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SEEDS, PLANTS, BULBS, ETC- 
H enderson’s GARDEN GUIDE AND RECORD 
WHT FREE WITH EVERY ORDER amounting to $1.00 or over, IF ASKED FOR WHEN ORDERING 
REVISED and MANY NEW GARDENING POINTS ADDED for 1913 including CANNING and PRESERVING VEGETABLES for WINTER USE by MRS. RORER 
T HIS booklet is in convenient pocket form, with a waterproof cover, so that it may be taken right out in the garden where 
it will often come in handy in giving cultural directions and answering concisely, in simple language, the perplexing hundred and 
one gardening questions. The information given on the various subjects, while not exhaustive, is strictly up-to-date, and may 
be quickly found by glancing at the ready reference index. Another valuable feature is the blank pages for making notes, such as the 
kind of vegetable, fruit or flower, date of sowing or planting, first product, continuity, quality, etc. In fact many little records should 
be kept in it to refresh one’s mind regarding another season’s gardening operations. 
Among the "GARDEN BEAUTIFUL" and "GARDEN BOUNTIFUL" Topics discussed are: 
Flowers from Seed: 
Selections for Different Purposes. 
Brief Instructions How to Grow An¬ 
nuals, Biennials, Perennials. 
Special on Asters.PansiesandSweetPeas. 
How the English Grow Their Big 
Sweet Peas. 
Garden Culture of the Rose: 
Combating Insects and Diseases. 
Chrysanthemums: 
How to Grow Exhibition Flowers. 
Dahlia Culture. 
Bulb Culture: 
In Gardens, Pots and Naturalized. 
Peony Culture. 
Pruning Shrubs: 
Which Flower on New and Which 
on Old Wood. 
Lawns and Grass Plots: 
Making and Maintaining. 
How to Eradicate Worms and Moles 
in the Soil and Weeds in Walks. 
Preparing Garden Ground: 
Fertilizing, Draining, Cultivating. 
Vegetable Culture: 
Brief Directions and How to Grow the 
Big Prizetakers. 
Planting Table: 
Days from Sowing until ready to Use, etc. 
The Fall Vegetable Garden: 
What and How to Grow for Suc¬ 
cession. Etc., Etc. 
Vegetables for Winter Use: 
What and How to Store. 
Coldframe Vegetables: 
For Winter Use, What and How to 
Grow. 
How to Prevent Potato Scab. 
Garden Culture of 
Strawberries and Other Small 
Fruits. 
Insects and Plant Diseases: 
Latest Methods of Treatment. 
How to Make 
Coldframes and Hot Beds. 
The Essential Fertilizing Ingre¬ 
dients : Nitrogen, Phosphoric Acid 
and Potash — consumed by good average 
crops of vegetables and fruits on one 
acre as a guide to what fertilizer the 
land requires. 
The quantities of fertilizers re¬ 
quired for different areas. 
Our Garden Friends that should 
not be destroyed. 
Seedlings Illustrated of the leading 
vegetables so they may be distinguished 
from weeds. 
An Interesting and Valuable 
Table of 
The Time Required to Digest 
Vegetables, Fruits and Nuts. 
Etc., Etc. 
HENDERSON’S GARDEN GUIDE AND RECORD 
PRAISE FOR 
“ Your 'Garden Guide' was received by me last even¬ 
ing and in an hour of reading 1 gathered information 
on at least ten subjects that / had never seen clearly 
dealt with by authors on gardening, who are considered 
in the United States and Canada as good guides. I 
am satisfied that it will help me considerably. ” 
A. P. PAPINEAU, 
369 St. Catherine St., E., Montreal, Can. 
"I have perused very carefully the ‘Garden Guide 
and Record' and think it the most complete 'pocket 
edition' on gardenhig that I have ever seen. You 
are to be congratulated on putting out such a valuable 
book of information." 
Mrs. L. C. ZIMMERMAN, 
2743 Rayner Av., Baltimore, Md. 
"Please send me at once another copy of your 
* Garden Guide and Record.' It is the most lucid 
and comprehensive work on the subject I have ever 
seen. " w . II. MAGOFFIN, Overbrook, Pa. 
"I received your 'Garden Guide’ which is of much 
importance Mrs. ASA WEBSTER, 
R.F.D. No. 4 . Versailles, Mo. 
"Your 'Garden Guide' has been so useful and 
convenient to me during the year that I desire to thank 
you for same. It is most complete." 
HARRY M. BIX BY, Salem, Mass. 
" Your ‘Garden Guide and Record' has the foremost 
place in my library, in fact I would not part with 
it for any book I have. I kept a record of all my work 
in it and found it of great benefit." 
ALEX SOMERVILLE, Cumberland, B. C., Can. 
"For a person without much knowledge of garden¬ 
ing your 'Garden Guide' is certainly the thing to 
have. I would not take $5.00 for mine if I could not 
get another copy." j . A . McDONALD, 
1044 So. Claremont Av., Chicago, III. 
"The 'Garden Guide and Record’ is certainly a 
generous gift and a book that every one should have 
that grows vegetables and flowers. It is compact 
and quite complete." 
Mrs. R. R. GAINES, Crete, III. 
“/ appreciate the 'Garden Guide’ very much. It 
is the most instructive book I ever saw on gardening.' * 
IIENRY F. LACKMAN, 
819 W. Sixth St., Cincinnati, Ohio. 
“ Your little book the ‘Garden Guide' is all right, 
very handy indeed. Thank you for it very much." 
ROBERT SMITH, 
122 North St., Norwich, Conn. 
"The 'Garden Guide and Record' is just what we 
need; it could not be better.” 
Mrs. GRACE PAGE, 
739 West Centre St., Pomono, Cal. 
S3*?" FREE WITH EVERY ORDER amounting to $1.00 or over, IF ASKED FOR WHEN ORDERING 
H enderson-s Garden Guide and Record 
