82 



The Florists' Review 



April 6, 1916. 



NURSERY STOCK 



EVEBOBEEirs 



Per 1000 



Irl8h Juniper trans., 3 to 5 in $20.00 



•' " 5 to 8 In 35.00 



8 to 10 In 50.00 



Siberian Arbor Vitae tp., 3 to 5 in. . 35.00 

 ' 5 to 7 in.. 65.00 



Tliese Arbor Vltaes and Junipers are 

 i-liolce cutting plants, transplanted in 

 field one and two years. Sample hundred 

 of either 1 year transplanted, postpaid, 

 for $3.00. 



American .\rbor Vltae ^., 



6 to 10 in. 40.00 

 Pyramldalis and Golden 



Arbor Vitae 2 yr. sdgs. 35.00 



Golden Arbor Vitae 1 yr. sdgs 15.00 



Chinese and Compacta 



" Arbor Vltae 1 yr. sdgs. 12.00 



" Arbor Vitae 2 yr. sdgs. 25.00 



I.«rch, European sdgs. 5 to 10 in 10.00 



" 1 to 2 ft 20.00 



" 2 to 3 ft 30.00 



Tungens, Blue Spruce, 4 to 6 In 25.00 



Norway Spruce sdgs. 3 to 5 in 4.00 



" 5 to 8 in 7.00 



Ponderosa, Yel. P. sdgs. 5 to 10 in. 25.00 



10 to 15 in. 30.00 



White Pine, sdgs., 3 to 6 In 5.00 



5 to 10 In 8.00 



" 10 to 12 in 12.00 



Hemlock Spruce, trans., 3 to 5 in.. 50.00 



5 to 10 in.. 70.00 



SEEDLIKOS, ETC. 



Per 1000 

 Sugar, or Rock Maple, 5 to 10 In. .$ 2.50 



10 to 15 in.. 8.00 



Silver Maple, 1 to 2 ft 6.00 



Norway Maple, 5 to 10 in 6.00 



.\ui. Sweet Chestnut, 5 to 10 in 8.00 



12 to 18 In 15.00 



18 to 24 in 25.00 



Perfectly healthy grown from large, 

 selected seed. 



Dogwood, Wh. Flower'g, 5 to 10 in. 10.00 

 10 to 15 in. 20.00 



Black W^alnut, 1 to 2 ft 10.00 



Tulip Tiee, Yel. Pop.. 1 to 2 ft 10.00 



2 to 3 ft 15.00 



" 3 to 6 ft 25.00 



White Poplar, 3 to 4 ft 20.00 



4 to 7 ft 40.00 



Russian Mulberry, 5 to 12 in 4.00 



1 to 2 ft 10.00 



Black Cherry (Serotlna), 5 to 30 in. 2.00 



1 to 2 ft. 4.00 



2 to 4 ft. S.OO 

 Rwl Oak, 5 to 10 in 10.00 



" " 10 to 15 in 15.00 



Magnolia acuminata, 3 to 5 in 20.00 



SHRUBBESY, ETC. 



Per 1000 

 .\pnle Seedllnss, No. 1, 3/16 and up 



(10 M, 1451 $ 5.00 



Apple Seedilrgs, No. 2 (10 M, «26) . . 3.00 

 No. 3 (10 M, $5)... l.OO 



Calycan*.hu8 inoridus, 5 to 10 in 8.0O 



1 to 2 ft 12.00 



Judas Tree (Cercis canadensis), 



1 to 2 ft 10.00 



Judas Tree (Cercis canadensis), 



2 to 3 ft 20.00 



Strawberry Tree (Evonymus), 2 to 



4 ft 20.00 



Japan Quinc?, 5 to 10 in 10.00 



Hydtaag^ P. GrandlHora, .'i to 10 in. 20.00 



1 to 2 ft. 30.00 



2 to 3 ft. 40.00 

 ijnowbal! (Viburnum 0. P. Sterilis), 



in same sizes and prices. 

 11 ydrangea. Hills of Snow, 5 to 10 In. 40.00 



1 to 2 ft. 50.00 



' 2 to 3 ft. 60.00 



Japan Snowball, 5 to 10 in 20.00 



1 to 2 ft 30.00 



Yucca Fllamentosa, Adam's Needle. 10.00 



Asparagus (10 M for $25 1, 2 yr 3.00 



.\sparagus, 1 yr 1.50 



Conovers, Palmetto, French Argenteuil. 



Strawberry plants $2.00 and up 



Wm. Belt, Clyde, Kittle Rice, Haverland, 



Frances Willard. Superba, Kellogg's 



Prize, Bnbach, Sample, Aroma, Helen 



Pavis, Warfle'd, etc. 



