FCBBUiBX 9, 1923 



The Florists^ Review 



123 



HILL'S SPECIMEN EVERGREENS ^^'^ ?ro^SSr'^- 



NOTB: Many FlorisU are bavins great success selling Hill's Specimen Evergreens. On any vacant spac* around 

 your grounds you can heel in a good assortment and easily sell them to customers driving by. No trouble at all to handla. 

 Profits unusually good. The following selected varieties are strong, thrifty, and well formed, suitable for the very b«it 

 trade. Now is the time to cover your needs for Spring planting. Write for information. 



All stock balled and burlapped (B & B) at prices below. 



Ablet (Fir) 



BiM, 

 fMt 



Conoolor 8 -8 



Souglaad > -8 



Doufflaui 8 -4 



Hamlook S -8 



Hamlook 8 -4 



Junipar 

 (Continned) 



Blse, 

 faat 



Juniperui 

 Oanadanalt 

 Oanadanaia 

 Pfltieriana 

 Pfltseriana 



(Junipar) 

 ....1 -VA 



....iV4-a 



....8 -8 

 8 -4 



HIU Specimen BTergreeni 

 are alwan worth the price 



Ka pay for tbem; ana will 

 found the moat econom- 

 ieal in the Ions ran. 



-D. HIU. 



Prooumbena ...1 -IVi 

 Prooumbeaa ... 1 ^ -8 

 TamarUolfolU..! -1^ 

 TamariaoifolU. .IH-t 

 Yirglniaiui ... .8 -8 

 Yirginlana ... .8 -4 

 VliSlaiMa ....4 -• 



8.85 

 8.75 

 6.00 

 8.00 

 4.00 

 6.00 

 4.00 

 6.00 

 8.00 

 8.60 

 4.60 



17.50 

 88.50 

 56.00 

 76.00 

 87.60 

 46.00 

 87.60 

 46.00 

 86.00 

 80.00 

 40.00 



Counarti 8 



Counarti 8 



Eleganta, La«. .8 



BohotU 8 



Olauoa 8 



Fioea (Spruoe) 



Alba 8 



Alba 8 



Canadenaia ... .8 

 Canadenala ... .8 

 Excelaa 4 



Finni (Fine) 



Auatriaoa 8 



Kticbo Comp...l 

 Mugbo Coinp...l%-8 



Strobua 4 -6 



Strobua 6 -6 



Bylveatrla S -8 



8 

 •4 

 ■8 

 •8 

 -8 



•8 



-4 

 •8 

 ■4 

 -6 



•8 



1V4 



Eaoh 

 14.76 

 6.00 

 6.50 

 4.00 

 4.00 



8.50 

 0.00 

 4.60 

 6.00 

 8,60 



8.00 

 8.86 

 8.00 

 8.60 

 8.86 

 8.76 



10 

 94S.60 

 55.00 

 60.00 

 85.00 

 85.00 



80.00 

 45.00 

 40.00 

 56.00 

 80.00 



86.00 

 80.00 

 86.00 

 80.00 

 86.00 

 88.60 



Slxe, 



Tazna (Yew) feet Eaeh 10 



Canadenaia ....1 -1% 88.60 $88.60 



CuapidaU 1 -IVi 8.75 85.00 



Cue. BrevifoUa.l -iVi 4.85 40.00 



Thuya (Arbor Vitae) 

 Oooidentalia ...8 -8 1.75 16.00 



OooidenUUa ...3 -4 2.60 80.00 



Olobea IVix^Vi 8.60 80 00 



CompaoU lV4zl>4 8.00 87.60 



PyranUdaUa ...8 -8 8.76 86.00 



FyramldaUi ...8 -4 8.76 88.60 



Slbirioa 8 -8 4.86 87.60 



WoodwardU ...IVixlVi 8.00 87.60 

 SHKUB8 AST) DECXDUOUS TBEE8 

 Large aasortment of choice rarletlea 



for Uninr out. 



of same rarlety and aice at 10 rate. 



Send for oomplete oatalocoe. 



THE D. HILL NURSERY CO., Inc. 



-EVERGREEN SPECIALISTS - 



-LARGEST GROWERS IN AMERICA - 



Box 403 

 Dundee, IlL 



Mention The ReTlew when you write. 



Magnolia Grandif lora 



EverKrpen variety, hardy in cold sections if 

 planted to northern exposure. 2 to 3 ft.. 

 $60.00: 3 to 4 t.. $75.00; 4 to 6 ft.. $125.00 per 100. 

 Other 8 zes ouoted on reauest. 



ABELIA GRANDIFLORA 



1 to 2 ft., $25 00; 2 to 3 ft., $35.00 per 100. 



Valdetian Nurseries, Bostic, N. C. 



Evergreen Trees, from 18 to 36 inches, trans- 

 planted. $1A.00 to $3500 per 100. 



Gladlolna Bulbs, mixed standard sorts, $1.75 to 

 »2.fi0 per 100. 



Iris Sibirica, blue. $2.50 per 100. 



Strawberry Plants, $1.25 per 100; Everbearing, 

 $2.50 per 100 

 F. 0. b. Starbuclc, Minn, Price list free. 



Paul P. Klcvaiin, Pope Comity, Starbock, Minn. 



Reference: lat Nat'l Bank, Starbuck. 



for their attention, one being the han- 

 dling of a lot of cheap nursery stock by 

 the 10-cent stores and department 

 stores at ridiculously low prices. 



