1 4 3 



For the Home Builder 



When your house is built, you have just begun to make a home. It is 

 your duty to yourself, to your family, to your neighbors and to your town, 

 ^M.% B ^ ...J4 to plant shade trees, evergreens and other ornamentals. 



fj\frgi$l iW^C^Ji. O ur b°°k "The Why and How of Shade Trees and Evergreens" 



'^Suaiimt w **** e $ n, '\ ' tells you why it pays to make home beautiful, and how cheaply it can be 



m: ■ ,"... done with Harrisons' hardy trees, evergreens, hedge plants and flowering 



shrubs. The book tells you what to plant, and how, where and when to plant 



it. It shows by means of pictures the pleasing results that can be obtained if instructions are carried out; 



contains sixty-four pages, forty-six pictures; helpful and interesting. 



A copy of "The Why and How of Shade Trees and Evergreens" will be sent free to property owners. 



Farm Lands on the "Eastern Shore Make 

 Progressive Farmers Successful 



The "Eastern Shore" of Maryland is one of the most favored sections in the world for fruit-growing 

 and trucking. 



Everything you grow can be sold to buyers right at your railroad station at highest market prices. If 

 you want to ship to the country's highest-priced markets you can do so, and your produce will arrive in 

 market in time to be sold the morning after shipment is made. 



Summers are cool, winters are mild — zero weather is almost unknown. Growing season from March 

 to November. Two crops ripen on the same land, bringing double profit. Fruit, grain, hay, vegetables, 

 poultry or stock all yield high. The finest water, excellent schools and churches, and miles of macadam, 

 concrete and other improved roads. Living conditions unexcelled. 



Berlin is the junction point of two railroad lines. Distance to Ocean City (on the Atlantic Coast, the 

 summer resort of the Eastern Shore), 7 miles; to Baltimore, 124 miles; to Philadelphia, 143 miles. 



"How to Grow and Market Fruit 



THE BOOK THAT HELPS TO SOLVE YOUR 

 FRUIT-GROWING PROBLEMS 



Twenty thousand copies of this thoroughly practical guide-book for 

 master fruit-growers and beginners, are now in the hands of fruit-growers 

 in the United States, as well as in many foreign countries. It covers soil 

 handling, planting and feeding trees, frost damage, spraying, pruning, thin- 

 ning, varieties, grading, packing, marketing and other essentials. Brief, to the point, but complete; progres- 

 sive and thoroughly reliable. It is a comprehensive record of facts gathered in our twenty years of practical 

 experience in fruit-growing. Many have told us that this is the best book for fruit-growers published in 

 America. Endorsed by twenty of this country's foremost fruit men. The heads of thirty state horticultural 

 departments have written in praise of it, and it is a daily companion of thousands of successful fruit-growers. 

 Tells you what should be done and why it should be done. Strongly bound, nearly one hundred and fifty 

 pages, twenty-four pages of pictures that show how. A book to keep. Price 50 cents rebated to you when 

 you send us a $5 order. 









INDEX 











Page 





Page 





Page 





Page 



Ailanthus 



36 



Dewberries 



31 



Jasmine 



46 



Raspberries 



31 



Apples 



..14-21 



Dogwood 



46 



Judas Tree 



37 



Red Bud 



....37 



Apples, Crab 



21 



Dutchman's Pipe. . . 



48 



Juneberry 



46 



Retinospora 



....43 



Apricots 



31 



Elder, Box 



. . . 37, 38 



Juniper 



.42, 43 



Rhododendron 



44 



Araucaria 



41 



Elm 



37 



Laurel 



... .44 



Roses 



....49 



Arborvitae 



41 



Fetter Bush 



44 



Lilac 



... .46 



Rose, Japanese 



....46 



Ash 



36 



Filbert 



46 



Linden 



... .37 



Rose of Sharon 



47 



Asparagus 



34 



Fir 



42 



Locust 



....37 



Senna 



.45, 47 



Azalea 



44 



Fringe, Purple 



39 



Magnolia 



Mahonia 



... .46 



Shrub, Sweet-scented. 



48 



Barberry 



. .45, 50 



Garland Flower .... 



44 



....44 



Silk Vine 



....48 



Blackberries 



31 



Ginkgo 



37 



Maidenhair Tree. . . . 



.. ..37 



Smoke Tree 



. 39, 47 



Beech 



36 



Glooe Flower 



46 



Maple 



. 37, 47 



Snowberry 



....47 



Bleeding Heart 



49 



Golden Chain 



46 



Mock Orange 



... .47 



Spirea 



.47, 48 



Birch 



36 



Golden Bell 



46 



Myrtle 



. ...48 



Spruce 



.43, 44 



Bittersweet 



48 



Gold Flower 



46 



Oak 



.... 38 



Strawberries. 



.32-34 



Boxwood. . . 



50 



Gooseberries 



31 



Pea Shrub, Siberian. . 



47 



Strawberry Bush 



. . . .48 



Catalpa 



36 



Grapes 



. . . 28, 29 



Pears 



... .27 



Tea, New Jersey 



47 



Cedar 



. .41, 42 



Hawthorn 



46 



Peaches 



. .22-25 



ThuyopJs 



41 



Cherries 



30 



Hazel 



46 



Pecans 



39 



Trumpet Creeper. . . . 



....48 



Clematis 



48 



Hedge Plants 



50 



Peonies 



49 



Tulip Tree 



39 



Cotoneaster. . . . 



. 44 



Hemlock 



42 



Pine 



43 



Viburnum 



48 



Cowpeas 



50 



Holly 



44 



Plane, Orienta' 



39 



Virginia Creeper 



....48 



Currants 



31 



Honeysuckle 



. ..46, 48 



Plums 



30 



Walnut 



39 



Currant, Flowering. . 



45 



Horse-Chestnut . . . . 



37 



Plum, Purple-leaved. 



47 



Weigela 



... .48 



Cypress 



42 



Hydrangea 



Indigo, False 



46 



Poplar 



Privet 



39 



Willow 



. 39, 48 



Daphne 



45 



46 



50 



Wistaria 



48 



Deutzia 



45 



Ivy 



48 



Quinces 



.31, 47 



Yew 



44 



The McFarland Publicity Service, Harrisburg, Pa. 



