Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 26, 1913, THE Semi-MONTHLY MAGAZINE SECTION, Page 12, Image 46

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    THE SEMI-MONTHLY MAGAZINE SECTION
1
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"rOt'R cnrilen or estate, hnw-
Y vir ttmt1. vtmnlil hflvo nmA
fruit trees. Plant a few nnole. hooch.
' near. plum, nulnco or cherrv trees.
Wo Iiavo600.i0of these IGO.OOOaonle
trees alone-of frrcd vou at half fluents'
prices. Kvery thine sold direct no
auents or solicitors even the smallest
buyer eels wholesale prices from Oreen.
Green's Trees
have 34 years' reputation as sure trrowers.
Head Green's jriiaranteo trees true to
name. Clean, healthy and hard v. Northern
irrown by tho largest, best nnnsprvmpn.
Extensive line of auncrli nrnnmnnfM trees.
vines, pianis, roses ana nowcrinif plants.
Green's 191 Catalog Free. Illus
trates and describes best varieties
and contains advice nn irrowinir
Ask for free copy of "Thirty Years'
wim fruits anu rjowen."
CRKN'S NUBJfRT CO.. 92 Will It.. Rocmiui. N. Y,
Are You
"Thinking Farm
Many persons who live
taking up gardening or farming' They
want the tnoncv that can be made from
the soil, want the pleasure and content
ment and easier life of the country,
want the health that comes from pure
air and proper food. They know that a
garden or farm would help the situation,
but they don't know how to proceed.
Start Growing Berries
I Will Show You How
Berry Growing is by far your best way of set
ting In touch with the toll. Willi a little money
and a small piece ol land you can be independ
ent. With a garden 50 by 100 feet you cau re
duce your food bill by half while living better,
or make n hundred dollars a year profit. I
make $400 an acre clear from my berries, and
you can do as well if ou try.
Get mr 1913 Berrydale Berry Book the
only think' ot its kind printed. Send today for
a copy -a postal will do,
A. Milling, Berry Specialitt
Berrydnln Experiment Gardens
Oceana Avenue, Holland, Mich.
$92.50 -Our Price
for Next 30 Days!
Wo now offer the KdwnnU Htetlcoto" Gnrage (1013
Model), direct from, factory for 992-bO. Hut to protect
oumlrt from advancing prices of etoel. we ovt n time
limit upon the offer. We imarantw tlile record price
Juajrtouljr. Juil
for 30
t now we can save you $35 or more.
Edwards Fireproof GARAGE
Quickly Set Up Any Place
An artistic, fireproof steel structure for private use.
OW ittMoluteprotertlnn (nun mpak thieves, joy rlden.
Hre, lightning, accident, enrtdeeente, etc Huvea 9'10 to
130 monthly In garage rent. Have time, tcork, worry ami
trouble. Oomea remly totet up. All parts cut and titled.
BlmpIe,couiiletedlrectloni furnished. Absolutely rust-
1roof. Jotntsand seams fenuunqntly tight Practically
ndestructlble. Lock ecctirely . Ample room for I artiest
car and all equipment Made by one of tho Inrgt-et
makers of ttortulle N reproof building. Prompt, safe tie
livery ana satisfaction guaranteed. Postal sent today
brings new GO page Illustrated Uaroge Hook by return
mail.
THE ED WARDS MANUr AUJ UKIiNU W.
631-681 Eggleston Ave,
Cincinnati, Ohio
!U5
1 1
An ART Scholarship
WRIT! AT OTICI r full Mh
tUnltrt at Ihlt pli Limit!
0'r. WchMfj.tUcUtii.
Teur mb fcoJ J4rM trlua
tbl skUJuU bj rtr tnaJI. ti. BMwmW lata
vfftr ti trHly hefJ. Da1 Ue Write
riHEHRTSIHSTlTUTf,StBingm .Oaib.Htb.
AFREE
FREE
TonmsoYUtofiiiL w
gtve a fm Lureka Camera
and conuete outfit. plate.
chemical, etc, Ith full Instructions- Just
tend our name sod address, we send you
14 papers Gold Eve Needles, Sell l pcrs
for Iuc. giving a TbimUe free. Wbeo sold
send us the $1 10 and the Camera and
complete outfit I yours. Addres
GLOBE CO., Dept. 206 Greenville, Pa.
PLANTING AND PRUNING
SHRUBS
IP properly plnntpil, not ono shrub out
of twoiity would die. Lets out tho
nurseryman doesn't itf That indi
vidual w usually made the scapegoat, to
he sure; but if lie is a reliable man, he
may be trusted to send plants that will
grow if given half a chance. J I is success
lies in the customer's satisfaction, lie
simply can't all'ord to be deceitful or
careless. This applies to established
linns, with good rating and a reputation
to sustain the firms that advertise in
the best magazines year after year. With
fly by-night concerns, the case is differ
ent ; they should not be patronized.
Likewise, traveling agents, unless they
bring proper credentials from well-known
growers, should be shunned. If you pay
them your good money, jou probably
will regret it.
