November, 1905 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



181 



LILIUM AURATUM 



"Consider the Lily" 



LILIUM AURATUM 



"The Golden-Rayed Lily of Japan" 



Monstrous pure white flowers, thickly studded with crimson spots. 

 Each petal marked with a wide gold band. This beautiful Lily attains a 

 height of about five feet, and has been known when planted out to bear 

 over one hundred blossoms on a stem — but, of course, this is exceptional. 

 Like all Lilies, Lilium Auratum should be planted deep. It is perfectly 

 hardy and succeeds anywhere grandly, also when planted among beds 

 of Rhododendrons, shrubbery, etc. 



BODDINGTON'S QUALITY LILIUM AURATUM BULBS, Extra 

 Selected, 25 cents each. $1.50 per doz. $1 2.00 per 100. 



LILIUM CANDIDUM 



"Annunciation Lily" 



One of the most beautiful and chaste of the hardy white Lilies. 



BODDINGTON'S QUALITY LILIUM CANDIDUM BULBS 

 Extra Selected, 10 cents each, $1.00 per doz., $6.00 per 100. 



LILIUM LONGIFLORUM (cX") 



"The Hardy Easter Lily" 



This is a prototype of the Bermuda Easter Lily — both in growth, 

 form of flower and color, which is pure white, but with this 

 exception it is perfectly hardy. 



BODDINGTON'S QUALITY LILIUM LONGIFLORUM BULBS, 

 Extra Selected, 15 cents each, $1.25 per doz., $10.00 per 100. 



BODDINGTON'S " QUALITY" COLLECTION of 12 Choice Lilies in 12 Varieties for Outside Planting, $2.50 



Write to me for my Autumn Bulb Catalogue, which contains a full line of Holland and other bulbs for indoor fo?ring or outdoor planting, 

 and over thirty varieties of Hardy Lilies, and which Catalogue is beautifully illustrated and contains much cultural direction — if s free. 



ARTHUR T. BODDINGTON, seedsman, 342 West 14th St., New York 



A Peach and Apple Orchard for $12.50 



IT is possible for you to plant an acre orchard of the finest apple and peach trees, such as we sell to the large 

 commercial orchardists, for twelve and a half dollars. Is there any similar investment in any sort of planting 

 that will give you so much pleasure and return of such practical value ? An orchard of this size will not only 

 supply a family with sufficient fruit for eating fresh, for cooking and for preserving, but enough to store 

 away for furnishing the table with fruit all winter, and still enough over to sell at a good profit. 



Or suppose you have an acre of unused land, is there anything that you can plant on it that will require as 

 little work and attention as an orchard ? As an example of what can be done, we might mention one of our 

 customers, who netted this season Si 4.00 from one four-year-old Elberta Peach Tree ! An acre contains a hun- 

 dred trees. Another customer netted S8.00 from one ten-year-old Yellow Transparent Apple Tree. An acre at 

 this rate would yield a profit of $800! Still another cleared $200 from one acre of Strawberries. These are just 

 three out of a score of instances we might mention. 



Believing that there are many readers of The Garden Magazine who would take advantage of an oppor- 

 tunity of planting an orchard at the low prices at which orchardists purchase stock, we make the following 

 attractive offers : 



For a One-Acre Plum and Peach Orchard 



50 Elberta Peach Trees , . i tie nn 



50 Abundance Plum Trees \ ■ ■ * lsM " 



For a One=Acre Cherry and Apple Orchard 



50 Early Richmond Cherry Trees . .~l 

 50 Yellow Transparent or Baldwin Apple > 20.00 

 Trees ) 



For an Acre of Strawberries 



i,ooo Strawberry Plants .... 3.00 



For a One-Acre Peach and Apple Orchard 



50 Elberta Peach Trees, fine one-year-old stock J .. , - n 

 So Yellow Transparent or Baldwin Apple Trees 5 » ,i - ;)U 



For a One-Acre Pear and Apple Orchard 



so Bartlett Pear Trees I 17 s,n 



50 Yellow Transparent or Baldwin Apple Trees! 



For a One-Acre Apple Orchard 



100 Yellow Transparent or Baldwin Apple Trees 15.00 



Any other varieties of the fruits included in these combinations may be 

 substituted for those listed. Those mentioned, however, are the most pop- 

 ular varieties among the orchardists, who naturally select the best for yield 

 and quality. 



These low prices are possible because we are one of the largest grow- 

 ers of fruit trees in America, having more than a thousand acres in our nur- 

 series, and sell to the large orchardists of the country in carload lots. We 

 frequently sell for single orchards from fifty to one hundred thousand trees. 



The trees in the above offers are all fine stock, and are just what 

 we supply to the commercial orchardist. This stock is grown in the rich 

 Maryland soil, and is perfectly hardy in severe Northern climates. 



We shall be glad to advise any reader of The Garden Magazine relative 

 to the planting of an orchard, whether large or small, and suggest other com- 

 binations than those offered above. Write us today. 



J. G. HarriSOn &SonS, Nurserymen, Berlin, Md. 



