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Show , ,Tet 'WV itor log 'gr'' gee Wr 10 gip"' - . r vw . oww woe 10t, 7sw loo. , - . , . ,... x ,, , , , st - -- W .. k, - i i . y I 1OL OA I5 4 L"I.E1171- ''''' , gillf13 - ' gakt rdtVetun Lake City, Utah, Saturday, Mcry . .We stand for the COnStitlition of the United vtat - having been divinely inspired. 41 1959 23: ' - ' , , - ' , , , - , .., ,. , - , ,. ... ' , .' ' ' , , , The I an ,, , , - - -- 1 ..,. - 7 By NAlli FAIREEOTHER 'axesvia frontA '"Gariteilis lises. Ed's' d. ow Bu gets Come theUnbalance ' Senate boosted it to $300 - . Gardeni Since Edon.. ,' t Shs Arta7) Masssise "Helixes) , hi first gardens we knowlbout THg as fact,' not flowery fancy, are the gardens of Egypt and China, and these two qvite 'different types have continued to the present day.- as two different' kinds--Ogarden - ,. , , , - - ., f?,,,,,i':'.7"' ' ..4.;:-- .,.,....--- -. - ,: ,i r,.., :.!: ,.....,.., ...f.,;'7,...: .,.;;:".7,,-.;:i-,t,c.Off- ::: :- ,- 1 'UNLESS HE BACKS downcoth:pletely .1959, ' .' ; , ' i., r t;is previous position; which is lion for dormitories plus another- $125 . , , ... million for academic facilities. The House 1 ' . 4 not likely, President Eitenhower is head- '. ,. -' with settled for a flat WO million. - 1..ti,;;..",.1,0."-vb,,-- -' 44 ,,, ,2,:17,11t, t...7i's.441!),.e-----: ,',,,,.., ing straight into another veto battle r., Senwhich the on . bill -The compromisq -Coneress. , ,' ,!; ' 1...t., The battle will revolve around the is- - ate and House will finally agree, in other ': , '!: Will be just about double the ad the which both words, for 5,47,.. 1 - 1 ot :, of ,ot 4 ,.,4 housing, public pue ' of .1;z:Albp, 1' I in bills ministration's now plenty have 1-House requestsand passed ,,Ii;.0',4,44. ;',.04t,l,cl. - ; Senate and .44 .3i6,1.44., ':',,'.,,,,,r' , . ' ,;-;-..--; r '''I''' ' V ' 41,:t tt.' 1 i natural far beyond the administration's recom- - Americans can be found who fed that- , style; the Chinese as the it ,.,:.,!)-'-'. ,11 74 - ' , , ;. i ),, i r , !: even the administration's proposals repmendations, and far beyond what is nec- i 14;11111211'1 r. 11 4..Lifv7-v---w--.; .,. (: .'' t, 1,1,.; il garden. landscApe '''..."7..'414-.. .-federal much resent fantoo participation essarv or wise. 1 , - 1 ':1 -' . European civilization' began in in matters that properly belong to com".t. ,, ir; '461527''1111'1211. The housing bill carries an importance 4 Mediterzlinean . individuals in ' the and , munities of I is a . Eastern . merits. l It .; symbol ..."1; its beyond , , 4 - 4 r, , P . 1 the fight for a balanced, sound budget on ALL THIS RECALLS the proposal of Sumer and Egypt and spread round !' t'5-- : xt 5.1 ' ' ,;.'"---'--".,c:.' 41i .:., b , -one hand, against generous spending ,, ,, , the shores of this Inland sea. Since ,'" '''' ' tLP44 I 1, 7 Utah's. CongressmanDavid S. King , i ''-'4', ittor,--".' I ,.....;, ,: ,'-' orrthe-othe- r. ,...- 0, It is, moreover, the first of and others recently that each budget the Mediterranean lies on ' r . .).' , ,, , $ -, the Tr.i.; ff.'.1, . edge 4 ,A.,,, f , , yot41,f,' " the major ApeMing issues on which Con- 4 s hould Include an item for retirement ,pf - . k.''''' ., ' , --P " ,,' , .. , of .,.. the ,., belt 1..1., desert of the . 41L,'''',...--great !4 am, completed gress has .1 ,,... - i'. ,,,,' . , theirverwhelming national debtAt th " , '''' i ' ,. A..., ...... . veto test ona spenaing------the climate stitute the first !no -I a such A , northern hemisphere, asked what IC4-. provision tirne'we good , 1, -- ' . 1,---,- ,,,, -, i ' .!..,'t.',,-.1, ' Issue. -- r: , ' Is hot and arid and the natural Ai 1;,,t1 Is ft ii,-,do if , going to be un- I's." ''-""-" Plr''''''' ' One trusts the President will nothesi, . would ' ""- , '' rt 21 ,', balanced anyway, as it almost alwaysAs: vegetation Out ; ' .' by r--,- . sparse and dried - --- : '. , ' tate. The abortive attempt to Override, these days, leading to more additions tes'.----------- I es e iT , 1 A s ,le.,..,.:. 44., -o ' tne summer- neatSo that what r r ;a , 4,,,, ' his veto on the comparatively minor 'REA the debt I thiskyl men lon g for I n their girdens-- 1 is . 