16 



n ojrri culture 



.liiniiHry 1. liUti 



CATALOGUES RECEIVED 



Henry \V. Turiur, .MoiiU'bello, Cul 

 IU>8cTl|>tlve Price List of Hoses. 



H. V. Liiwrcnre. Falmouth, Mass 

 Pamphlet, bound In red, of Chrlsini^i 

 Wreaths. Greens, and Flowers. 



S<'ott Brothers, Elmsford, N. Y. 

 Price List of Chrysanthemums, Koiies, 

 Carnations, etc., for 1916. A carefully 

 chosen list of novelties and standard 

 sorts. 



Hjalmar Hartmann & Co.. Copen- 

 hagen, Denmark.— 1915-16 Surplus Offer 

 of Danish Seeds. Loechner & Co., New 

 York, sole agents fm inii..! si^.'; ;uul 

 Canada. 



Chas. H Totty. .Mudisuu. N. J.— 

 Chrysanlheniunis. Roses, Carnations 

 and Hardy Plants. The most attractive 

 and readable catalogue in its class 

 which has come to o\ir desk this sea- 

 son. It lists the cream of the new 

 things and the illustrations are very 

 fine. 



.lohn H. Dunlop. Toronto, Ont. — An 

 8-page pamphlet illustrated with views 

 of Mr. Dunlop's magnificent new floral 

 store on Adelaide St.. Toronto. Prices 

 of design work, flowers and plants are 

 given, and it will prove useful to the 

 buying public, who are waiting to 

 know. 



H. G. <Hastings Co., Atlanta, Ga.— 

 Catalogue No. 51 of Hastings' Seeds, 

 Spring 1916. One of the catalogues 

 that impress by their originality and 

 unlikeness to those sent out by "the 

 other fellow." Cover in colors, show- 

 ing Hastings Prolific Corn on front and 

 Kleckley Sweet Watermelon and Red- 

 field Beauty Tomato on back. 



W. Atlee Burpee, Philadelphia, Pa. — 

 Burpee's Annual. "The Plain Truth 

 About Seeds That Grow" is again told 

 in this bright and interesting publica- 

 tion in the same convincing way as in 

 years past. The covers show Sweet 

 Pea Fiery Cross and Blue Bantam Pea 

 and Golden Bantam Sweoi Corn in 

 natural colors. The novelty lists are 

 lengthy and there are four pages in 

 colors, one of these showing Fordhook 

 Hybrid Gladioli. 



Knight & Struck Co., New York.— 

 1916 General Catalogtte. Similar in 

 style, binding, etc., to its predecessors, 

 blue covers, and mailed in a box of 

 corresponding tint. This year's edition 

 is a volume of 336 pages, and being in 

 fine print and minus illustrations, con- 

 tains an exhaustive list of .si <ds, plants, 

 bulbs, etc., hardy and tender, with a 

 vast amount of descriptive text and 

 cultural notes and gardening advice. 

 It is unique in its w-ay. 



Watkins & Simpson. Ltd.. London. 

 England — Foreign and Colonial Whole- 

 sale Catalogues of Vevetables and 

 Flower Seeds, 1916. As a wholesale 

 catalogue this publication has few 

 equals in its typographical excellence, 

 completeness and direct value to the 

 trade. It is well illustrated with por- 

 traits of novelties and established fa- 

 vorites in the flower seed line especial- 

 ly. A frontispiece shows the extensive 

 new building now in course of erection 



Burnett Bros., New York. — Descrip- 

 tive Folder and Price List of Novelties 

 in Flower Seeds. 



A. IVl. DAN/EN 



PLANT GROWER for the TRADE 



Fitu-st sttK-k (if all foliaKc and llo\v<.Tin).r |)la]its, iK-ddinj.: MulIc, ch. 



Diih Fmtna and Biid Nrmt Ftrnt a Specially 

 \A/A-rER-rO\A/IM IVIASS. 



ive:^^/ rose: 

 IVIIS 



LITTLEFIELD & WYMAN, 



irMK OA.F9IM,A~riOIM 



^ «3^ MO f-k 



NORTH ABINGTON 

 IVIA}»S. 



CARNATIONS 



Field Grown Fine Stock 



Matchless, Enchantress Supreme, 

 J8.00 per 100; $70.00 per 1000. 



Enchantress, British Triumph, White 

 Wonder, Pink Delight, $7.00 per 100; 

 $60.00 per 1000. 



