Gardening for Little Girls
ps Toward
, like the warbling of music) than in the hand, therefore nothing is more fit for th
ac
es that sound strange,-with cold winds and occasional snow? Ah, but t
e taken before st
at space you can h
the soil, situati
st of seeds, bul
lanting with view t
ether you can have the whole back yard, a plot along the walk, a round bed in the center of the lawn (only wo
, you can still have your roses and dahlias if you will add both manure and sand. So find out what kind of earth you are going to work with. Quite poor soil will grow sweet alyssum, California poppies, coreopsis and geraniums, while rich soil is needed for asters, larkspur, zinnias and marigo
ong. If you are lucky enough to have a kind friend or neighbor give you of her store, they will probably be good and come up as they should. If you
hat you will arrange to the best advantage,-the nasturtiums which climb, for instance, going t
FOR COMM
about their nature, habits, and tendencies, and certain words always f
re the plants that live bu
before they perish, making roots and leaves th
kind that continue f
shrubs and trees that los
that keep their verdur
perennial, but they have a stem that does not
uced by "crossing," or mix
NT
best in sunlight, others in the shade; some in sand, others in rich soil. You will have to find out what each kind requires. The food properties needed in the soil have some big names, too,-nitroge
EED N
s they give the quickest returns. Many kinds can be started in the house in March, and for this purpose any kind of a shallow box will answer. Bore holes in the bottom and put in a l
R INDOOR
es (or "flats") with a s
nly about the
nly to avoi
irmly after seeds
ith a whisk broom. The ordinary sprinkler lets out the water
htly-and thinly-over the pulverized soil and
the names plainly marked on the edge of the box, so you
er for the first week, to keep the eart
IAR A
in this way any of the following annuals, which
r edging; blooms for th
nk, red, purple;
, white; from
violet, white; f
yellow; from July to
icolor; August to
ink, crimson; Au
nd white starry blos
, white; Jul
ning-glory), white, a vi
ombinations, of white,
ite, rose, maroo
ed; Augus
white, pink, pur
llow, magenta;
GROWN P
following should all blossom the first
ia, red,
-not, lov
pur,
te, red, purple
e, pink, red, maroo
sis, y
s Dart
y, yellow, w
deserted-farmhouses on Long Island, still carries in its dooryard the impress of some gentle flower-lover long since passed away, in its annual spring beauty of daffodils
OWERS AL
and June with spirea, peony, iris, forget-me-not, columbine, baby's breath, bleeding heart, mountain pink, candytuft, Chinese pink; in July and August, golden glow, hollyhock, larkspur, hardy phlox, snap-dragon; September and October, su