PARK AND CEMETERY. 
V 
ESTABLISHED1890 
Devoted to the Improvement of Parks, 
Cemeteries. Public and Private Grounds 
Published on the 15th of the Month by 
R. J. UAIGHT 
324 Dearborn St., Chicago 
EDITORS 
John W. Weston O. H. Sample 
Subscription. $1.00 a Year. { 
Parks, Cemeteries and Public Grounds 
Bituminous Treament of Newton. 
Chas. W. Ros.s. ill. G. R. M. 11: 
157-162. Alay ’10. 
Concrete Arch Bridge :it Pelham 
Bay Park. ill. G. R. AI. 11:190-192. 
Alay '10. 
Competitive Designs for a Cemetery 
at Bremen, ill. M. D. G. (German) 
16:181-89. Apr., 23, ’10. 
Competitive Designs for a Public 
Park in Gotha, ill. M. D. G. (Ger- 
man) 20:232-37. May 21, ’10. 
Filling Cemetery Vases. F. R. 26:20- 
21. Alay 19, ’10. 
Good Road Agent. C. Dillon, ill. 
Harpers Weekly. New York City. 
54:11-12. Apr. 9, ’10. 
Highway .System of Los .Angeles, 
Calif. B. A. Heinly. ill. AT. E. 38; 
306-13. May, ’10. 
Alethods of Constructing Bituminized 
Roads. H. Tipper, ill. G. R. AI. 11: 
162-64. May ’10. 
Notes on the Chicago Parks. Card. 
18:251. Alay 1, ’10. 
Specifications for Macadam Pave- 
ments. AI. E. 38:322-24. Alay ’10. 
Some Experiments with the Dura- 
bilit}- of Cement Drain Tile. Prof. 
W. H. Day. ill. AI. E. 38:406-08 
June ’10. 
The Purposes and Uses of Public 
Parks. A. Lichtwark. ill. G. K. (Ger- 
man) 12:75-79. May ’10. 
Why not a Good Roads Laboratory. 
Scientific American. New A^ork City. 
102:354. Apr., 30, ’10. 
Trees, Shrubs, Plants, Etc. 
Advance of I'orestry in the United 
States. H. Graves. Alay Review of 
Reviews. New York City. 41:460-6. 
Apr.. ’10. 
Branch Cankers of Rhododendrons. 
H. von Schrenck. ill. G. C. A. 
11:8-10. Alay, ’10. 
Business of Seed Growing. W. W. 
Tracey. F. R. 25:48-52. Alay 12, ’10. 
Companion Crops in the Flower 
Garden. L. King. ill. G. AI. 11:299- 
301. June, ’10. 
Culture of Ornamental Conifers. N. 
THE COTTA LANDSCAPE SYSTEM 
For More Beautiful American Cities 
COMPREHENSIVE PLANS 
DRAWN FOR 
Re-building of Cities along Mod- 
ern lines. 
For Park, Boulevard and Play 
Ground Systems. 
For Private Estates, Residence 
Parks and Modern Cemeteries. 
H. R. COTTA 
Landscape Architect and Engineer 
Rockford, 111. 
Cemetery 
Records 
Specimen pages 
and prices of record 
books suited to 
cemeteries of all 
sizes sent on re- 
quest. 
R. J. Haight 
324 Dearborn St. 
Chicago 
MEMBER of FRENCH and GERMAN SOCIETIES of LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS 
ADVICES, SKETCHES, DESIGNS, OR FULL WORKING PLANS FOR CEMETERIES, 
PARKS AND PUBLIC OR HOME GROUNDS. SURVEYS MADE IF REQUIRED 
Correspondence Solicited in English, French and German 
Planting: Contraots 
We are among the largest growers of ornamental 
trees, shrubs and plants in America. Hardy va- 
rieties a specialty. vve employ a competent land- 
scape gardener for the service of our large patron- 
age. Cemetery and Park Organizations are invited 
to correspond relative to eitherPLANNiNG or Plant- 
ing, or both. We will be pleased to make estimates 
on any proposition. 
THE JEWELL NURSERY COMPANY 
Est. 1868 Lake City. Minn. 1200 Acres 
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. 
SID. J. HARE 
LAiNDSCAPE ARCHITECT 
KANSAS CITY. MO. 
3224 Campbell Street 
JUST PUBLISHED 
CONCRETE POTTERY AND 
GARDEN FURNITURE 
By RALPH C. DAVIDSON 
16mo. (534 r 734 inches). 196 pages. 140 illustrations. 
T his work should appeal strongly to all of those interested 
in ornamental concrete as the author has taken up and ex- 
plained in detail in a most practical manner the various 
methods of casting concrete into ornamental shapes. The au- 
thor has taken for granted that the reader knows nothing what- 
ever about the material and has explained each progressive step 
in the various operations throughout in detail. These directions 
have been supplemented with half-tones and line illustrations 
which are so clear that no one can misunderstand them. 
Sent postpaid for $1.50 by 
R. J. HAIGHT, 324 Dearborn St., CHICAGO 