When shrubs are shipped from tho
nurseries they tire carefully wrapped in
moss and burlap and can be sent across
the continent. When the amateur pur
chaser gets his bundle, he usually rips
it open to see what the plants look like.
Ho leaves the roots exposed to the air
until he gets ready to set out the shrubs.
Then, he digs a hole, crowds in the roots,
pours n pail of water over the earth and
calls the job done.
Now, trees are living creatures and
they need to be mighty robust to endure
such treatment. Pretty often they die.
They were not given a square deal. If
thev live, they are likely to bo spindly
and frail.
Most failures arc duo to one of three
causes or to a combination of them all
letting the roots dry out, failure to
cut back the top, and too deep planting.
Tho shrubs may bo kept safely; for
several days in the original package, if
the roots aro not exposed. If they are
to be kept for some timo before being
planted, a trench should bo dug and tho
plants set in it, very closo together and
slightly inclined toward tho direction
from which the sun shines, tho roots
being covered with earth. This is called
"heeling in" and serves to keep the
roots moist.
If thcro nre several shrubs to be
handled at planting time, it is well either
to set them in a barrel of water or to
dip tho roots in a puddlo of liquid mud,
which will cako over them and prevent
their being dried out by the wind.
TVJANY men get poor results because.
1YA of their curious mania for deep
planting. Generally, a ring on the stalk
will show where the plant stood in refer
ence to tho surface of tho ground when
in tho nursery. Let it go into the earth
just deep enough to hide this ring under
half an inch of soil.
Lifting a plant usually deprives it
of half its root growth, and tho top
should bo cut back accordingly. It is
just ns well, in fact, to have rather less
top than root at the beginning. Cutting
bnck to this extent may seem a drnstic
measure; but it really is of vital impor
tance. Tho roots themselves should bo
trimmed smooth at the ends, if they have
been broken off, nnd should be carefully
spread out in a wide circle. This means,
naturally, that a wide hole should be dug.
To get tho best results, tho soil should bo
thoroughly dug over, just as if annual
garden plants were to go into it. Well
rotted stable manure may also be worked
in to provide additional plant food.
When the shrub has been set in tho
hole, tho soil should be carefully worked
in around the roots so as to leave no
open spaces. The end of a lntho is ex
cellent for pressing the soil into the
interstices. When half full of earth, a
pail of water may bo poured in, not so
much because water is needed by the
plants ns to firm the soil over the roots.
When the hole hns been entirely tilled,
the earth should be well compacted with
a maul or the foot. A slight depression
to hold the water inny lie left around
each shrub. '
Put into, the ground nfter this manner,
one need "have little doubt about his
shrubs living nnd prosHring. And in
nil the essential fentures, the process to
be followed in planting trees is the
I samo. Most shrubs look best when
' massed, and should therefore lie planted
thickly, and some of them removed when
they get large enough to crowd each
other. No sort of planting dresses up
the home grounds to lxttor advantage .
than shrubs, and fear of not making I
them live need deter no one from order
ing a supply. The order should go iu
early, however. This ery minute is none
too early; for nurseries are busy places
in the spring and mistakes may occur in
a rush season.
A S for the pruning of shrubs, it is not
" so much n matter of how to do it as
when. Many a garden lover has consci- j
entiously gone over his choice shrubs
every spring, nnd then has marvelled
that they have failed to bloom except in
a half-hearted way. The truth is, of
course, that he has cut oil' a large pro
portion of the buds. All the shrubs that
tlower in the spring or early summer
make that same summer the wood on
which the next season's (lowers are to
be produced. It follows, then, that the
lilacs, Japanese quince, bridal wreath, i
(lowering currant, weigela, syringa and
such early (lowering plants " should be
trimmed immediately after they have
blossomed. On the other hand, the late
blooming kind like the hydrangea and
nit hen (rose of Sharon) may be pruned
in winter or spring.
In most cases, the trimming should
not 1 severe. Some gardeners are too
fond of the knife. Nipping of the
branch ends is a common mistake. The
real purpose should be first to cut out
the old and dead wood, getting the
pruning shears as closo to the bottom of
the plant as possible. Then, some of tho
new wood may be cut out, if necessary, 1
and tho branches trimmed back if they
are growing out of bounds. Usually,
very little of this work is needed.
Tho hydrangea, however, is somewhat
of an exception to the general rule. This !
shrub may be cut freely to secure special
results; it is ono of the most obliging
plants imaginable. If wanted for mass
ing in a bod, it needs merely to be cut
back almost to tho ground. If a fine
(lowering specimen on the lawn is de
sired, it may be allowed to grow freely,
and shaped to suit the owner's taste.
FLOWERS FOR PORCH
AND WINDOW
WITH what high hopes do hundreds
of flower lovers start porch and
window boxes in the spring, only
to seo the plants wither and the (lowers
fade beforo the season has half gone by.