1 bill a few weeks ago,showed his strength. effeCtive , We Suggested that .... ....,4.18,.. ik .1,4 . -d 4r ' -- -- ., that the arid ifilde, solnewElii ,.... ,.. -4, spendlni,re-dü-c'eErlitc;,..i,".4-,44.,,,s, $04 . esmoist and 'under to spending bloó in Congress cannot muster k2.4. luxuriantly leafy the debt, and get inflation t"-.4,,3control, . ..,... ' 44'-") ' the votes to override a veto on a clear- - is to pass a law that any increase inspend- - cape to "when tile fierce heat:dries cut spendinr't Issue, . up the moisture in the mouth and.. ing must automaticallY increase taxes to on this one THE ISSUES are clear-cu- t the scorching wind consumes the cover IL ' On every major point, the bills passed marrow of the bones." ' The housing bill Is an excellent illus- ., . of Confine' reretti OSITSIrint fr tit mot in, But if treesand flqwers ere to , tration. How many of the senators and by the Senate and House are extravagant. : ' For example:, i - thrive in such a climate th?y need . representatives who so blithely boosted From the debt by voting for extravagant pro- - telt3. They must be sheltered from ', , On Urban Renewal--.-Th- e administra- ' tion had recomm'ended the spending of grams would have done so if it had mean't 'Scorching winds, and from mau- - . J. To ' a direct, immediate tax increase for which , S1.35 billion over the next six years. As- an), ,- rauding animals (includi g ; the federal government they vi:ou11.,have to -answer to the voters- 'and above all they must be con- tom For Renais- It f.uming.bethat or rigid divisions--- The trees and Since twentieth century gardeners magnificent .. home? back in the business of Pubstdizing , --- shrubs seem to stantly watered. So In the ' as no are have neither the space nor the chance, imere longer Same by grow gardens in the first for'the Municipaj improvements dens there is Always water place ree., "(tog ' . if without humarr interference, homes for plAnts,..-thewhich is are works an' unchallenge- labor to cultivate a large area, e P4?- cool relief of men and plants alike: '. , ' 1:::r Ay able assumptionthis would seem to be But the 'love of trees and of these new gardens are small, often water him, In pools, falling in of Art,-- Architectural constructions ' .1 ! ''l more than adequate. The administration tier' s ', ' :, no larger than the grounds p1an fountains, flowing in channel ds to use vegetation as their build- - landscape had little influence on ' ' ' recommended, moreover, that the federal trees-anA, t of a house, or even, of, a single (( PI"? ) the irriqate blssoming -- gardens till the eightof a , subsidy be reduced from ' .. . , room. , And need of this shelter ttnd more than Ei n y Euro- flowers.. Ay, . eenth Century.. It was then in Engof their longer any city's slum clearance cost to one-hal- f. personality dictated before, they are part '4' the of andlvate'r gardens 'tt .," hqs Gr style pan " , '2 , -But first the Senate and, this week, the . ,, 5 of the buildings to which they be- .. I -; Mediterranean gardens from ' the OWEI ; they are there to fill the land that the romantic landscape House boosted that amount to $2-- billion (rd:. 2---4revolt in Ati . against developed style deIn to the long. Formal gardens -- were de- them start, has meant that despite- the places allotted Ir7e,oilltels. , and refused to make any redUction in the . . the tyranny of formal gardening, sioned as a setting for the palaces and the art,of not history changes' , ii-sign. Trees and shrubs are percentage of subsidy. and it quickly grew to the height' - o ' surrounded. Spanish patios, -of the same are all -- early gardens , valued- for their beautYbut because On Public HousingThe administra, of extravagant fashion. Its most 40.,;,, ., 1-rt were roofless extensi ons of the do- . the and details vary. only family ; , tion Yin .) was famous :, constant stand 'authorization of no Lancelot,. clipping, exponent, they 'it.. rnestic dwellinft space. But the 'Since they must he rigidly en-vz.:' new units. The Senate B r o w n, nicknamed. Capability 45,000 OM-i chosen best of these new American gar- .t. tio,.: - ....- ,'il. .14) ,, flowers are their are and for .4.c1osed. they small.'tSince they. d uring the next four years, at an Brown because he would always . dens farm with the house a single -- 7 ' neat disciplined '1171?;10 i,C They and growth. be the ground plan irrigated, mated cost to the federal taxpayers of - find "capabilities" of improvement - indivisible ortanic unit: house and , -- 2- - , t''-- -:.07!