. American homes and gardens. e grow-ing Nursery and Greenhouse Products for every place and purpose. The following are among our Specialties: Roses . Hardy Old Fashioned Flowers Evergreens - Trees and ShrubsRhododendrons - Boxwood, Bay Trees and Palms • Hardy Climbing VinesBulbs and Roots • Plant Tubs, Window-Boxes and English Garden FurnitureOur New Hybrid Giant-FloweringMarshmallow Our Illustrated General Catalogue No. 75 describes our products;will be mailed upon request. The Proper Way to Buy is to see the material growing. We shall gladlygive our time and attention to all intending purch
. American homes and gardens. e grow-ing Nursery and Greenhouse Products for every place and purpose. The following are among our Specialties: Roses . Hardy Old Fashioned Flowers Evergreens - Trees and ShrubsRhododendrons - Boxwood, Bay Trees and Palms • Hardy Climbing VinesBulbs and Roots • Plant Tubs, Window-Boxes and English Garden FurnitureOur New Hybrid Giant-FloweringMarshmallow Our Illustrated General Catalogue No. 75 describes our products;will be mailed upon request. The Proper Way to Buy is to see the material growing. We shall gladlygive our time and attention to all intending purchasers visiting our Nursery and inviteeverybody interested in improving their grounds to visit us. Our Landscape Department Plan and Plant Grounds and Gardens Every-where with Our Worlds Choicest Nursery and Greenhouse Products. Visitors take Erie Railroad to Carlton Hill, second stop on main line;3 minutes walk to nursery. LANDSCAPE GARDENERS Nurserymen and Florists RUTHERFORD, N. J. April, 1913 AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS. RAISING BANTAMS By E. I. FARRINGTON BANTAMS are the best of poultry , tame and companionable, theymay be handled freely and will run tomeet their young owner at the sound ofhis voice. They will thrive in verylimited quarters, require only a dry goodsbox for a home and may be fed largely onthe scraps from the family table. More-over, they will pay their way by the eggsthey lay, and if good stock is kept, itis quite possible for the youthful bantamraiser to make a considerable sum ofmoney each season by selling eggs forhatching purposes or by selling chickensand mature birds to other fanciers. In-deed, there is no reason why entriesshould not be made at the local poultryshow, with a possibility of winning prizes,which always creates a demand for onesstock. Many bantams are really pocketeditions of the larger breeds and weighjust about one fifth as much, so that theweight of some kinds is reckoned byounces rather than by pounds. TheCochins, Brahma
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectarchitecturedomestic