* ••'./.iT/.'TTiT '••-•■ 



OCTOBEB 28, 1920 



The Florists' Review 



119 



60,000 



CUNBING ROSES 



From 2H-iach pots. 



$7.00 per lOO $65.0O per lOOO 



DOROTHY PERKINS EXCELSA 

 DOROTHY PERKINS, White 



TERMS:— Cash with order less 3% discount 

 and free boxins. 



The D. Hill Nursery Co., Inc. 



Box 403 DUNDEE, ILL. 



Plant PEONIES Now 



Send for onr Special Price LUt showing 



best sorts, with each color in the 



order of bloominc 



PETERSON NURSERY 

 SO N. La SaUe Street, CHICAGO, ILL. 



MentlPB The Brlew when yee write. 



VIBURNUM PLICATUM 



Also Berberle ThuobergU, Hydrangea 

 Paaicttlata, Welgela, Sjpuacae, etc 



Ask for complete list of Oak Brand Shrubs 



"• L JONES CO. 



Robert Pyto, Pres. 



@ 



HfEST GROVE. 



VT PENNA..U.S.A. 

 Afrt.Wintsw.V.-P. 



Hardy Old-fashioned Plants 



Our Specialty 



Specially grown for Florists, Nursery- 

 men and Landscape Architects. Prices 

 on request. 



WILLIAM TOOLE & SON 



Hudy Phat ml Pmht Fam BARABOO, WIS. 



M— tloB Tfce BeTlew wiwe yee wilte. 



by the defendant's counsel and practi- 

 cally conceded by all that, in spite of 

 the greatest care in budding nursery 

 stock, the trees will not always bear 

 fruit true to name and that the exact 

 character and quality of the stock can- 

 not be definitely known until the trees 

 begin to bear. The guaranty made, so 

 far as the intention of the parties is con- 

 cerned, must be interpreted in the light 

 of these conceded facts. When so con- 

 sidered, we are of the opinion that the 

 guaranty was in effect an agreement 

 that the trees, when they bore fruit, 

 would bear the varieties known as El- 

 bertas and Willetts; we believe that 

 the guaranty related entirely to the 

 future and to what the trees would do 

 when the time of bearing arrived. The 

 purchaser could not know in advance 

 what the fruit would be and it might 

 be that for one reason or another the 

 trees would not begin to bear until after 

 the statute of limitations had run, were 

 there to be deemed a breach at the time 

 of delivery. The court, we think, should 

 interpret the agreement in the light of 

 what was clearly in the minds of the 

 parties to it, and where the agreement 

 calls for the accomplishment of certain 

 things at a future time, there cannot 

 be said to be a breach of the contract 

 until that time arrives and the result 

 stipulated for fails to be realized. If 

 this be true, then in this case the breach 

 did not occur until the trees began to 

 bear, and the action was brought within 

 time. Our view of the case is sustained 

 by the statement claimed to have been 

 made by defendant's agent that 'the 



Two- Ymat FimU- Grown 



IBOLIUM 



SS PRIVET 



Cross between Calif omla and Ibota Privet 



HARDY AS IBOTA 

 LOOKS LIKE. CAUFORNLA 



ARNOLD ARBORETUM 

 RmportM it hardy thmrm thm past wintor 



JUST THINK WHAT THIS MEANS 



ORDER PROPAGATING STOCK 



NOW 



Grows equally well from either hard or SOFT WOOD 

 Start propagating now and be ready for the coming 'demand 



TRADE OFFER 



2 years, 3 to 4 feet Each, $2.50 



(Not cut back. See above cut.) 



1 year, 1 to 2 feet Each, 1.00 



Summer Frame Cuttings " .50 



THE ELM CITY NURSERY CO. 



WOODMONT NURSERIES, Inc. 

 NEW HAVEN, r. CONNECTICUT 



Also Introducers of Box-Barberry 



HENRY S. COOPER, Peony Fan 



Dunmovin Gardens r> WT* ^^ T^T W W^ Q* 



KENOSHA, WISCONSIN MT Hi V^ 1^ 1 JCj O 



Largest planting in the West of the highest and best varieties only. 

 Confined to 100 varieties of the best. 



I otfer for sale • few thousands eack of 



Festiva Maxima per 100, S25.00 



Felix Crousse " 25.00 



Delicatissima " 18.00 



Queen Victoria " 16.00 



Clirysanthemiflora " 15.00 



In sood. strong, standard divisions 



Also Limited Qnaatitics ol 



Lady Alexander Duff each. 110.00 



Walter Faxon " lo.oo 



Kelway's Glorious " 40.00 



Elizabeth B. Browning " 26,00 



LaFrance " lo.oo 



Soulange " lO.OO 



LeCygne " 20.00 



and others. 



trees would be all right, ' clearly indicat- 

 ing that when they bore they would bear 

 true to name." 



The court was of the opinion that 

 sections 263 and 264 of the Agricultural 

 law, which were added in 1914 and 



