PARK AND 
CEMETERY. 
VII 
1C 
WHY 
NOT 
LET 
n(MA19)EVAK|5WHD 
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT ' 
DESIGN AND EXECUTE 
PLANS FOR YOUR_> 
PARKS, CEMETERIES 
0^ HOME GROUNDS 
? 
' /jVrER^STmBWKLETSy/kEQUEST 
-f ; llTlsK^ILWAY EXCHANGE^ 
Is J CHICAGO 
^ A 
Turn it Over to S. J. Hare 
Landscape Architect 
If you want the 
Best Results 
with the 
Natural Features 
of your 
Park, Cemetery, or 
Home Grounds 
Preserved. 
3224 Campbell Street, Kansas City, Mo. 
I WANTED I 
Adrertisements, limited to five lines, will be 
inserted in this column at the rate of JO cents each 
insertion, T words to a line. Cash must accom- 
pany order. 
WANTED POSITION — As superintend- 
ent by a thoroughly competent man, now 
employed in same capacity by a large 
corporation. Satisfactory reasons given 
for desiring change. Address A. B. C. 
(Cal.), care Park and Cemetery. 
WANTED POSITION— By an experi- 
enced superintendent of construction; 
prefer large cemetery in middle states; 
thoroughly competent; married man with 
best of reference.s. At present employed 
in similar position. Address X. Y. Z. 
(N. y.), care Park and Cemetery. 
WANTED POSITION — As superintend- 
ent by a thoroughly competent man; 
prefer large cemetery where a knowledge 
of the conduct and management of mod- 
ern cemeteries will be appreciated; ref- 
erences given. Address A-1 (N. Y.), care 
Park and Cemetery. 
POSITION WANTED— Position as su- 
perintendent of cemetery or public park; 
14 yeais' experience as superintendent of 
large priv'ate estate; thoroughly acquaint- 
ed with trees and shrubs; building roads, 
drainage, grading, planting and all de- 
tails of landscape work. Superintendent 
of large modern cemetery, familiar with 
office details; graduate of I. C. S. of C. E. 
as surveyor; competent to lay out lots, 
compute area and systematize work. Ad- 
dress A-2 (Pa.), care Park and Ceme- 
tery. 
W.ANTED — The address of Otto C. 
Doier, formerly of Evergreen Park, 111., 
also J. V. Hammett, late of Chicago, 111., 
landscape gardeners; will pay $1.00 each 
for their present address. Address J. H. 
H. Boyd, McMinnville, Tenn. 
the trunk and give it an injection of 
various • nostrums. I have found sul- 
phur to be the most fretpuently used 
substance, although calomel and cop- 
per sulphate have also been applied. A 
moderate scraping is sometimes bene- 
ficial in remo.ving hiding places for in- 
sects ; but of course the anointing by 
kerosene, linseed oil or turpentine is 
nonsense and worse in that it is act- 
ually injurious to the health of the tree. 
The scraping, as your correspondent 
mentions, also disfigures the tree badly. 
Ignorant tree doctors of this type 
should be treated summarily in the 
manner they practice on the trees them- 
selves.” 
Directory of 
PARK, CEMETERY, AND 
CIVIC IMPROVEMENT 
ASSOCIATIONS 
And Kindred Organizations. 
American Association of Park 
Superintendents. 
President, John P. Cowell, Buffalo. 
Secy.-Treas., F. L. Mulford, Plarris- 
burg. Pa. 
Annual Convention. Minneapolis, 1908. 
Association of American Cemetery 
Superintendents. 
President, F. R. Diering, New York. 
Vice-Pres., James Currie. Milwaukee. 
Secy.-Treas., Frank Eurich, Detroit. 
Twenty-second Annual Convention, 
Kansas City, 1908. 
The American Civic Association. 
President, J. Horace McFarland, Har- 
risburg, Pa. 
1st Vice-Pres. and acting Secretary, 
Clinton Rogers, Woodruff, Philadelphia. 
Treas., William B. Howland, New York, 
American Society of Landscape 
Architects. 
Pres., John C. Olmsted, Brookline, Mass. 
Vice-Pres., Samuel Parsons, Jr., St. 
James Bldg., New York. 
Treasurer, Charles N. Lowrie, 156 Fifth 
Ave., New York. 
Secretary, Downing Vaux, 68 Bible 
House, New York. 
Ohio State Association of Cemetery 
Superintendents and Officials. 
President, J. Perrin, Toledo. 
Vice-Pres., I. N. Smith, Greenville. 
Secy.-Treas., G. C. Anderson, Sidney. 
Illinois Association of Cemeteries. 
Pres., Edw. G. Carter, Oakwoods, Chi- 
cago. 
Vice-Pres., Arthur J. Graves, Blooming- 
ton, III. 
Secy.-Treas.^ John E. Miller, Mattoon. 
New England Cemetery Association. 
President, G. F, Standley, Beverly, 
Mass. 
Vice-Pres., Jas. Warren, Jr., Provi- 
dence, R. I. 
Secy.-Treas., H. A. Derry, Everett, Mass. 
Michigan Cemetery Association. 
Pres., J. W. Burns, Port Huron. 
Vice-Pres., Dr. Douglas, Lapeer. 
Secy.-Treas., Eugene Goebel, "Oak 
Hill,” Grand Rapids. 
Next Annual Meeting, Port Huron, 1908. 
FRANK H. NUTTER 
Landscape Architect and Engineer 
710 Sykes Bldg., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 
Advices, Sketches, Designs or full Work- 
ing Plans for Cemeteries, Parks, and Pub- 
lic or Home Grounds. Surveys made if re- 
quired. Correspondence solicited. City 
Park Engineer. 
7^£6 
Specialties for 
fall Planting 
Prepare your orders now. 
We offer for Fall 11)07 an unusually large 
and well grown stock of— 
Fruit Trees for Orchard and Garden. 
Oriiniiieiital Tree.s, ^Shrubs, etc., 
consisting of rare and teautiful species 
and varieties for the embeliishineut of 
public and private grounds; Shade trees, 
Street trees and Flowering Shrut s, includ- 
ing Lernoioe’s marvelous New Double 
Lilacs, Deutzias. etc. 
Tile Rose is a specially with us, and 
our assortments embrace all the old favor- 
ites as well as the newest kinds. 
Peonies, Phloxes and Iris. Of these 
showy, beautiful, hardy, easily grown 
jilants, we offer the choicest kinds, also 
Hardy Plants, including the most orna- 
mental, flowering from early Spring till 
late Autumn. 
Our beautifully illustrated Descriptive 
C'atalogue— a manual indispensable to 
Planters, mailed free on request 
ELLWANGER & BARRY 
Nurserymen— Hor licultur ists. 
Mount Hope Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. 
Accurate Records of Interments 
are indispensable to a well-ordered ceme- 
tery. Specimen pages of record books, in- 
dexes of interments and lot diagram books 
sent on application. 
B. J. HAIGHT, 324 Dearborn Street, Chicago. 
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