October 13, 1906 



HORTICULTURE 



405 



New Offers in This Issue. 



ADIANTUM FARLEYENSE. PAN- 



DANUS VEITCHII. BOSTON 



FERNS, BEGONIAS. 



J. A. Peterson, McMpnry Av., Ciiuiim.itl. O. 

 lor page see List of Advertisers. 



BOXWOODS. 



J. U. Troy, Xew Koelielle, N. Y. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



CARNATIONS, FICUS, FERNS. 



Wm. C. Smith, 61st & Marl;et Sts., Pliila. 

 For page see List of .\dvertisers. 



CARNATION PLANTS. 



Isabella Greenhouses, Bal>ylon, L. I.. N. V. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



CAULIFLOWER, CABBAGE SEED. 



lljalmar Hartmaun & Co., 



12 Stormgade, Copeahageu, Deiimaik. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



HIGH GRADE BULBS. 



Johnson Seed Co., 217 Market St.. I'liilu. 

 For prge see List of Advertisers. 



NARCISSI FREESIAS. 



Wm. Elliott & Sons, 



201 Fulton St., New York. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



ORCHIDS, LILY OF THE VALLEY. 



S. S. Pennock-Meehan Co.. 



1608-1618 Ludlow St., Phila. 



For p.ige see List of Advertisers. 



PALMS, ASPIDISTRAS, ARAU- 

 CARIAS. 



H. Roseukraenzer, 



36 Clinton St.. Newark. N. J. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



REMOVAL NOTICE. 



J. Stern & Co., 1928 Germantown Ar., I'hila. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



ROSE PINK ENCHANTRESS. 



S. S. Skidelsky, 824 N. 24th St., Phila. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



ROSES, RHODODENDRONS, CON- 

 IFERS, HARDY SHRUBS, 

 PERENNIALS. 



U. Rosenkraenzer, 



36 Clinton St., Newark. N. J. 



p^or page ste List of .\dvertisers. 



VIOLETS, LADY CAMPBELL. 



J. M. Bramhani, Waldrop, Va. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



tmtyyy*0*0yyv*iv»n^0*iyyyyyyy*i*f* i 



WANTS, FOR SALE, ETC. 



Advertisements in this column one 

 cent a word, nitials count as words. 

 Cash wilh order. _ 



POSITIONS WANTED for head garden- 

 ers .ind assistants; for further information 

 apply to W. W. Rawson & Co., 5 Union 

 St., Boston, Mass. 



SITUATION WANTED — Private place 

 preferred as head gardener. Married; two 

 ehildren; good reference. A. N., care R- 

 & J. Farquhar Co., Boston. 



SITUATION WANTED by carnation and 

 violet grower; also good grower of Bud- 

 ding Stock; 25 yeais' experience. J. P. 

 Hers ey, 29 So. Main St., Attlcboro. Mass. 



SITUATION WANTED— As private gar- 

 dener on place where there is a range of 

 greenhouses. liest of references. Over 7 

 years in last place. Expert rose grower. 

 Married. Address J. J., care UOUTICUL- 

 TURE. 



WANTED — Medium sized second hand 

 hot water boiler. H. W. Vose, Hyde Park, 

 Mass. 



W.ANTED — Experienced florist for higli 

 class city store. Apply in person or write 

 to W. II. Traeudly, 100 West 17th Street, 

 New York City. 



FORCING QUALITY — SPLENDID STOCK 



Druschki. Kaiserin, Liberty, Teplitz, Perle, Killarney. 

 'Maid, etc., etc. Dwarf, $10 per KK), Standard, $24 per KM). 



BABY RAMBLERS, 

 $15 per 100. 



MANETTI, $8 per 1000. 



CRIMSON RAMBLERS, 

 E. Strong, $12 per 100. 



BRIARS, $6 per 1000. 



Rhododendrons, Azalea Mollis, pontica and indica. Peren- 

 nials, Shrubs, Conifers at lowest prices. Please write to 



I. ROSENKRAENZER, 36 Clinton Street, Newark, N.J. 



OBITUARY. 



Patrick J. Donoliue. 



It is our sail duty to record the 

 deatii of this well-known and highly 

 esteemed gardener at his home in 

 Lenox, Mass.. on October 1, at the age 

 of sixty years. Mr. Donohue's garden- 

 ing tastes were inherited from his 

 father, who was a gardener in Ireland, 

 and in Galway, where he was born. 



K. Jesup was building his great stone 

 house at Lenox, he induced Mr. Dono- 

 hue to go to Lenox to undertake the 

 laying out of the grounds, and for the 

 next 16 yeai-s the hand that had made 

 beautiful the homes of Bennett and 

 .•\stor was devoted in making Belvoir 

 Terrace what it is. Mr. Donohue was 

 eminently successful in both outdoor 

 and indoor plant and fruit culture. He 

 was a member of the Lenox Horticul- 

 tural Society and, until recently, of 

 the Society of American Florists. He 

 was of jovial and companionable tem- 

 perament and enjoyed the esteem of 

 his fellow-gardeners in a marked de- 

 cree, 



Isaac P. Dickinson. 

 Isaac P. Dickinson, died in Morgan- 

 .ille, N. .1., on October M, aged 81. Mr. 

 (lickinson was for many years a resi- 

 lient of Springfield, Mass., and active- 

 Iv interested in the development of 

 land about Forest Park. He moved 

 his market gardening business to Mor- 

 L'anviile alioiit twenty years ago. 



INCORPORATED. 



The Braidwooil l'"loral Co.. Denver, 

 I'olo.. capital, $25,Oi)0: incorporators, 

 J. B Braidwood, Wm. Williamson, C. 

 \. Braidwood. 



Mr. Donohue was tau.gM the business. 

 In lStJ4 he came to America and en- 

 i tered the employ of James Gordon 

 Bennett, the elder. Bennett, who was 

 always bragging of his beautiful prop- 

 erty, one day praised the work of 

 Donohue in the presence of John 

 Jacob Astor, and Astor, wanting a 

 man to develop his Newport property, 

 sent for Donohue and engaged him. 

 Bennett cabled to Astor one of bis 

 sharp retorts when he heard of Astor 

 overbidding him for the services of 

 his gardener. In 1890, when Morris 



Adiantum Fadeyense, finished pianis 



$|.50 to $2 DO each 



Begonia "Gloirede Lorraine" and 

 TurnfordHall" 



A tew hundred extra heavy plants, in 

 3 and 4 inch pots, f.a.st call. 



Pandanus Veitcliii, 



50c $1.00, $l.50 and $2.50 each 



No lietler value to lie had aiiywliirf. , 



Boston Ferns, (cliolce specimens) 



$2. CO each 



J. A. PETERSON, m^ 



McHenry At., Westwood, Cincinnati, 0. 



