THE GARDEN BEAUTIFUL. 
3 
the shape or number of beds, or paths, we may have in our 
gardens that yield any interest or charm, but the plants we 
cultivate. 
In large or small gardens the importance of growing beauti- 
Fig. i. 
Fig. 2. 
Explanation. — Fig. i shows the wrong way to lay out a garden, and Fig. 2 the 
correct way to do it, 
ful flowering trees and shrubs should not be overlooked. 
Far too many common kinds are grown in gardens. If the 
reader will only attentively read the sections devoted to hardy 
trees and shrubs, he will find a great variety of charming kinds 
