Various

Trees, Fruits and Flowers of Minnesota, 1916


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HELPS

       Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society

       FOR OUR ROSE GROWERS.

       THE MINNESOTA HORTICULTURIST

       Vol. 44 NOVEMBER, 1916 No. 11

       Peonies—Old and New.

       A. M. BRAND, NURSERYMAN, FARIBAULT.

       Fruit Retail Methods and Costs.

       CLARENCE W. MOOMAW AND M. M. STEWART, FRUIT AND PRODUCE MARKETERS, PORTLAND, OREGON.

       Raspberries.

       F. C. ERKEL, FRUIT GROWER, ROCKFORD.

       The Flower Garden.

       (AN EXERCISE LED BY G. C. HAWKINS, FLORIST, MINNEAPOLIS, AT THE 1915 ANNUAL MEETING.)

       Blueberry Culture.

       U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE.

       Hardy Perennials.

       MISS GRACE E. KIMBALL, WALTHAM.

       Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples?

       ISAAC JOHNSON, WEST UNION, IA.

       Planting for Color Effects in the Garden.

       MRS. H. B. TILLOTSON, MINNEAPOLIS.

       The Fall-Bearing Strawberries.

       CHARLES F. GARDNER, NURSERYMAN, OSAGE, IA.

       Heredity in Gladioli.

       G. D. BLACK, GLADIOLUS SPECIALIST, INDEPENDENCE, IA.

       Civic Improvement.

       MRS. ALBERTSON, PRES. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE, AUSTIN.

       BEE-KEEPER'S COLUMN.

       GARDEN HELPS

       Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society

       SECRETARY'S CORNER

       THE MINNESOTA HORTICULTURIST

       Vol. 44 DECEMBER, 1916 No. 12

       Perennial Garden at Carmarken, White Bear.

       J. W. TAYLOR, ST. PAUL.

       The Minnesota State Fruit-Breeding Farm.

       CHAS. HARALSON, SUPT., EXCELSIOR.

       Color Combinations in the Garden.

       MISS ELIZABETH STARR, 2224 FREMONT SO., MINNEAPOLIS.

       Truck Crop and Garden Insects.

       AN EXERCISE LED BY PROF. WM. MOORE, ENTOMOLOGICAL DEPARTMENT, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.

       The Wealthy Apple.

       F. H. BALLOU.

       Law Fixes Standards for Containers for Fruits, Berries and Vegetables in Interstate Commerce.

       (TAKEN FROM "WISCONSIN HORTICULTURE," THE ORGAN OF WIS. STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY.)

       The Rhubarb Plant.

       LUDVIG MOSBAEK, ASKOV.

       The Greenhouse versus Hotbeds.

       FRANK H. GIBBS, MARKET GARDENER, ST. ANTHONY PARK.

       An Ideal Flower Garden for a Country Home.

       M. H. WETHERBEE, FLORIST, CHARLES CITY, IOWA.

       The Planting and Care of Hardy Perennials.

       MISS GRACE E. KIMBALL, WALTHAM. (SO. MINN. HORT. SOCIETY.)

       IN MEMORIAM—J. F. BENJAMIN.

       PASSED