VI 
PARK AND CEMETERY. 
Park and Cemetery 
^ AND 
LANDSCAPE GARDENING 
ESTABLISHED 1890. 
OBJECT; To advance Art out-of-Doors, with 
special reference to the improvement of parks, 
cemeteries, home grounds, and the promotion of 
Town and Village Improvement Associations, 
etc. 
John W. Weston, C. E., Editor, 
R, J, HAIGHT, Publisher, 
324 Dearborn St,, CHICAGO 
Eastern Office s 
1538 Ani,Tract Society Bldg,, New York, 
Subscription SI 1.00 a Year in Advance. 
Foreign Subscription $1.60. 
Published Monthly. 
Issned on the 15th of the Month. 
(Continued from page 42.) 
Public Squares in City and Village, by 
Sylvester Baxter, illus.. Cent., 71 :86o- 
70, Apr., ’06. 
Roads, The Good, in France, illus., G. 
R. M., 7 :25S-7, Apr., ’06. 
Roads in England, Some Experiments 
on Making them Dustless. M. E., 30 : 
296-7, Apr., ’06. 
Trees, Shrubs and Plants. 
-•Mpine Flowers of Easiest Cultivation, 
by Jas. T. Scott, illus., G. M., 3:133- 
6, Apr., ’06. 
Carnation, The, illus. paper by A. H. 
Seeker. F. E., 21 :376, Mch. 24, ’06. 
Cerasus Japonica pendula rosea, by 
Jackson Dawson, illus., Hort. 3 1363, 
Mch. 24, ’06. 
Coniferous Trees and Shrubs in Eng- 
land and Scotland, by T. D. Hatfield, 
illus., Hort., 3 1359-60, Mch. 24, ’06. 
Crysanthemums, New, by C. H. Totty, 
illus., G. C. A., 3 :5S-8, Apr., ’06. 
Douglas Fir. Canadian Alag., 26 1397-8, 
Feb., ’06. 
Dust Spraying of Fruit Trees, by C. 
P. Close, illus., Fg., 1:107-8, Apr., ’06. 
Evergreen Specialist, An. D. Hill, Dun- 
dee, 111 ., illus., N. N., 14:115-6, Apr., 
’06. 
Evergreens, Some Choice Ornamental, 
by John T. Johnston, illus., F. E., 21 : 
358-62, Mch. 24, ’06. 
Flowering Shrubs from April to No- 
vember, by Leonard Barron, illus., G. 
M., 3:130-2, Apr., ’06. 
Forest Reserves, The Eastern, W. R., 
5 :6-8, Apr., ’06. 
Forest Trees Suitable for Planting in 
the United States, IV. ; The Russian 
Mulberry, F. I., 12:128-9, Mch., ’06. 
Forestry in Massachusetts. Outlook, 
81 :85I, Dec. 9, ’05. 
Forestry, Uncle Sam’s Romance with 
Science and the Soil, by F. Vrooman. 
Arena, 35:159-63, Feb., ’06. 
Grasses, North American, Trinius pani- 
cum types of, by A. S. Hitchcock. 
Bot. Gaz., 41 :64-7, Jan., ’06. 
Hardy Flowers, A Constant Succession 
of, by H. G. Taylor, illus, G. M., 3: 
145-6, Apr., ’06. 
Anothe^r Proposition 
This is just the sort of a lay out adaptable to the park 
or cemetery of medium size. It is divided in two com- 
partments for plants requiring different temperatures. 
The potting shed cellar is an admirable place for 
storage of bulbs, etc. The construction is iron 
frame, the most lasting and practical house made. 
50 feet of plant possibilities, 
meaning thousands of feet 
of beautiful bedding plants 
and bloom. 
Lord and Burnham Company 
Greenhotije Designers and Manufacturers 
1133 Broadvk/ay, Cor. 26th St., IN.'V. 
Boston Branch: 819 Tremont Building 
Flower Memorial Gateway, Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, N. Y. 
# The Entrance to Your Cemetery % 
K Should be dignified, beautiful— and appropriate. We make a specialty Y 
W of Ornamental Iron Fences and Entrance Gates for Parks, Cemeteries, ^ 
r etc. We make the designs, manufacture the materials, and do all the work 
on one contract — or, if preferred, we will follow your own architect’s designs. 
Original Designs and Estimates free. Write for Catalog No. 30 H. 
ANCHOR POST IRON WORKS, No. 151 Nassau St., N. Y. 
LAWN GRASS SEEDL”;!... 
Dickinsons, Evergreen, and Pine Tree Brands 
Special Mixtures Seed for PARKS AND CEMETERIES 
MINNEAPOLIS THE ALBERT DICKINSON CO. Chicago 
How to Plan 
the Home Grounds 'Wter. of 
suggestive practical advice on every jihase 
of the work of planting, planning and improving home grounds. 
249 pages, cloth; price $1.00. R. J. HAIGHT, 324 Dearborn St., Chicago 