----,,-- ; is formal. And since the world are none of -- them there for theix in the sites he was given for gar- . $883, million .And the House, going corn- 44:: eareni mer7e Into - other like own sakes. but as Malleable -walls is hot and dry d( outside the 6 ,, oerb(-AtHe designed In a deceptively s authorized - dens. pletely f elmsoed- bands. The 140,000 ct., th s own mans ' material 0,, for . and desert, the gardens are as Aoe -- ...units during the next lour years, at Pn . f rooms are continued in g style with sweeps 7 si mole-seexnic mon'. f14 gar water and , leafy as thrivingly green N .7- .... estimated eventual ledira cost or S3.7 trees and of f and t--$0clumps grass f , e den livince, the . innts end of one is Renaissance gardening space ,snd ga'rdening skill can make billion. - ttis., picturesquely winding water, using ,si,iA ,c,14,i. consid, and of fine the best arts, thorn. this natural material to emphasize a- On$ College HousingThe adrnin . 'Sit Dow); You Guys Wont To Sink ered not as gardening at all but So the Egyptian garden was IN GARDEN design the United ' the Inherent character of the land- tion recommended $200 million for fisca The, Boat?' w ceremonial of form as a stately ,... . States has botTowefrom many copied everywhere, rind though . scape. . 4 there are local variations in the music, a superb overture to the ; from the Japanese (in peoples -different lands and climates, we palaces it surrounds a n d ih4 THE GROUND IS not leveled but from the settings), enntemporary left with hills and hollows , the princely life for which it is the 1:lanislt (in southwestern recognize with pleasure always the IN THESE COMPLICATED times we Western Mr. Sandberg, serving history. The gardens are rot water lies unconfined in spreading ., same enclosed oasis of fragrant ings), from the English (in formal need men with the broad outlook, a of course, represents the arts,a field about but by more pools and natural rivers, and the designed gardeners by and estate gardensnow on the shade, a'fragile paradise leafy firm grasp on their intellectual heritage; which education writers have said all too boundary is invisible, screened by all the empires be-- - architects, sculptors, paintersby Some of the most strihing wane). tban, men mentally and morally disciplined and tittle. the great names of the Renaissance belts of trees or a'lence sunk out cause it is constantly ' created effeets have been achieved in reat trained to evaluate situations, make sound ha-h' a . po,lic "wild gardens." of sight in a ditch called a the Le Notre himself was trained THE FIELD OF BUSINESS; is entitled decisions and by their skill and experi- afresh, by man's unchanging deon it to turned before (because coming visitors, by he an - in as architect flowers In one time a new and original and trees to loan is the ence provide the leadership the world is light high prominence It receiving. ' surprise. were wont to exclaim material for his stvle'is We to climate. need , gardens arid economic boom avoid being develnned in the and , bust, fon looking , . so that we are not eon- are a single Notre's e designs American te intoxication the the I 611929 and the pessinri,,at When such leaders appear, generally THE TRUE STYLE is still of garscious of any distinction between indivisible unit, He can control mism of the early 30's. , We must Sbon nrec,aures of modern life increase , society is prompt to recognize and honor rooms roofless are dens the nark and. the countryside be- which material The his of And tbrauhwavs whole tthem. find immense telin ways , by which industry and labor Brigham Young University on June for outdoor living, a style :which ' hods. 'wink, look to their gardens at once in a way no Italian gar- - Yond. For the effect to ha aimed 5cwil1 confer honorary doctorate degrees may adjust their differences without unL art , is enhanced unbroken of Eurnature at continue by through build not He does aro achieved. Pe American coercion. Ail these things and dener relief. 