April, 19 11 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



The Readers' Service will give information 

 about the latest automobile accessories 



149 



Fairfax Roses Will Put New Life 

 Into Your Home Rose Garden 



This is a sample of Fairfax Roses as I grow them in my Nursery 

 — right in the heart of the best Rose-growing section of the United 

 States, where the seasons are long and mild, yet cold enough to pro- 

 vide that period of "ripening" and rest so essential to the production 

 of Roses that will thrive in the North. 



And Fairfax Roses do thrive in the North — and in the West and the 

 East as well. Wherever Roses are cultivated, my Roses will show most 

 satisfactory results — will put new life into your home Rose garden. 



I Have More Than 100,000 

 of These Splendid Plants 



— hearty, vigorous specimens, every one of them, with ample roots to take hold in the 

 soil of your garden and throw out lusty canes with the return of spring. 



This extensive stock covers more than 200 sorts — all the leading varieties that can be 

 successfully grown, particularly in the hybrid tea class. 



My book "Fairfax Roses for 191 I," tells of the finest stock of Roses I have ever grown and 

 explains my successful methods of Rose propagation. I'll gladly send a copy if you say so. 



W. R. Gray, Box 6, Oakton, Va. 



Big Crops from Little Trees 



Dwarf Fruit Trees Solve the Problem of Fruit Growing 



in Small Gardens. 



? warf w£« Why You Should Buy Dwarf Trees 



Baldwin Wallbridge 



Spy Alexander 



Wealthy Ben Davis 



Wolf Fameuse 



Duchess Gano 



King Red Astrachan 

 Greening 



Dwarf Pears 



Duchess Seckel 



Keiffer Clapps 



Bartlett . . Flemish 



Anjou 



Other varieties listed in booklet 



Prices 



4 Trees, carefully packed, $ 3.00 



8 " " " 5.50 



12 " " " 8 00 



20 " " " 12.00 



Larger quantities subject 



to special arrangement 



Price includes packing. Any 



varieties of pears or apples in 



list may be selected 



1. They bear bigger, better fruit; come into bearing several years 

 earlier, and produce more fruit from the space than standard size 

 trees. 



2. They are easy to care for, because the heads are so low that 

 insect pests can be controlled. Picking is easy, because the fruit is 

 within reach. 



3. With dwarf trees, you can use the land for vegetables, as the 

 shade is less dense. 



You can have forty trees, -with a variety, in a space 20 feet 

 square, save several years, get better fruit, and each tree should 

 bear a bushel a year. 



We offer the best stock ever produced in this country. Our apples 

 are grafted on Paradise stock, and the pears on quince stock. They 

 will succeed in many places where standard trees would fail. 



To secure full season's growth, order at once for Spring plant- 

 ing. Our Illustrated Booklet including descriptions of Varieties 

 and Cultural Directions sent o,n request. 



The Coneal Co. 



Sheepshead Bay Long Island, N. Y. 



