1 
PARK AND CEMETERY. 
V 
ESTABLISHED 1890 
Devoted to the Improvement of Parks, 
Cemeteries, Public and Private Grounds 
Published on the 15tb of the Month by 
R. J. HAIGHT 
324 Dearborn St., Chicago 
EDITORS 
John W. Weston O. H. Sample 
Subscription. $1.00 a Year, ^L25 
Notes from Arnold Arboretum. 
Hort. 10:465. Oct. 2. 
Massachusetts Nurseries. Illust. N. 
N. 171:315-23. Oct. 
New Chinese Vines and Their Uses, 
F. Moore. Hort. 10:466. Oct. 2. 
Narcissi, Naturalized. Illust. F. R. 
24:3. Oct. 14. 
Nursery Inspection Regulations. A. 
F. 33:570. Oct., ’09. 
Prairie Plantations, J. P. Wentling. 
Illust. M. H. 37:382-86. 
Small Shrubs for a Small Place, C. 
D. Lay. Am. Homes. 6:Sup.l4-5. 
Oct., ’09. 
State Control of Private Forests, W. 
T. Howell. Harper’s Weekly, New 
York. 53:32. Oct. 9, ’09. 
Sweet Peas in 1909, T. A. Weston. 
Illust. F. E. 28:500-1. Oct. 2. 
Sweet Peas Worth Growing, List of. 
Illust. F. E. 28:610. Oct. 23. 
The Dahlia, D. W. C. Ruff. Illust. 
M. H. 37:405-11. Nov. 
The ’Mums of 1909-10, S. A. Hill. 
Illust. F. E. 28:572. Oct. 16. 
Teachers to Co-operate with Forest 
Service in Tree Study. M. H. 37: 
379. Oct. 
Taking Care of Our Trees. Ind. 
67:837-9. Oct. 1, ’09. 
Your Relation to “Conservation,” J. 
H. McFarland. Illust. S.’ L. 9: 
237. Nov. 
REPORTS, ETC., RECEIVED 
From the Forest Service, U. S. De- 
partment of Agriculture: “The Status 
of Forestry in the United States,” by 
Treadwell Cleveland, Jr., circular 167; 
“Commercial Importance of the White 
Mountain Forests,” by P. W. Ayres, 
circular 168; “Natural Revegetation of 
Depleted Mountain Grazing Lands,” 
by A. W. Sampson, circular 169. 
The first number of Meehan’s Gar- 
den Bulletin, a new monthly garden- 
ing magazine, published by Thos. 
Meehan & Sons, marks it as a worthy 
successor to Meehan’s Monthly. 
While intended primarily to further 
the nursery business of this firm its 
gardening information is so thorough, 
practical and timely as to make it 
For 
Results in Cemetery or 
Park Work 
write 
H. R. COTTA 
Landscape Architect and Engineer 
Rockford, 111. 
Booklet, '' The Landscape Beautiful," mailed free 
Is Your Cemetery Satisfactory? 
Are you caring for it economically? 
Is green grass the leading feature 
with shrubbery to give a proper set- 
ting to the monuments? IF NOT, 
then you need Howard EvartsWeed, 
Landscape Architect, 1715 Railway 
Exchange, Chicago, to modernize 
things for you. 
“The lot owners won’t let us” you 
say? If so, you have gone at it in 
the wrong way. You need Weed to 
give his stereopticon lecture — “More 
Beautiful Cemeteries” — in your 
town to point out the right way. By 
means of the stereopticon pictures the 
difference between the good and bad, 
between the graveyard and the mod- 
ern park cemetery is vividly shown. 
You are wasting your efforts in 
caring for the cemetery under present 
conditions. Get out of the rut. Wake 
up, even if you do have charge of 
dead people. 
Write Weed today and he rvillsendyou 
some interesting literature. 
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. 
"Park, and Cemetery The best Medium 
. for keeping before 
Park and Cemetery Superintendents. 
SID. J. HARE 
LAfNDSCAPE ARCHITECT 
KANSAS CITY. MO. 
3224 Campbell Street 
Always Mention Park and Cemetery 
Baker’s Waterproof Grave 
Linings and Earth Covers 
furnish the neatest and best decora- 
tion for a grave. Write for samples 
of goods. 
Baker Bros. & Co. Tiffin, 0. 
Galvanized 
Cast Iron 
Grave &Lot Marks 
”A Guarantee ’with Every Mark" 
BERGER MEG. CO. 
Marks for all 
Requirements 4227-4229 Fergus St., 
CINCINNATI, 0 . 
Catalog on 
Request 
