October 11. 1919 



HORTICULTURE 



315 



IN LINE FOR FALL SPRAYING 

 IN NEW ENGLAND 



Insecticide 



SAN JIISK SCALE 



OYSTEK 811 EEL SCALE 



BAY TKEi: AND I'ALM SCALE 



SCURFY HARK LOUSE 



PEAR I'SYLLA 



CLUSTERS OF APHIS EGGS 



HANG OVER FUNGUS SPORES OF THE 



BROWN ROT OF THE PEACH AND 



OTHER STONE FRUITS. 

 PEACH LEAF CURL 

 APPLE CANKER AND SCAB 



Destroy the above named insects and fun- 

 gus spores by spraying them with 



SULCO-V.B. 



A combined contact insecticide and fungi- 

 cide of known reliability 



\ NEW\DBK.U.SA./ 



Simple, Sure and Safe — Right in Principle and Price 



From your dealer or direct — go to your dealer first 



*£= COOK & SWAN CO. Inc. 



148 Front Street 

 NEW YORK CITY 



141 Milk Street 



BOSTON. MASS. 



Geo. II. Frazier, Mffr. 



The Recognized Standard Insecticide. 

 A ijpray remedy for green, black, white By, 

 thtlpe au,i soft scale. 



Quart, gl.00; Gallon, li.SO. 



FUNCINE 



For mildew, rust and other blights affect- 

 ing flowers, fruits and vegetables. 

 Quart, $1.00; Gallon, st.so 



VERMINE 



For eel worms, angle worms and other 

 worms working In the soil. 



Quart, 11.08 1 Gallon, IJ.oe 

 SOLD BY DEALERS. 



Aphine Manufacturing Co. 



MADISON. N. J. 



C\0W Oil, 



)reer's Peerless^ 

 Glazing Points 



For Greenhouses 



Drive easy and true, because 

 both bevels are on the same 

 •ide. Can't twist and break 

 the glass in driving. Galvan- 

 ized and will not rust. 

 rights or lefts 



The Peerless Glazing. Poi_ 

 Is patented. No others like 

 It Order from your dealer 

 or direct from us. 

 1000, 80c. postpaid. 

 Samples free. 

 HENRY A. DREEbJ 

 714 Chestnut StreetN 

 Philadelphia,. 



Have your piaata and trswa. Just toe 

 thing for greenhouse and outdoor use 

 Destroys Mealy Bug, Brown and White 

 Scale, Thrips, Red Spider, Black and 

 Oreen Fly, Mites, Ants, etc., without 

 Injury to plants and without odor. 

 Used according to direction, our stand- 

 ard Insecticide will prevent ravages on 

 your crops by insects. 



Non-poisonous and harmless to user 

 and plant. Leading Seedsmen and 

 Florists have used It with wonderful 

 results. 



Destroys Lice in Poultry Houses. 

 Fleas on Dogs and all Domestic Pete 

 Excellent as a wash for dogs and other 

 animals. Relieves mange. Dilute with 

 water 30 to 50 parte. 



% Pint, lOo.; Pint, 60c; Quart frOo . 

 V4 Gallon, gl.SO; Gallon, fz.fiO; S Gal- 

 lon Can, ■ 10.90 j 10 Gallon Can, 120.00. 

 Directions on package. 



LEMON OIL COMPANY 



Oept. S. 421 W. Liriortoi St. Mttwi. HI 



CAMBRIDGE 



NEW YORK 



£2, 



World's Oldest and Largest 

 Manufacturers of 



FLOWER POTS 



WHYT 



A. H. HEWS & CO., INC. 



Cambridge, Mass. 



full development. It is good for pillar 

 treatment in the greenhouse and looks 

 well when trained to a cross section 

 end. While the individual flowers do 

 not last long they are produced in 

 great abundance and cover a long 

 period. Most old gardeners know this 

 plant as Pleroma, but it is now listed 

 more commonly perhaps under the 

 name of Lasiandra macranthum. 



Our friends across the water are so 

 far ahead of us in rose culture and so 

 well aware of the fact, that we feel 

 grateful when they pay us a compli- 

 ment. However, in one of the London 

 trade papers I find the following let- 

 ter: 



Dear Sirs: Re your notes upon this 

 rose as shown at R. H. S. Meeting. It 

 is a fine thing. No rambler will last 

 so long when cut as Kew Rambler. I 

 have had it last good for eight days 

 and its lovely pinkish-white flowers 

 are so cheerful in their coloring. It is 

 said to be a cross between R. Souleana 

 and Hiawatha. The growth is much 

 like R Souleana. Any one seeing it 

 growing could not refrain from giving 

 it an award. This fact is another argu- 

 ment for a Rose Test Garden. We are 

 far behind our American friends in 

 this, as in many other horticultural 

 details. Why not approach the Kew 

 authorities to set up such a trial 

 ground. One of their walled-in private 

 gardens would be just the thing. 



Walter Easlea. 

 Eastwood, Leigh-on-Sea. 



Will the editor of the Rose Annual, 

 Mr. J. Horace MacFarland, please take 

 notice. 



THE BURRAGE ORCHIDS. 

 Mr. Albert C. Burrage has decided 

 to open his famous orchid green- 

 houses to the public for several Satur- 

 days and Sundays during October at 

 the Beverly Farms, Mass. estate. He 

 is an ardent enthusiast regarding 

 orchids, and next to his immediate 

 family these wonderful blooms make 

 his greatest interest. 



■ VVaSba 



National Nurseryman 



The oldest and best established 

 journal for nurserymen. Circula- 

 tion among the trade only. Pub- 

 lished monthly. Subscription price 

 SI. 60 per year. Foreign subscrip- 

 tions, $2.00 per year. In advance. 

 Sample copy free upon application 

 from those in the trade enclosing 

 their business card. 



National Nurseryman Pub. Co., lit. 



HATBOftO, PA. 