'Renaissance, nrivacy upon four such outstanding Americans but by art which is not Carefully garwho have cultivated what Lord White- Jan,nese. and English landscane many more must be accomplished by our opeanhistoryin the cloistercourtup his plan by adding nieces to- - ' hidden. dens of the Dark Ages, the head has termed "the habitual vision- - of' 'business leaders. They are important to gardens were designed to be seen; gather but conceives the entire In nineteenth-centur- y and Moorish of Europe -- contemnorarv American gardens Spain, our garden yard future . garden as a setting for the house, prosperity. greatness" and thereby have risen to posi- the castle gardens of the ,Middle fusing the two together into a sin- - there was no significant new garare for living. A eareen today is a tions of importance in their respective future will Colleges now ,and in the den style. The formal garden con- Jfields Ages. And the qtyle spread east nipm, to eat. to recline, to enter- of endeavor. work of art.: The pallee con- : gli see that the humanities are given high. fain. but not a rolling greensward I Afghanistan ' trols the vistas and the axes of tinued or was revived, Plough the PersiOnd through Those who are to be ,,so honored are l l vision waslost, and by cassica place in the educational setup. An all-ito India, for Babur, the Mogul -- - the garden the tn Ptroll unon and admire, ,,Aslate' . George Romney, industrialist; J. Willard garden - controls the end of the In century the herba- - P, t'In needed also the areas the "Prince conqueror, was century, the merican Marriott, business executive; Nicholas G. the setting and nroportionS of the ceous border and the woodland of knowledge,being eliplored to the end of Gardeners" and loved the liitle garden was laid nut coMfortablv Morgan, Sr., attorney, businessman and (Indeed at Versailles the palace. garden developed in revolt against with a front yard and a bark yard regular gardens of Persia, taking gardens were laid out before the historian, jand Carl Sandberg, the great that there may be woven a new fabric the ' mechanical degeneration of of run . mutual to his on ago was genernitslv exposed to the with him the formal understanding American Tpoet. The realms of triumph through style The was Palace final designed.) all carpet world Of cultures. I such things- world eastern conquests to India where two belong inevitably together, here vepr sented are typical of what the s . been we have l':c winiFfilisife.m- Thm"17thneeewciiintahfcohrinn: is made. century, kinship hlneegthe Moguls laid out elaborate . to the body progressiye American universities Are now head like a wealth of verwhelmed o the so by has become sort of an overdens as settings for their tombs. age" 'emphasizing and also those to which the ' new plants which pour in from all ruling leviatham in these times. But brought us back to the enclosed The great change in European VERSAILLES IS THE apotheosis college or university of the future will we of ends the that even in an age of fantastic marvels of earth, scarcely of the formal garden, but what give even more impetusbusiness, science, .., ' garden. gardens came with the Renais' ;art and the humanities. machinery and nuclear advances, the of landscape gar- - have time to consider the design sance, that sudden astonrshing HERE WE ARE back how we of where the but at all, only human wart and the human Imagination garden Mr. Romney, president of American of man's spirit which car-re- d dens which we know of first from , started ,meed than three thou- we can successfully grow all these crave nourishment. The arts, music and growth , the of ancient China? Motors, has been the toast ott the automo- Into the forward. him paintings dayliiht Sands years ago, with. a garden 1 new treasures. such as Mr. Sandberg's po.etry, live industry sincehts company SOld more of intellectual confidence. He is The landscape style, though really . ',that is - primarily a dwelling place cars In 1958 than in 1957, the only firm help to provide this nourishment. BUT NONETHELESS there are no longer satisfied with the little . no more natural than the 'formal for green things and neonle, in to accomplish the teal. Mr., Marriott, IIT IS G001.) .Ghut-i- n ed garden, gives the impression that to recognize and honor our signs that w e are evolving plots that cuiet harmony. The Garden of .' founder of Hot Shoppes, national res'-new garden style to suit our ne - Eden no this delightful scene we have come him throuzh all the dark centuries all fields of human enterIr;aders longer seems so rem oter . taurant chain; Mk-gainwide .attention and in America esnecially, on is sinrly A happy accident of are, of Ills history till now. He feels : in prise. They have led-bin time : here we