57 
February, 19 21 
WE RECOMMEND 
Itittlc (Free Jfarme 
BABY TREES AND 
LARGER TREES 
FOR 
4 FOUNDATION PLANTING- 
4 LAWN SHADE AND DEC¬ 
ORATION 4 ROADSIDE 
PLANTINGS 4 HEDGES 
4 BORDER PLANTING 
AND BACKGROUNDS — 
4 SCREEN PLANTING — 
4 WINDBREAKS AND SHEb 
TER BELTS 4GENERAL 
TREE PLANTING 4 EVER¬ 
GREENS FOR POTS,TUBS 
AND WINDOW BOXES- 
4 A LITTLE TREE GARDEN 
Send for Book 
of 
3little€ree faring 
— beautifully illustrated. 
Containing: new ideas of 
landscape decoration and 
just what you want to 
know about trees and 
shrubs — their planting:, 
care, etc. Used in schools 
as a reference work. 
Listed In library of TJ. S. 
Dept, of Agriculture. 
ICittlc ^Frcc jfatmsi 
<— afct 
$ 
FOUNDATION PLANTING OF EVERGREENS 
HARMONIZING HOUSE AND GROUNDS 
DLUL/LD LV LnonLLiMU l> ^ » ■ >- 
ALSO SOFTEN ARCHITECTURAL LINES 
INTRODUCTORY LlTTLE TREE OFFER 
6 Choice Evergreens iffTo 2 +' high * 5 °° 
Selection includes ONE White Spruce, TWO Douglas Firs, TWO Arborvitae and ONE 
Juniper, —the “just right” evergreens for planting around the house. All are of regular 
lEittlf ®rrEi 3farma quality with the best of tops and big, healthy roots. 
Price includes packing and delivery to Express or Post Office, Framingham, Mass. 
Average shipping weight 25 lbs. Remittance should accompany order. 
If yours is a “LITTLE HOME” like one of those pictured above these six evergreens 
will make a splendid beginning for its artistic and distinctive decoration. Or if you have 
an extensive landscape problem they will show you, better than words can express, what 
quality of stock you can secure from us at reasonable price. 
- . T -1 . o OWNERS OF 
American rorestry Company LITTLE TREE FARMS 
Dept. K-2 15 BEACON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. 
Gardens That You 
Long To Possess 
Those real “homey” gardens, where 
you ramble at will and at every turn 
find something new—are the gardens 
where perennials and an¬ 
nuals grow in happy com¬ 
panionship. 
But to have such a garden 
you need more than a list of 
common things. You wish a 
broad field from which to se¬ 
lect the bulbs, seeds, and 
plants, that are to make this 
“homey” garden. 
Good Hold Garden 
Book for 1921 
contains the longest list of 
good Gladioli ever issued — 
all the new Ruffled varie¬ 
ties, plain-petaled sorts, 
and Primulinus.. Hybrids, 
are given, and hundreds of 
the older favorites. 
Rare Perennials, from all 
lands— Hardy Asters, Campanu¬ 
las, new Violas, Peonies, lop- 
pies, Larkspurs—-make my list 
indispensable to every garden. 
Flower Seeds — annuals and 
perennials—round out my com¬ 
plete service to garden-makers. 
_A postal card mailed today 
will bring promptly a copy of 
this book. 
Ralph E. Huntington 
Good Hold Farms 
Box 212 Mentor, Ohio 
..iimmlii...mmiiiii.mm.mm... 
An Endless Story 
T HE longer you own a garden the more you will love 
your perennials-and the newer you are at gardening, 
the more desirable it is for you to plant them! For 
they give the biggest return for the least care, hardly ever 
go back on you, grow tall and profusely and handsomely, 
and offer an endless variety of form, color, fragrance, and 
storied charm. It is easy enough to plan a perennial border 
or garden that will give you never-failing bloom throughout 
two-thirds of the year-a brilliant procession from the early 
Columbine of April, through the Irises, the Peonies, and the 
Phlox to the Anemones and the Chrysanthemums of late 
November-the “swan-song’ of the floral pageant. 
Imagine the constant supply of cut flowers of the most 
fascinating variety that such a perennial garden would give 
you for indoor adornment-and for your friends! And the 
fragrant story will repeat itself year after year with hardly 
a thought or a care on your part! Write us today for our 
price list of perennials and our planting suggestions. 
Moons' Nurseries 
THE WM. H. MOON CO. 
MORRISVILLE PENNSYLVANIA 
which ts / mile from Trenton, N.J. 
