70 



The Florists^ Review 



May 13, 1915. 



ROS£S from 2^-inch Pots 



Grown to plant— not to sell. Surplus over our own planting: 

 requirements. Not rooted cuttins^s, but well established 



plants from 2->^in. pots. 



RAMBLEBS AND CLIMBERS. 



Per 1000 

 American Pillar — Pink, clear white eye, 



yellow stamens, single Uowcr $,'?0.0'> 



Baltimore Belle— Blusli white 25.0(> 



Crimson Rambler 25.(K) 



Climbing American Beauty 50. Oil 



Dorothy Perkins — Shell pink 25.00 



Excelsa— Red Dorotliy Perkins .30.00 



Philadelphia— Red 25.<X) 



<Jueen of the Prairies — Rosy red 25.00 



Sodonla— Bright red .{O.OO 



Tausendschon (Thousand Beauties) 25.00 



Trier- Creamy white 25.00 



Veilchenblau — Violet blue 25.00 



White Dorothy Perkins — Pure white 25.00 



DWARF POLYANTHA OR BABY ROSES. 



Per 1000 



Anny MuUer- Oerlse pink $30.00 



Baby Rambler (Mme. N. Levavasseur) 



Crimson 27. 50 



Jessie — Clear glowing red 27. .50 



Orleans — Geranium pink 25.00 



Yvonne Rabier — White 27.50 



MOSS ROSES. 



Blanche Moreau — White $;!5.00 



Crimson Globe — Crimson .S5.00 



Princeas Adelaide — Pink 35.00 



TEAS Ain> HYBRID TEAS. 



Gruss an Teplitz— Rich scarlet f.TO.OO 



Maman Cochet— Coral pink 30.00 



Yellow Soupert — Yellow 27.50 



HYBRID PERFETUALS. 



Po 



Alfred Colomb — Crimson 



Anna de Diesbach — Pink 



Conrad F. Meyer — (Hybrid Rugosa white) 



Coquette des Alpes — Blush white 



Coquette des Blanches — Creamy white. . . . 



General Washington — Deep red 



J. B. Clark — Deep scarlet 



John Hopper — Rosy pink 



Marchioness of Lome — Red 



M. P. Wilder— Crimson 



Mme. Georges Bruant — Hybrid Rugosa 



white 



Mme. Gabriel Luizet — Silvery pink 



Mme. Plantler— White 



Mrs. R. G. S. Crawford— Pink 



Oakmont — Peach pink, free tlowering. . . . 

 Prince CamiUe de Rohan — Deep maroon.. 



r 1000 

 $35.0() 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 40.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 



35.00 

 35.00 

 30.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 

 35.00 



NEWARK, NEW YORK 



Mentloii The B«Tlew when yon write. 



JACKSON & PERKINS CO. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF NTTRSERTMEN. 



President, H. B. Chase, Chase, Ala.; Vice- 

 president, E. S. Welch, Shenandoah, la.; Secre- 

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

 Peter Youogers, Geneva, Neb. 



Fortieth annual meeting, Detroit, Mlcb., June 

 28 to 2B. 1015. 



Two recent bulletins of the United 

 State,s Department of Agriculture that 

 are of interest to nurserymen are num- 

 bers 648 and 650, respectively * ' The Con- 

 trol of Eoot-knot" and "The San 

 Jose Scale and Its Control, ' ' 



The nurseries that specialize on orna- 

 mentals appear to have had a better sea- 

 son than those that devote their energies 

 exclusively to fruit trees. Large orchard- 

 ing enterptises have been considerably 

 less numerous than usual the last few 

 months. 



Ox the board of directors of the Gulf 

 Coast Horticultural Society for the com- 

 ing year is James Brodie, of the Biloxi 

 Nursery, Biloxi, Miss. Theodore Bechtel, 

 of the Bechtel Pecan Nurseries, Ocean 

 Springs, Miss., is vice-president for the 

 Mississippi coast. 



MINNESOTA LAW AMENDED. 



