SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $i.oo per year, entitling the subscriber, to membership of the Fruit 

 Growers' Association of Ontario and all its privileges, including a copy of its valuable Annual 

 Report and a share in its annual distribution of plants and trees. 



REMITTANCES by Registered Letter or Post-OflHce Order aie at our risk. Receipts will be 

 acknowledged upon the Address Label. 



ADVERTISING RATES quoted on application. Circulation, 5,000 copies rer month. 



LOCAL NEWS.— Correspondents will greatly oblige by sending to the Editor early intelligence 

 ot local events or doings of Horticultural Societies likely to be of interest to our readers, or of any 

 matters which it is desirable to bring under the notice of Horticulturists. 



ILLUSTRATIONS.— The Editor will thankfully receive and select photographs or drawings, 

 suitable for reproduction in these pages, of gardens, or of remarkable plants, flowers, trees, etc. ; but 

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DISCONTINUANCES.— Remember that the publisher must be notified by letter or post-card 

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 will not enable us to discontinue it, as we cannot find your name on our books unless your Post 

 Office address is given. Societies should send in their revised lists in January, if possible, otherwise 

 we take it for granted that all will continue members. 



IN RETURN. 



To The Canadian Horticulturist in reply to its New Year's greeting in its new dress, to its 

 5000 subscribers. 



Your subscribers (thousands five) 



In return wish you 

 Joy and gladness o'er your live, 



Lustrous, garments new ; 

 Which are in perfect keeping with 

 Your intellectual power and pith. 



" At hoi Bank," Hamilton, Jan. i8gg 



The same five thousand also wish 



Your Editor in- chief. 

 Long life and every luscious dish 



That can convey relief 

 To one who in our time of need 

 Has been a patriot indeed. 



Wm. Murray. 



^ ]s[ctes ar)cl (?cnr)rT)er)l(?. ^ 



New Creations in Fruits in Flow- 

 ers, supplement for 1899 from Luther 

 Burbank, Santa Rosa, California, con- 

 tains notices of several new fruits of inter- 

 est. Among them we notice the Climax 

 plum, the best selection from a number 

 of hybrids of Simoni and Botan. The 

 originator claims that it is " as produc- 

 tive as Burbank, about four or five 

 times as large, two or three weeks 

 earlier, and very much more richly 

 colored." Another new plum is 



The Sultan, a cross between Wick- 

 son and Satsuma, over two inches in 

 diameter and round, excellent sub acid. 

 Ripens a week before Burbank ; a great 

 keeper. 



The Bartlett is another, unfortunately 

 named we think — but so called because 

 in quality, flavor and fragrance, it so re- 

 sembles that pear. A cross between 

 Simoni and Delaware. 



A new quince, the Pineapple, is also 

 offered, similar in appearance to the 



76 



