MELONS. — Continued. 
53 
CARTER8 HARDY FRAME MELON. 
It is many years since the Royal Horticultural Society awarded us their First Class 
Certificate for a Melon that could be easily grown without heat. In Carters Hardy Frame 
we now offer a variety specially suitable for amateurs who do not possess the convenience 
necessary for cultivating the more tender Melons. The fruits are large, ribbed, and the flesh a 
rich scarlet colour. 
“ I should like to recommend your Hardy Frame Melon. This has been a great success ; it bears profusely. 
Sir Edmund G. Loder, Bart. 
The Cultivation of Melon .— Sow for 6rst crop in January, and plant when ready into pits or on slabs filled 
Jhe Cultivation oj it manure, adding a dressing of fine soil to the surface and bringing the 
with good maiden loam a noss ible It is essential that a regular temperature be secured rather than a 
p ants as near the light and glassy posable. » ‘ g and J air freel when fruit is ripening, 
checMngThe°su^ply -Les are soL later and kept under glass until 
the season is sufficiently advanced for them to be put out on a warm heap of soil in the frame. 
Everyone who has a frame is recommended to give it a trial. 
Price IS. and is. 6d. per packet. 
i fiaX&sJ 
237, 23!, & 97, High Holborn, London. —1909- 