Lady Bountiful, Lady NorthcllfT, 

 White Wlnsor, Pink WInsor, $6.00 per 

 100- J.=in 00 npr 1000 Sneclal rnteo nn 



wnne vvinBor, h-inK winsor, 



100; $50.00 per 1000. Special 



large lota. 



WOOD BROTHERS 



FISHKILL, N. Y. 



CHARLES H. TOTTY 



CHRYSANTHEMLMS 



IVIA.^I^OIM, r^. J. 



WIIITM.\MI I.MritOVEl) — SJ i>ir 10(1, *4« 



|)fr 1000. 

 WHIT.MANI rO.MrACT.i— $5 per 100, $10 



per loun. 

 BOOSEVKI.TS — S5 per 100, SIO per 1000. 

 BOSTONS— »^l per 100, $35 per 1000. 



■-'.">0 al 1000 rates. 



H.H.BARROWS&SON,Whitnian,Mass. 



for their oflices and warehouses in 

 Drury Lane, Covent Garden. 



Sutton & Sons, Reading, England — 

 Amateur's Guide in Horticulture for 

 1916. Truly a superb prodMction. 188 

 pages, magnificently illustrated, sev- 

 eral full-page pictures in colors in- 

 cluded. Ever to the fore in tlie raising 

 of improved strains of vegetables. 

 Messrs. Sutton are now offering for 

 the first time a number of new varie- 

 ties, prominent among which are two 

 fine marrowfat Peas — "The V. C." and 

 "Lord Kitchener." In the potato sec- 

 tion a new weight-producing maincrop 

 variety has been added to the unique 

 strain of pedigree seedlings, the distri- 

 bution of which was commenced in 

 1912. This latest introduction, Sut- 

 ton's Gordon Castle, should prove of ex- 

 ceptional interest in view of the 

 national importance of the potato crop. 



A large number of pages are de- 

 voted to flower seeds. The list is con- 

 veniently compiled in alphabetical se- 

 quence and includes the many well- 

 known specialties which adorn thou- 

 sands of public and private gardens. 

 Two magnificent colored plates call for 

 special mention. These represent the 



CARNATIONS 



F. DORNER & SONS CO. 



LA FAYETTE, IND. 



CHRYSANTHEMUMS 



The best tor FLORISTS or PRIVATE estates 



Either NKW OR OLD 



ELMER D. SMITH & CO. 



ADRIAN. MICH. 

 THE IIO.ME OF THE 



SCOTTII FERNS 



.\imI nil the othiT (iuod Selh-rN. 



JOHN SCOTT, 

 PELARGONIUIVIS 



Niiw ri-.iMv. liiii' ^iM. K :iud f]ic friiiii wlille 

 n.v: Liiric Ilecki-r, Wurteiulierul.-i, Swabian 

 .Maid. L> ill.. $!t.i:(l piT KK). Kii.^tiT (irepllnc. 



■-' In., ronil.v .Inn, 1, .•'-•. (Kl per 1(M>, 



WOAIAIV J. IKWIJV 



Rutland Road and 

 Kail 45lh Street, 

 BROOKLYN, >. T. 



I OS >> 



I li M.. New Vork. 



Southcote Beauty Aster and Giant 

 Frilled Sweet Peas, and the telling col- 

 ors will doubtless enhance the already 

 w'ide popularity of these charming 

 strains. 



NEW CORPORATIONS. 



Alpha. O.— Alpha Seed & Grain Co.. 

 capital stock, $20,000. 



Canton, O. — Holmes - Letherman 

 Seed Co., capital stock, $2.5,000. 



Auburndale, Mass. — F. W. Fletcher 

 Co., Inc., capital stock $25,000. Incor- 

 porators, F. W. and Lizzie R. Fletcher. 



Fargo, N. D. — Smedley Floral Co., 

 capital stock, $50,000. Incorporators, 

 T. D. Smedley. J. F. Pogue and .Minnie 

 Neal. 



San Francisco. — Articles of incorpor- 

 ation have been filed for the Richard 

 Diener Co., with a capital stock of 

 .f-'o.OOO by Richard Diener. who was 

 formerly interested in the .Metzner 

 Floral Co., of .Mountain View, and Wm. 

 Kent of Kentfield. It is the intention 

 of the new company to grow gladioli, 

 carnations, pansies, petunias, etc.. on 

 a large tract of land near Kentfield in 

 Marin County, which is being prepared 

 for the purpose. 



