Z A N T ’ S 
WILDWOOD 
GARDENS 
Qar^en cM.otes of ig^S 
One of our pleasures during the winter months is to go 
over our garden notes. We again see the garden as It 
was In bloom and compare the much-talked-ot new 
variety with the older variety it was to replace. Many 
times they do — but just as often the much advertised, 
new. sensational stand-out proves to be very ordinary 
when sent out to be grown in all types of soil, and 
climates, etc. We try to see the new ones growing In the 
garden or Trial Grounds before we catalog them, as we 
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