By a law which took effect April 22, 

 1915, the provisions of the Minnesota 

 laws relating to inspection of horticul- 

 tural stock to avoid spread of plant 

 diseases, etc., and requiring certificates 

 of inspection to be attached to ship- 

 ments, were amended by the enactment 

 of the following section: 



"Dealers, and florists not owning 

 nurseries and shipping by post, freight, 

 express, or otherwise, may obtain from 

 the state entomologist a special certifi- 

 cate, in order to comply with the fed- 

 eral and state lawa. Such certificate 

 will be granted only upon stock pur- 

 chased from an inspected nursery or 

 upon foreign stock inspected in Minne- 

 sota. 



"Provided that, before such certifi- 

 cate is granted, the dealer or florist re- 

 questing the same shall furnish a sworn 

 affidavit that he will buy and sell only 

 stock which had been duly inspected 



Headauarters for 



HEDGE PLANTS 



I still have on hand 100,000 California 

 Privet 2 to 8 ft. and 3 to 4 ft.; fine stock 

 at low prices. Also a few thousand 

 Amoor Privet l*s to 2 ft. and 2 to 3 ft. 



Contracts solicited for California Pri- 

 vet, Amoor Privet and Berberis Thun- 

 bergii in car lots for fall delivery. 



J. T. LOVETT, 



Ntuntli Nmery, Little Siher, N. J. 



Mention The Rerlew when you write. 



by an official state inspector and that 

 he will maintain with the state en- 

 tomologist a list of all sources from 

 which he secures his stock." 



NEW LAW IN INDIANA. 



June 1 a new law takes effect in 

 Indiana in regard to the inspection and 

 sale of nursery stock. While it is in 

 some matters a little stricter than the 

 old law, it contains nothing new or 

 unusual in horticultural legislation. 



All nursery stock sold in Indiana 

 must bear a tag showing that it has 

 been examined by the state entomolo- 

 gist. Failure to 'comply with the pro- 

 visions of the act subjects the person 

 or firm to a fine of from .$10 to .$100 

 for each offense. Application to have 

 stock examined by the state entomolo- 

 gist must be made before July 1 of 

 each year. Persons receiving foreign 

 stock must notify the entomologist, who 

 must examine it. Infested or infected 

 stock must be destroyed. 



All dealers within or without the 

 state who do business in the state, 

 must secure a dealer's license and make 

 affidavit that they will sell only stock 

 that has been inspected and must fur- 

 nish the state entomologist with a list 

 of the sources from which stock is 

 secured. 



All nursery agents or canvassers, or 

 salesmen doing business in the state, 

 must carry an agent's license issued by 

 the state entomologist. 



Nurserymen residing outside of the 



RAFFIA 



Natural— Four standard grades. 

 Colored— Twenty colors. 



We are headquarters — always carry 

 several hundred bales in stock. Can ship 

 any grade in any quantity at a moment's 

 notice. 



Bale (225 lbs.) lots or less. 

 Write for prices and terms. 



McHutchison & Co. 



The Import House 

 17 Murray Street, NEW TORK 



Mention The ReTlew when yon wrif. 



state and desiring to sell in Indiana 

 must have certificates of the state en- 

 tomologist before they can do business. 



All persons engaged in the nursery 

 business are prohibited from misrepre- 

 senting any stock offered for sale. If 

 requested, such persons must furnish the 

 state entomologist with copies of his 

 order forms, contracts and agreements 

 with customers. A fee of $1 shall be 

 charged for dealer's or agent's license. 



Whenever, as the result of an official 

 inspection, the state entomologist, or 

 his deputies, shall order treatment or 

 removal of any trees, vines, shrubs or 

 plants and the owner shall refuse to 

 carry out such order, the state officer 

 shall remove or destroy the infected 

 plants and the expense of the same 

 shall be added to the taxes of the prem- 

 ises. 



FIND PEST IN NORTHWEST. 



The devastating eelworm, or Tylen- 

 chus devastatrix, has been found again 

 in the Pacific northwest, several hun- 

 dred miles from the point where it was 

 discovered in 1913. This tiny, thread- 

 like organism is a nematode, and is re- 

 markably destructive to many forms of 

 bulbous plants. Commercially, its 

 chief importance is due to its ravages 

 in onion fields, but it also feeds to a 

 great extent upon flowering bulbs such 

 as hyacinths and upon such crops as 

 rye, oats, hemp, potatoes, strawberries, 

 etc. Hitherto, the United States ap- 

 pears to have been practically free 



