February, 1915 
T II E G A R I) E N M A G A Z I N E 
Speaking of Heating 
Churches — More People 
Go To Sleep Because Of 
Reheated Dead Air 
Than Poor Sermons 
N OT one of "the 
Committee” who 
have charge of decid- 
ing on how the church 
is to be heated, would 
think of drinking 
stagnant, scummy 
water. Yet that same 
committee will decide 
to put in a heating 
apparatus in the 
church, that heats and re- 
heats the same old dead, 
poison infected air. 
Is it a wonder, then, that 
people nod in their pews? 
Is it a wonder they go 
home with a “Sunday head- 
ache?” 
The ideal heat for a 
church, as well as for a 
home, is that heat which 
both heats and venti- 
lates at the same time. 
Just such a heat is the 
Kelsey Heat. 
But it is not only a 
healthy heat, it is an 
economical heat. In 
short it is a healthizer 
and economizer. 
If you are on the 
heating committee, 
let us tell you just 
what there is about 
the Kelsey heat be- 
fore you commit your- 
self on any kind. 
If the heat in your home 
is unsatisfactory, and you 
are going to replace it, 
or if you are building a 
new home; first find out 
about all other kinds of 
heat, and then let us tell 
you about the Kelsey health 
heat. 
Kelsey Generators heat 
and ventilate large and 
small houses, churches and 
schools, with the modern 
warm air method. 
ssT he. Kelsey 
L.nc° In | WAR(V) AIR CEHtUATOU fp” 
232 James Street, Syracuse, N. 
Dealers in all Principal Cities 
York 
103 P 
Park Ave. 
Y. 
a ji 
tm Ccfl 
Wf 
=S 3 = 
tea \ 
The gardener who gets the high prices is the one who sends his crops 
early to market. You can beat Nature by forcing your growths under glass. 
Plants and flowers in ordinary hotbeds may freeze, but they’re safe if you use 
Duo Glazed Sash. No covering required. You get all the light and no chance 
of frost. A good living can be made from three acres under Duo Glazed Sash. 
Double Glass Forms Air Chamber 
Two layers of glass instead of one. Non-conduct- 
ive air chamber between protects your plants and 
flowers just as the space between wall and plaster 
keeps your house warm. 
The Duo-Glazed Sash will advance your season a 
month to six weeks. It’s the same, climatically, as 
though you moved your farm 300 miles farther south . 
s m 
HP® 
“TRADE REG. APPLIED FQR 
PATENTED HOTBED SASH 
Made of genuine Louisiana Red Cypress, inches thick, with extra heavy ten- 
ons. Will last a lifetime. A boy can put in the glass. Broken panes can be cut 
to use in bottom layer. Every farmer, gardener, or home owner needs Ducr-Glazed 
Sash. They pay for themselves by producing early crops for the table or for sale. 
Write for free catalog and prices. 
CALLAHAN DUO-GLAZED SASH CO., 80 Wyandot St., Dayton, Ohio 
tv JIM r. *v ' ^ MASS 
•to u ij, of 
Underground Garbage Receiver 
Sets in the ground. Saves the battering 
of your can and scattering of contents from 
pounding out frozen garbage 
Sold Direct. Send for circular. 
Thousands in use. It pays to look us up. 
C. H. Stephenson, Mfr. , 40 Farrar St., Lynn, Mass. 
ARMY AUCTION BARGAINS 
Saddles 
Bridles 
Team II arness 
jeggings, pair 
I'ents . . . 
$3.00 up 
. .90 “ 
21.85 “ 
. .15 “ 
. 2.85 “ 
Army Revolvers 
“ M-L Rifles *. 
i ‘ Swords . . 
7 Shot Carbine 
New Uniforms . 
$1.05 
. . 9 H 
. .35 
3.50 
. 1.50 
Colt’s Cal. .45 Revolver $ 7 . 15 . Ctgs. lc each. 15 Acres 
Government Auction Bargains illustrated and described in 
420 large page, wholesale and retail cyclopedia catalogue, 
mailed 25 cts. East, and 30 cts. West of the Mississippi River. 
Francis Bannerman, 501 Broadway, New York 
Wells- Pockett-Totty Novelties 
Write at once for our 1915 catalogue 
of chrysanthemums, carnations, roses and 
hardy plants. 
Many pages are devoted to description 
and picturing of some of the best and 
latest novelties of both 19x4 and 1915. 
Never in our experience has the Horticul- 
turist had the number of sterling novelties 
in all sections to make a selection from. 
Charles H. Totty, Madison, N. J. 
Sweet Corn 
I wish to let the readers of this paper know that I am still in 
the com business, but do not intend to be very still about it the 
coming season, because I have a supply of first-rate seed sufficient 
to fill many small mail orders; and I am so positive of its growing 
popularity that I do not hesitate to pronounce it the most desirable 
sweet com in existence. It is early, tender, juicy 
and surpassingly sweet — four leading qualities of the 
ideal corn. 
Ordway’s Golden Sweet Corn 
will be sent to any address by parcel post at the following 
prices: Trial packet, sufficient to plant 35 hills, 10c; half-pint, 
20c; pint, 35c; quart, 60c. Choice ears, 15c each. Address 
O. P. ORDWAY Saxonville, Mass. 
QUALITY 
FIRST 
RH 
TREES SHRUBS 
EVERGREENS 
[ODODENDRONS 
EVERYTHING WORTH PLANTING 
Write us now for Catalog and Price 
List of your Planting Require- 
ments for special quotation. 
List or send 
QUALITY 
FIRST 
F. W. KELSEY NURSERY CO. 15 H T tT 
Pocket KIPLING Edition 
BOUND IN FULL FLEXIBLE RED LEATHER 
Light and convenient to carry, easy to read. Each, net, $1.50 
The Kipling Birthday Book. 
The Light that Failed. 
Soldier Stories. 
The Naulahka (With Walcott Balestier). 
Departmental Ditties and Ballads 
and Barrack-room Ballads. 
Soldiers Three, The Story of the 
Gadsbys and In Black and White. 
Many Inventions. 
From Sea to Sea. 
The Seven Seas. 
Actions and Reactions. 
Rewards and Fairies. 
Recently Issued: “SONGS FROM BOOKS” 
An interesting collection of scattered poems made by the author himself. Net, $1.40 
Just Out: "A Handbook to the Poetry of Rudyard Kipling” 
By Ralph Durand 
Prepared with Mr. Kipling’s personal help, it explains all unfamiliar expressions and allusions, and 
contains many interesting notes on Kipling characters and places. Net, $ 2.00 
Published by DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., Garden City, N. Y. 
Puck of Pook’s Hill. 
Traffics and Discoveries. 
The Five Nations. 
Just So Stories. 
Kim. 
The Day's Work. 
Stalky & Co, 
Plain Tales from the Hills. 
Life’s Handicap; Being Stories of Mine 
Own People. 
Under the Deodars. The Phantom 
'Rickshaw and Wee Willie Winkie. 
For information regarding railroad and steamship lines, write to the Readers’ Service 
