March, iqii 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
233 
Plan Your Sweet 
PeaDisplay NOW; 
Onr Special 25c 
Collection Named Sorts 
Vou can make your “hedge of sweet peas” 
most beautiful of all the early-flowering things 
in your whole garden — if you sow the seeds in time. 
For best results sweet peas must be planted early 
— the sooner you get them started, the more 
satisfactory will the flowers be. 
You can have sweet peas that excel, if you get our 
Special Collection, consisting of six packets of our Grand 
Orchid-Flowering Spencer Sweet Peas—each of distinct, 
notable merit. They are put up separately; each may be 
sown and kept to itself. Packets contain about 100 seeds 
- .. r apiece — the six will provide 36 feet of gorgeous summer 
Spencer bloom. The varieties are : 
Asta Ohn Spencer — Lavender Mauve Aurora Spencer — Variegated 
Countess Spencer — (See Ill.)Soft Pink Captain of the Blues Spencer 
King Edward Spencer — Deep Scarlet NewWhite Spencer 
REGULAR CATALOGUE PRICE, 60 CENTS-SPECIAL 
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, 25 CENTS, POSTPAID 
This liberal proposition is a get-acquainted offer — we want to know you, and 
we want you to know us, our seeds and our methods, and to see our large 
and handsome new Catalogue, beautifully illustrated throughout, a copy of 
which goes with each special collection. 
PACKET OF AFRICAN ORANGE DAISY FREE WITH ABOVE 
If ordered at once we will include with each of the above collections a packet 
of our New African Orange Daisy, a novel and beautiful dwarf plant; glossy, 
orange-golden flowers, unique and striking. Regular price, 25c. per packet. 
Supply limited — order today, and we’ll send seeds and Catalogue at once. 
50 BARCLAY STREET Dept, a NEW YORK CITY 
You Love Sweet Peas—Do You 
Know the Kind You Can Grow 
from Boddington’s Quality Seeds ? 
Giant Orchid Flowering 
Mixed Sweet Pea Seed 
For A Quarter 
This is without question the most 
desirable Sweet Pea Mixture ever 
offered — last year we filled nearly 
5,000 orders for this collection 
alone. All the varieties of Sweet 
Peas that we handle are accurately- 
described in 
Boddington’s 1911 Garden Guide 
is accompanied by articles by experts 
showing how to grow them success¬ 
fully. YOU need this book before 
you turn a spadeful of earth in your 
garden this spring-—get it now, and 
get started right on the seed question! 
The book is free. Write for it today. 
Maud Holmes 
(Spencer Sweet Pea) 
—great, fragrant masses of 
magnificent bloom, borne on 
healthy, vigorous-growing 
vines — the kind you have 
always it /anted and hoped 
to grow sometime ? If not, 
it’s to your interest to find 
out about them this year; 
to let us help you produce 
the finest Sweet Peas you 
have eyer had. 
Quality seeds are our 
specialties, but Sweet Peas 
are one of our very par¬ 
ticular hobbies. We are al¬ 
ways trying our new vari¬ 
eties, adding to those that 
are worthy; you can always 
depend on our list as repre¬ 
senting what is new and 
worth while in Sweet Peas. 
A Quarter - Pound of 
“Boddington’s 
Quality 
Flower 
Seeds have 
Helped to 
Make the 
Gardens of 
America 
Famous.” 
ARTHUR T. BODDINGTON, Seedsman 
Dep’t. H, 342 W. 14th St., New York City 
Low Cost Suburban Homes 
I F YOU think of building in the suburbs, this little book is 
just the thing to help you decide many questions. It is 
an invaluable assistant in determining the style, arrangement 
and decoration of your new home. 
Within its pages are descriptions, plans, and illustrations of 
nearly ioo houses of various cost and design, from the $1000 
bungalow of cosy comfort, with its five rooms and bath, to the 
cement house complete in every detail for $8000. Pertinent 
suggestions for the house-builder are here to simplify his prob¬ 
lems and meet all conditions of construction and location. This 
is an opportunity to get ideas that others have put to practical 
usage. 
60 pages, attractively illustrated. Printed on coated 
paper tvith art cover. 'Price 25 cents, postpaid. 
McBride, Winston & Co., 449 Fourth Ave., New York 
Machinery 
innni 
IN THE 
PANTRY 
One of the smaller “Bruns¬ 
wick” special installations 
T HE refrigerator, which is of the overhead 
bunker type, occupying little floor space, may 
M be constructed to suit the space available in the pantry 
Ew or kitchen. The small compartment on the end of the 
/•/ box produces 15 to 20 lbs. of ice each day for table use. 
Plants designed to meet the requirements of each indi¬ 
vidual household—to cool any number of refrigerators and 
to manufacture ice in any' quantity. 
Representative will call by appointment, and specifica¬ 
tions and plans will be furnished cheerfully’ and without any 
obligations to purchase. 
Write for List of Users—then ask any user of the Bruns-zvick 
what his experience \with it has been. 
Main Office and Works : 
New Brunswick, N. J. 
I New York Office: Baltimore: 
$■ Courtlandt Bldg. Chatard & Norris 
30 Church St. Continental Bldg. 
Wv Philadelphia: Air 
m, V. J. Goetz W 
345 North 12th St. IN 
XlB oston Office: a THE 
^%A^ xchange CELLAR 
In writing to advertisers please mention House and Garden. 