J. JENKINS & SONS, NURSERIES, WINONA, OHIO 



Mention The Review when you write. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AlfEBICAN ASSOCIATION •T NTmSEXTKEll. 



Presldrat, E. S. Welch. Shenandoah, la.; Vice 

 prvaldent, John Watson. Newark, N. J.; Secre- 

 tary. John Hall. Rochester, N. Y.; Treasarer. 

 Peter Yonngers, Genera. Neb. 



FV>rt7-flrst annual meeting, Mllwankee. Wis., 

 June 28 to 90, 1910. 



The nurseryman who has idle moments 

 now never will be busy. 



J. G. Harrison & Sons, nurserymen of 

 Berlin, Md., have opened a display and 

 Bales room at 931 Chestnut street, Phila- 

 delphia, with F. A. C. Vosters in charge. 



The office of the landscape department 

 of the P. J. Berckmans Co., which is not 

 at the nursery, but downtown, in the 

 Chronicle building, was burned out dur- 

 ing the recent big fire there, most of the 

 records as well as the equipment being 

 lost. The fire did not, however, in any 

 way affect the company 's nursery busi- 

 ness. 



The Federal Horticultural Board, in 

 connection with the notice published in 

 this department of The Review for March 

 30, is asking the trade in the east to 

 sign the following pledge: Receipt is 

 acknowledged of your circular letter of 

 March 22, 1916. In consideration of 

 similar agreements by other eastern nur- 

 serymen and your witl^holding for the 

 present the establishment of a domestic 

 quarantine on account of the white pine 

 blister rust, I hereby promise and agree 

 not to ship or cause to be shipped any 

 white pines, currants or gooseberries 

 west of the line indicated therein. 



BIGGEST BOAT WITHDRAWN 



The Holland-America Line has laid 

 up the Rotterdam, the largest boat 

 plying between Rotterdam and New 

 York. 



The announcement is of more than 

 passing interest to the trade because 

 nearly all the imports of plants and 

 seeds now come via Holland and the 

 withdrawal of the largest carrier will 

 still further cripple a service that has 



NOTICE==SURPLUS LIST 



First grade in every respect 



6000 Norway Maples 10 to 



5000 Norway Maples 10 to 



200 Norway Maples 12 to 



1000 Pin Oaks 8 to 



600 Red Oaka 6 to 



800 Mossy Cup Oaks 6 to 



600 Lombardy Poplars 12 to 



100 Lombardy Poplars U to 



150* Catalpa Speciosa 12 to 



1000 Catalpa Speciosa 10 to 



600 American Elms 10 to 



600 American Elms 10 to 



600 Larch, low- branched 5 to 



F. 0. 6. carload lots. 



Boxes and bales at coat. 



B. F. BARR &. CO., Keystone Nurseries, Lancaster, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



BERBERIS THUNBERGII 



Heavy bushy 3-year stock, 18 to 24-inch $7.01 per 100; $60.00 per lOOO 



C. B. GATES, Wayside Gardens, Mentor, Ohio 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



been inadequate to supply space for the 

 prompt and safe shipment of perishable 

 commodities. The reason for with- 

 drawing the big ship, while not an- 

 nounced in this country, is thought to 

 be the rising danger of loss at sea be- 

 cause of the operations of submarines. 

 Insurance has so risen that covering the 

 Rotterdam recently has cost $90,000 per 

 trip for that item alone. 



NEW ENGLAND £MBA£(H>ES. 



The counsel of the Seed and Nursery 

 Trade Association April 3 had a con- 

 ference with the railroad officials of 

 the New York Central and New Haven 

 railroads and also with the Eastern 

 Freight Accumulation Conference con- 

 cerning the lifting bf embargoes on 

 seeds and nursery stock. 



As readers of The Review were here- 

 tofore advised, the New Haven em- 



bargo on seeds was lifted March 1 and 

 March 28 a permanent order against 

 embargo on seeds was made. On the 

 same road, March .'{1, the embargo on 

 nursery stock was lifted. 



The New York Central lines and Bos- 

 ton & Albany have lifted embargoes 

 on seeds and nursery stock. 



The Boston & Maine also has no em- 

 bargo on seeds or nursery stock. The 

 Pennsylvania has cooperated in the lift- 

 ing of embargoes. 



It is of the greatest importance that 

 seeds and nursery stocks shall go for- 

 ward promptly, as the planting season 

 is at hand. The railroad officials havo 

 shown an earnest desire to assist in this 

 movement. If any seedsman or nursery- 

 man finds any delay in shipments, tele- 

 graph his complaint at once to the vice- 

 president in charge of traffic of the 



