126 



The Florists^ Review 



February 9. 1922 



Thomas C Joy 



NEW WHITE 

 SEEDLING CARNATION 



We are now booking orders'for February delivery. 



$12.00 per 100, $100.00 per 1000 



150,000 delivered to date without a complaint. 



JOY FLORAL CO., NASHVILLE, TENN. 



CARNATIONS — Rooted Cuttings 



Our Carnations are the picture of health, and we offer you this stock with the absolute guarantee that the cuttings wUl 

 be first-class in every respect. If you are not pleased with ♦hem, it is your privilege to return them immediately and they 

 will not cost you a cent. 



'^here is not a semblance of disease or wild growth in our stock, and these carefully selected, vigorous, well|rooted 

 cutt Dgs can be depended upon for results. 



White Enchantress, Washington, Ward, Belle Washburn, Nebraska, Matchless, 

 $5.00 per 100, $45.00 per 1000. Enchantress Supreme, $6.00 per 100, 

 $£>0.00 per 1000. White Wonder, $4.50 per 100, $40.00 per 1000. 



Prompt delivery. Aak for quotationa on large quantitieM. 



FURROW & COMPANY, 205 W. Main Street, Oklahoma City, Okla. 



the deaths of Edward J. Canning and 

 John K. AI. L. Farquhar. The nominat- 

 ing coniniittee presented the following 

 list of nominees, who, later in the ses- 

 sion, were duly elected: President, Ken- 

 neth E. Gillctt, Southwick, Mass.; vice- 

 president, James A. Tufts, Jr.; secretary, 

 Donald Wyman, North Abington, Mass.; 

 treasurer, J. R. Barnes, Yalesville, 

 Conn.; executive committee, Leonard W. 

 Boss, W. E. Campbell and C. H. Greaton. 



C. Vandervort, of the Arnold Arbore- 

 tum, read an interesting paper on "Who 

 Ib an Arboriculturist!" He spoke of the 

 great value of trees to the world, dis- 

 cussed hybridization, pruning and propa- 

 gation, and incidentally spoke of sev- 

 eral classes who he felt might be ar- 

 boriculturists, nurserymen being one of 

 these. The rapid depletion of lumber 

 supplies, he classed properly as economic 

 suicide and urged a broader and saner 

 forestry policy, such as existed in some 

 European countries. 



W. N. Craig spoke from the profes- 

 sional gardeners' point of view, on 

 quarantines in general and No. 37, and 

 the Federal Horticultural Board, in par- 

 ticular, and roundly condemned the pres- 

 ent narrow policy of the board. Nu- 

 merous permits issued were never used, 

 owing to governmental red tape; some 

 nurserymen were favored and could get 

 even carload shipments from abroad, 

 which did not go to Washington, while 

 other good firms were denied permits for 

 small lots of the same things. He chal- 

 lenged Dr. Marlatt to publish a list of 

 permits issued and used and warned 

 nurserymen that, while they might favor 

 the exclusion of everything from abroad 

 •with the idea of eliminating competi- 

 tion and boosting home prices, the great 

 army of amateur gardeners were ut- 

 terly opposed to the quarantine and 



BETTY JANE 



Our new Ward pink seedling has a beautiful 

 formed flower on long, stiff stems; of an even 

 shade of Ward pink. It is a good grower in 

 the field and under glass and a free and con- 

 tinuous bloomer, good keeper and shipper. 



Awarded the Special S. A. F. & O. //. Silver Medal 



by the American Carnation Society at Hartford, 



Connecticut, January, 1922. 



Place your order now for early delivery next 

 winter. $12.50 per 100; $110.00 per 1000. 



A. JABLONSKY, Carnation Specialist, 



OLIVETTE, CLAYTON P. O., MISSOURI 



Orders will be filled in rotation aa received 



would continue to fight it until reason- 

 able amendments were made, one of 

 which would be inspection at port of 

 entry. He condemned the sending out 

 of pathologists and other experts to ex- 

 amine shipments in owners' hands, 

 which had just been overhauled in Wash- 

 ington, as a waste of money and said 

 the board would never be satisfactory 

 until it contained one or more practical 

 horticulturists, instead of five scientific 

 theorists. 



The session now became warm, but 



good-natured. O. M. Rogers, Boston 

 representative of the Federal Horticul- 

 tural Board, pleasantly did the best 

 he could to stem the tide against his 

 superiors. A large number of members 

 joined in the discussion and Mr. 

 Stranger, Harlan P. Kelsey, C. H. Great- 

 on, J. Brandley and others made perti- 

 nent remarks, none of them favorable 

 to the Federal Horticultural Board and 

 quarantine 37. The discussion was quite 

 prolonged and animated and the lee* 

 turer had to rise several times. Every- 