example. They 1. essence, r for excellence as a business organizer and Ihave don 4 much to show their fellows a glardino secret, a pleasure g ar- magnificent. And nature. Tibere is,no question here ' gardens are being created . which the himslf executive. The . . field of the .1way to success hi setting the good exaare as clearly modern as the archi- Ironi Jfrse modest enclosures of of a lot enclosed, nothing formal den. humanities. the legal Profession and 'bust- - mpleOurt compliments - or symmetricaL-n- o for. straight lines - - tecture -t- hey to them an flowers he ness also, is represented in the award to I Young University for selecting be given Mr. Morgan, known widely for ifor honorary doctorate degrees, such deextensive work' in memorializing and pre- ! The Flower Gorden: serving recipients, mil-fro- m - . - - T ..-- a: 'r1;""):4v. ' ' .' !--- - , I .:. 41,), . 4..47;''-'1;-11.,- t - .tr..r,,...1,,:-- .,- - , - ' - n- 4 5 ovetv' '' , i egetit ' . -: 1 ,E ,r ' . - , I ' ' 0- ",,, - . s ; 0 -'.- , 4 - ' ,, .,,,,,107.: - - - -- ". ,Vt-'7s.- ' 4-- - - . 1 (-'' ) 4"-,1- ' . ', -- ; action-,--so-w.co- , , ,. , , - ..7 - ;N4-1- on - '1;-'14s--- -' 1 , - , . - , . , ,. . - . , -, - - ie - ,..,t- . - 4 a1 ,- 1 ' , ' 0111 ........... - - ' , 'ye . , Privacy To Renaissance Splendor Privacy Of Twentieth 'Century Retreats Girderng Has Gone And Back i means , (in i ' 'n - , t .,.. '1 i y --- c two-thir- - arse ' 7, ,-fl- European 1 . i . ' , , ' i.? - , -- rectoI-mende- - , .;: . . . - -: -- grn - 1..1.-..- - fin-or- self-expre- , oluctola - , , ' Leadership The World Can Use d. - -- los "A-ha- r) . ee , 1 - I 1 1 n, - it . 3 , . i 1 gar-Scien- s- 1 othersthe ture . I , i havo-c,mfort- ed y . ., fast-growi- 1 - , 2, , , 7 , ' - IT ISN'T OFTEN a state agency makes a proposal so heavily baldnced on the merit side-a- s one under study by the Utah Finance Commission to place the state's fire insurance coverage on a bid basis. ' The idea carries a three-wa- y label of economy, efficiency and dernocraey. 'Economically speaking, opeA bidding would save the state's taxpayers between $15,000 and $20,000 a year, according to conservative In the matter of efficiency,the finance department would have only one oolicy to keep track of and one claims ndiuster to deal with Instead of being saddled mith 200 policies and dozens of claim; to file on r , , , , '',- - eachfire loss. The case for democracy is obviousi seems only fair that all fire underwriters In the state have a crack at this 3100.000- piece of state business rather than It as a political .plum. distributing Annual fire insurance premiums palci by the state last Aug. 1 amounted to $109,- 626. Richard P. Lindsay, the lone Democrat on Ow finance commission, says competitive bidding could reduce that fig- 'tire by 15 to 20 per cent. nig is a servative figure when compared with from Information., Mr. Lirmlay'-,seureColorado during a study asked by the full commission. Colorado's nurchasing agent, Lacy L. Wilkinson, said his state saved 30 per cent by consolidating policies and ' , awarding them on bids. ar d - , .. - .:. , , Feminine Touch . How To Save . are-desig- ned makes-gardens-wh- . rear A rear A A Thing Of Beauty And A Joy Forever . Undoubtedly some opposition can be By LES GOATES expected to the consolidation and 'open-th- e bid proposer because of the political 11111E business of growing things patronage now involved, although little is is rapidly becoming the world's expected from the office of Gov..George D. most confused and contradictory Clyde, who said he is all for it can field of domektic endea:vor. The garbe worked out satisfactorily" dener has his own ways of doing The- - report of Commissioner Lindsay and craves theit adoption by things discloses that 425 insurance agents, all his neighbors and friends. That throughout .the state are- now providing. makes him the leading gerdener in various amounts of coverage on s. The vicinity and that to him means owned buildings. More than 200 separate more than cowing. a prize patch of policies were' involvedwith only 11 actual fire losses totaling $15,600 peonies. during the last fiscal year. Take killing bugs as"another example. There are a great many ways The commissioner also reports the of.them itates loss ratio oven, the past ten years ,to kill These pests, and all ,havetheir advocates.. Meanwhile. is onlY126 per