July 3, 1913. 



The Florists' Review 



HI 



The KENILWORTH Giant Pansy 



PANSIES IN SKPARATB COLORS 



1000 seeds 

 Oiant Adonis, light blue with yelluwitih 



white face, large dark blotch 25c 



Oiant timperor William, ultramariue Dlue 



with purple violet eye ....2f>a 



Giant King of the Blacks, coal black . ...25c 

 Qiant Lord Beaconsfield, purple violet, 



upper petals shading to white 25c 



Oiant Yellow, pure golden yellow iHc 



Oiant Yellow, with dark blotch 2.^c 



Oiant White, large satiny white 25c 



Oiant White, with large violet center 2hc 



Oiant Red, a fine mixture of red shades. 25n 



1000 seeds 

 Oiant Royal Purple, fine, large flower.... 25c 



Giant Bronze and Copper mixture — 25c 



Uiant l-ight Blue, sky blue 26c 



Oiant Dark Blue, deep blue shades 25c 



Oiant Zebra, mixed shades, striped 25c 



Oiant McKinley, yellow, each petal 



blotched with a deep reddish brown ... .25c 

 Oiant Psyche, Masterpiece type, violet 



with white margin 25c 



Oiant Mme. Perret. red and wine shades. .25c 

 The preceding 17 sorts, mixed in equal 



proportions 25c 



Any 5 pkts., $1.00: any 11 pkts., $2.00. 



seeds are all grown by myself and are offered in the follow- 

 ing mixtures and separate colors: 



KENILWORTH STRAIN— The flowers are of perfect 

 form and substance: many of the immense flowers are from 

 81^ to 4 inches; it is a striking collection of beautiful colors 

 and markings, rich with shades of red, brown, bronze, ma- 

 hogany and many others too numerous to mention. Light, 

 Medium or Dark Mixtures. 



KENILWORTH SHOW— An extra fine strain of large 

 flowers; the immense flowers are of circular form and great 

 substance; a beautiful collection of colors and markings. 



KENILWORTH CUT FLOWER MIXTURE- Is a dis- 

 tinct class by itself, surpassing all other strains as a cut 

 flower or for exhibition purposes, for inside or outside grow- 

 ing: the large flowers are carried erect above the foliage on 

 heavy stems, 7 or 8 inches long, in the most graceful manner, 

 and stand the hot, dry weather well. 



MASTERPIECE— A remarkable type; the curled, wavy 

 petals giving the flower a double appearance, its large flowers 

 of great substance, on long, strong stems. 



ORCHID FLOWERED. Mixed— A dwarf free bloomer 

 with a range of delicate colors that do not exist in any other 

 pansies. a remarkable combination of light rose, shell pink, 

 blush mauve, fawn, light brown, orange and chamois. 



NEW SEED NOW READY 



1000 seeds, 25e: 5000 seeds, $1.00; kez.. $1.25; 1 oz., $5.00 

 RAINBOW is a mixtuie of the 

 most beautiful, gorgeous colors, 

 blotched, striped, veined, .^H>J 

 margined, etc. With every 

 $1.00 worth of Pansy seed 

 I will send, free, 1000 

 seeds of Rainbow. 



and with other 

 amounts in like 

 proportion. 



Mention The Review when you write, 



The Largest of all Giants 

 W. A D. AMERICAN SHOW 



PANSIES 



with great diversity of colors—^ oz., $1.50 



WEEBER & DON, Seed Merchants 



1X4 Chambars Strcat. NKW YORK 



Mantlon Th» R»vl»>w wh<»n you write. 



We have not heard much from Wis- 

 consin, but we understand they have 

 been having the same kind of weather 

 over there, and we should think it 

 would have the same effect with peas at 

 this time of the year when they are in 

 their critical state. We have no news 

 from our crops in Ontario, except to 

 say that the Canadian grown peas do 

 not cut much of a figure, as they are 

 grown in such small quantity in com- 

 parison to what they grew in other 

 years. The latest news we have from 

 California is to the effect that pea 

 crops are badly damaged, some entirely 

 ruined. On the whole, it is stated, by 

 the best authority, that California will 

 not harvest one-third of a crop of peas. 

 We have no reliable news from Oregon, 

 but the jieas grown in that section do 

 not cut much of a figure one way or the 

 other. As to crops in Idaho and Mon- 

 tana, will say that peas were backward 

 in Montana, and the early varieties just 

 in bloom while the late peas have just 

 fairly started. In Idaho our crops are 

 showing up well in the Twin Falls dis- 

 trict, as well as our crops near St. An- 

 thony, but we do not look for so good a 

 crop as last season for the reason that 

 it was too dry this spring and peas 

 were late in coming up. In many in- 



Giant Pansy Seed, Home Grown 



As fine as the very best abtainable: — 



$5.00 par ounca; $1.50 par quartar ounca; 50c par trada packat 



Cyclamen Seed, the celebrated English 



strain, $9.00 per 1000. 



Poinaettiaa, 2i^-inch, strong, 15 00 per 

 100; 145.00 per 1000. 



Fern Flats, 10 best varieties, 12.00 per 

 flat; 20 flats at $1.75 each. 



Begonia Oloire de Lorraine, $12.00 per 

 100: $110.00 per 1000. 



Begonia Gloire de Chatelaine, easiest 

 Begonia grown, $8.00 per 100. 



For Roses, Primulas, Snapdragon, Asparasfus Plumosus Nanus, 



Spren^ri and Cyclamen plants, etc., see our ads 



in the Classified Columns. 



S. S. SKIDELSKY & CO. 



1215 BETZ BUILDING, 



PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



Mention The Kevlew when you write. 



stances it was necessary to irrigate 

 them to get them to come up, and many 

 peas are thin on the ground. This, of 

 course, will cut the crop down some 

 and We could hardly look for as good 

 a crop as last season from that part." 



BURNETT BROS. 



SEEDS :: BULBS :: PLANTS 

 78 Cortlandt St., NKW YORK CITT 



Always mention the Flortsts' Review 

 when writine advertlsei s 