James Wheeler spoke of the New Eng- 

 land Florists' Alliance and suggested 

 that nurserymen, if they could only get 

 a catchy slogan like the florists, might 

 well consider the adoption of a some- 

 what similar percentage basis. Paul V. 

 Fortmiller, of the Jackson & Perkins 

 Co., Newark, N. Y., made the first ad- 

 dress on the opening afternoon, his sub- 

 ject being "Business Conditions and 

 Outlook." In opening he extended the 

 greetings of the Eastern Association of 

 Nurserymen, at Trenton, N. J., and said 

 this association would like to cooperate 

 in the educational work being done by 

 the New England Nurserymen's Asso- 

 ciation. Business conditions were, he 

 said, hard to analyze and the future dif- 

 ficult to predict. The element of gam- 

 bling in the business, however, made it 

 interesting. His firm continued to get 

 a large volume of business, in common 

 with others, and predicted slumps had 

 not come. Large landscape contracts 

 were few in number at present, but 

 there were many small ones and in this 

 connection he said it was well to remem- 

 ber that by far the greatest proportion 

 of nursery stock sold went to the masses 

 and not the classes. He quoted opinions 

 of many firms on business, briefly 

 touched on quarantine 37, and concluded 

 by predicting a good business in 1922. 



Advantageous Prospects. 



E. K. Thomas, Providence, R. I., man- 

 ager of the agricultural department of 



BOSTON IVY, Ampelopsis Veitchii 



Hardy Amoor River North Privet and Spiraea Van Houttei 



OurS and 4-year-old Boutin Iv7 are extra heavy grrades. Ions tops and well-rooted plant* that will please tCa 

 eholeeat retail tr ade. This stock is graded stronger than the average run and will suit the best trade at any time. 



Perdoz, lOO 1000 ^i 



Boston Ivy, 4-year-old, extra heivy, transplanted, long tops $3.50* $25 00 4^ 



Boston Ivy, 3 year old. No 1, transplanted, long tops 2 00 » 16.00 — ^ "^ 



Boston Ivy, 2-year-old, transplanted, shorter tops -m looo '$75.00 



The Z-»ear-old Boston Ivy were transplanted last spring, making them now S-yenT-old, extra heavy plants 



f growing on for next fall trade. 



We also have a very fine lot of Spiraea Van Houttei. Bridal Wreath. 18 to 24-inch, which we are pricing right to maks 



you some money .h 



Spiraea Van Houttei, t8to21-incb perlOO, $5.00; per 1000. $40.00 ^ 



^ill quote ipe'sial prices on large quantities. 

 Have a hsavy graleof strongly rooted well branched Soi'aea Van Houttei, 2 to 3-ft„ which 



we will nuote at $12 00 per 100. 



We have an exceptionally fine stock of hardy Atnoor River North Privet, well branched, heavily rooted 

 plants, properly grown, in 12 to 18-inch, 18 to 24-inch and 2 to 3-ft. grades, which we will quote at right price*. W« 

 have handled this hardy strain of Privet for over twenty years and it never has winter-killed, staying green to th« 

 tips through the most severe winters, 



LA SALLE COUNTY NURSERY, La Salle, 111. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



WELLER'S PERENNIALS 



With that wonderful Root Sytem 

 READY NOW 



WELLER NURSERIES CO., Inc. 



HOLLAND, MICH. 



Hardy Perennials 



Sonil for our Surin*? i;»2'2 Wholesale Price 

 L St of strong field-Kiown hardy perennials. 



WILLIAM TOOLE & SON 



HARDY PLANT & PANSY FARM 

 BARABOO, WIS. 



ROSES 



All best varieties for forcing and lining out 

 from 2)^- inch pots. 



LARGE, finished plants from 4-inch pots. 



AMERICAN ROSE & PLANT CO. 



SPRINGFIELD, OHIO 



PEONIES 



Send for our Special Price List showiag 



best sorts, with each color in ths 



order of blooming. 



PETERSON NURSERY 



SO N. La Salle Street, CHICAGO, ILL. 



the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 

 spoke most interestingly of the work be- 

 ing done by that institution in extending 

 credits to farmers and of how successful 

 it was proving. He said that with forty 

 per cent of the buying population of the 

 country dependent on agriculture for a 

 livelihood, neither the nursery nor any 

 other business could be really prosper- 

 ous while all agricultural crops were 

 selling at such low prices. He spoke 

 of the bright agricultural outlook in 

 New England and gave statistics to 



ROSE SPECIALISTS 



Budded flcld-irrown Teas. Perpetualg, 

 Climbers (own root) and Standards. 



SEND LIST WANTED 



NEW BRUNSWICK NURSERIES 



NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. 



STAR BRAND ROSES 



■American Pillar" and nearly every 



other good hardy climber. 



Send for our list. 



EST GROVE. 

 PENNA.. U.S.A. 



Ant Wintzer.V.-P. 



TL, r<ONARD A 

 "• L JONES CO 



Robert Pyle. Prea. 



lur our III 



m 



The Wayside Gardens Co. 



GROWERS OF HARDY PLANTS 



Shrabs, Balbs and Seeds 



BfENTOR, OHIO 



show numerous purchases of farms by 

 westerners here. One large farm agenej 

 in Boston sold 297 farms in New Hamp> 

 shire in 1920 and of these no less tham 

 185 went to parties outside New Eng- 