cent of the premiums paid, go on doing right well for or approximately $260,000 for S1000,000' themi Ts. So it --goes for killing ,' pd id. Yet the state, under the present weeds. lulch 'ein under, burn 'cm System, pays for its insurance at standard out, hoe 'em under, spray rates, the ' same . rates available to the everyone has his pet theory but- -public. well. you know weeds. (ED. NOTE: If you don't know which are weeds Commissioner Lindsay offers as an al. and which are flowers, the sure terdate-th- e of state possibility tile way is to pull tip everything; and Ing itself at even more saving to the whatever comes back are weeds.) taxpayer. With large corporations and 'It's quite the same; if not more businesses finding this method so profitso.' with sprays and dusts, lertilizbe able, may worthy of , ing. cultivating. irrigating. .et al. , close consideration by the state. Whereas sensible theories for ,gar dening have .bee o evolved. there is ME AWHILE THE STATE can take' a much of the absurd that trips along ) long step in the right direction by with them. , Too often a principle working out a program of consolidation is creatOd from a theory ihat is and open bidding that tIn be put into et. created ' to create a principlei- - byt .lect when new policies come-uin August.. that's gardening for you! . - Who thr fellow seen everything. ex- the average' gardens ceedingly fond eas- when he's. in lawn satisfied with ily ADN1,41..SER, he's and a few rose con- home. So he tells viction how gay the then gardens are comes home to his lawn. and watch a ' - state-estimate- , "oor-1,0- 6 ' .1.04 I . ,, . , , , , ... ' . , , 4.1 , ' ' ' f'''' ,, . ) 4)1 ' , ,. 1, - - , All'I', ''' 1, , ,, . , -- 1, c , , :12 - fen-II:lin- The Flower Garden: "A Thing of ' Beauty and s JoY Forever." . - - - . - - - ) . , . , , . .. , - I :,f, jo 4..4, ,,,.,,, -- la . - 'I 0,4 ,44 er -- - ... 4 A, ' '' ns- , I ','''',,,", t - - ,4,10,-;- ,, .self-insuran- , By JOHN K. TERRES ANE of the queerest robin nests The difference between - gar. that-Levheard' of was built ' dens in our of A. and those in a tree in a Boston back found in Europe is due primarily yard in to the climate. It's too hot, or cold , the early 1900s. The female robin usually builds or dry for really great gardens in most of the nest, and he male this country as,compared to some in Europe, Japan or Hawaii. Also helps bytringing her ma erials. we have too many insect pests but ' This female, with a extra. then, too; most English gaidens . ordinarily lou had h, are populated by snails, slugs and 7 woven into her nest. two red satin earwigs. There are. other explana- - .1 ribbons worn by people who at;,, tions and excuses. all quite con- tended the 1903 convention (dale vineing to a householder whn National Education Association. would rather admire a beautiful one. in work garden than Trailing partway out the side of the nest, the AFTER IdOOKING OVER a few of g on our neighbor 's, gardens, we're one of these ribbons read plainly: convineed they're better than ours "New York N.E.A. at Boston, because they're smaller. A flower' garden with lawns and a few ifult--trees should extend no farther than NEAR THE NEST ript the bird, a tired newspaperman can push ' had embedded a piece of coarse loaded weelbarrow without puffwhite ,lace through which she had This wisdom, we hope, will be neatly threaded v9 wit4e chicken passed frptm father to son so that future gardeners will not bite off feathers The remainder of the nest she more than they can masticate, ,,r,'S some seem to have done out our' had decorated with brown string, ' , - yellow way. string, a piece of blue ern;.. But large or small, !here's noth . broidered silk, the hem of a hand- . ing more beautiful than a garden in t ' the spring, just,ns the flowers are kerchief, and a bit of white satin bursting into bloom, the young trees But Inside the nest she had un- - are in brossorn and the lawns Vs- failingly built a hidden lining of einn aa gtea,rdn ti:eamtohrinnigngoidbeewa.utTyralutd Mud. Without mud, no roblir nest Ally forever" andwell worth the bil;-complete . ters and the backaches the gardener Frtme "111.nebtrds la Tom. Gardeu.. esevrighl. 193:1 Thome r. Crewel Cols. gets in making it that way! palm) gold-letterin- t - ----- -- . who Is is and it that THE GARDEN friost lavish MI it'if .. Inside The Nest -- , , . . - |