And yet, it is possible to have a thrifty
little garden on tljo porch or in the
window until long after frost comes. To
begin with, a strong box, fully eight
inches deep, is needed. Many people err
in using boxes that aro too shallow and
so dry out quickly. Tho box must be
the garden. Well-rotted manure may be
mixed with the soil, or a small amount
of bono meal added. Tho third require
ment is water in abundance. Soil in
boxes dries out much more quickly than
that in the garden and, if neglected, the
plants will perish of thirst. Daily
watering is needed if the box is in tho
stm.
When tho middle of summer comes,
window boxes that made a bravo show
up to that time begin to look seedy and
forlorn. They ueed to be fed, nnd
several light coats of innnuro will carry
them nicely through the season. Or,
the plants may bo watered weekly with
mnnure water the color of weak tea.
The geranium is well adapted to
white houses of the conventional type,
and variegated vinca supplants it well.
Nasturtiums, too, look well with such n
house. It often happens that a box
filled with vines only is more attrac
tive when used on a brick house than one
boasting a profusion of flowers. Ivy and
moneywort, like vinca, are good vines to
grow. If the soil is made extra rich and
the climbing nasturtiums used, there will
Ik' a wealth of foliage and not over much
bloom. Other good decorative trailers
are Thunbergia, which grows rapidly nnd
has many dark-eyed blossoms in buff,
orange and white, nnd variegated
Japanese hop.
Pansies may be grown in the porch
and window box very early in the sea
son, and later replaced with geraniums
and other plants.
T 'T 1 1 T. ETT ; I I "TiTTj-TSSBSBSBl
Have a Beautiful Lawn
and Attractive Home Surroundings
Flowering tree nnd shrub require but little space
in tlie ynnt or lawn and are nlwa8 the luluiirntlon
of pnnner by Among Hip beet ore th Arnhae,
Cntnlpn, Japan Cherry Connie. Crnbe. Horse
Chestnut Judas, Magnolia. Thorn Alt hens,
II)drangt?a, Webzela. Stlres. etc Thfue in con
nection with rrnups of Dwarf Shrubbery Unpeg,
QrnMefl nnd Hardy Herbaceous rinnU initke n
beautiful lawn nnd attractive homelike nur round
xngs. They can be had nt a nominal rout within
the reach of everyone We carry ecrythltiK for
the Harden. Lawn. Park and Orchard. Ml yearoof
fair dealing hax put us to the front 1 OOncres, 47
itreenhontiHn rite todn for General Catalon
No 2 10S patten, free THY UK. v Ktiaruntee
satisfaction (GU)
THE ST0RRS & HARRISON COMPANY
Box 37, Paineiville, Ohio
5
Star Flower
Seed Novelties
For Only
1 Octs.
Celosia Cattle Gould,
most brilliant of flowers.
Crego Aster, monster
white, cnonnous in size.
Carnation, Evcrblooming,
finest white, large double.
Giant Portulaca, a glorious
new sort of marvelous brilliancy.
Orchid-flowered Pansies, wonderful
colors and forms.
These S most superb Novelties sold last
year for one dollar. Nothing better in
cultivation. We mail all S with cultural
directions and big Catalogue.
For Only Ten Cents
Our bit; Catalogue of Flower and Vetr. Seeds,
Bulbs and rare new l'ruils free to nllulio apply.
We are the larcest crowds in the world of
Gladiolus. Carinas, Dahlias, Lilies, etc.. and
our blocks are the best and cheapest.
JOHN LEWIS CH1LDS, Floral Parle, N.Y.
m
ToEv
Worn
TJERE'S the daintiest
sift you ever laid eyes on a whole week's
supply of Marinello Face Powder FREE. Ol
course, you know of Marinello Face Powder,
but perhaps you have never used It, and so,
simply to let you see how delightful it Is, we
are goinc to eive you enough, of this exquisite
powder to last you a whole week.
Daintily put up in a charming, useful Lucky
Elephant Coin Purse and Vanity Case one
side of which holds S1.2U in change the other
contains a put! and mirror. Usually sells for
SI. 00. Send us your name address, 2 dimes and
3 two-cent stamps, and both the case and the
free Marinello Powder come to you prepaid.
You'll find Marinello a surprisingly delightful
powder Write today mention shade.
MARINELLO CO., Dept. B, Chicago, Illinois
LIL 1
J U. fi.CI.il Hen Ice potUloDi py t!l,
j offer ftpkndld opportuuitUa for !
vunctmrDt. and srs Hfe-kD(, You r
t Ihjible to try toy Civil Service examina
tion If you ir n American oft-r 18, blJ
eta rJ ftivl write. Voo can qaillfj t
koi.ethronaI.0-S.help, LastfearoTrr
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IftUrftttteul CerrrflpondtDe KektMtlj
Bt 1238 tJertalott,
AdvertUlnr hut e ml owed lltrraturef your part Is obvloui.
Rapid. Easy, Legible, Penmanship
taught quickly thrdugh the celebrated Palmor Mot hod Cor
respondence School. Write today fur Information and a free
taiuple opv ji the tutiful month I v American Teaman THE
A, tt. Palmer Company. 30 I Irving Plate New Vera Chy