones. Largest grower in 
‘America, Every plant true to name. 
) Also Raspberry, Blackberry, Gooseberry 
and Currant Plants, Grape Vines, Cali- 
fornia Privet and other Shrubbery 
(Cultural directions with each ship 
ment. Beautiful Catalogue FREE. Send 
a postal today. My personal guarantee fh) 
back of every sale. 
W. F. ALLEN é 
10 Market Street, Salisbury, Md. 
CLINCH right through the 
standing seam of metal 
roofs. No rails are needed 
unless desired. We makea 
simila1 one for slate roofs. 
Send for Circular 
Berger Bros. Co. 
PHILADELRHIA 
