90 



The Florists' Review 



Mat 20, 1915. 



ROS£S from 2^-mch Pots 



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

 requirements. Not rooted cuttings, but well established 



plants from 2-j^in. pots. 



RAMBLERS AND CLDIBEIIS. 



Per 1000 

 American Pillar — Pink, clear white eye, 



yellow stamens, single flower |30.00 



Baltimore Belle — Blush white 25.00 



Crimson Rambler 2o.OO 



Climbing American Beauty 50.00 



Dorothy Perkins— Shell pink 25.00 



Excelsa — Red Dorothy Perkins 30.00 



Philadelphia— Bed 25.00 



Queen of the Prairies — Rosy red 25.00 



Sodonla— Bright red 30.00 



Tausendschon (Thousand Beai'tles) 25.00 



Trier — Creamy white 25.00 



Vellchenblau— Violet blue 25.00 



White Dorothy Perkins — Pure white 25.00 



DWARF FOLTANTHA OB BABY BOSES. 



Per 1000 



Anny MuUer — Cerise pink $30.00 



Baby Rambler (Mme. N. Levarasseur) 



Crimson 27.50 



Jessie — Clear glowing red 27.50 



Orleans — Geranium pink 25.00 



Yvonne Rabier — White 27.50 



MOSS ROSES. 



Blanche Moreau — White $35.00 



Crimson Globe — Crimson 35.00 



Princess Adelaide — Pink 35.00 



TEAS AND HYBRID TEAS. 



Gruss an TepUtz — Rich scarlet $30.00 



Maman Cochet — Coral pink 30.00 



Yellow Soupert — Yellow 27.50 



HYBBID FEBFEIirALS. 



Per 1000 



Alfred Colomb — Crimson $36.00 



Anna de Dlesbach — Pink 35.00 



Conrad F. Meyer — (H.vbrid Rugosa white) 35.00 



Coquette des Alpes — Blush white 35.00 



Coquette des Blanches — Creamy white 35.00 



General Washington — Deep red 35.00 



J. B. Clark — Deep scarlet 40.00 



John Hopper — Rosy pink 35.00 



Marchioness of Lome — Red... 35.00 



M. P. Wilder — Crimson ; 35.00 



Mme. Georges Bruant — Hybrid Rugosa 



white 35.00 



Mme. Gabriel Lulzet — Silvery pink 35.00 



Mme. Plantler — White 30.00 



Mrs. R. G. S. Crawford— Pink 35.00 



Oakmont — Peach pink, free flowering.... 35.00 

 Prince Camllle de Rohan — Deep maroon.. 35.00 



NEWARK, NEW YORK 



MentloB The Review when yon write. 



JACKSON & PERKINS CO. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF NUBSERYMEN. 



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

 prestdent, B. S. Welch, Shenandoah, la.; Secrer 

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

 Peter Youngers, Geneva, Neb. 



Fortieth annual meeting, Detroit, Mich., June 

 23 to 25. 1915. 



W. A. Peterson, of the Peterson 

 Nursery, Chicago, was the only layman 

 in the party of nineteen that went to 

 Trenton, N. J., last week, to tender the 

 invitation to Billy Sunday to come to 

 Chicago, all the others being clergymen. 

 Mr. Peterson has in charge the financial 

 end of the hoped-for revivals. 



IN no previous season has so much 

 nursery stock found its outlet through 

 the department stores. Sales to depart- 

 ment stores never are anything but an 

 outlet for surplus stock, a bit better 

 than the brush pile, no doubt, but the 

 nurseryman who depended on them for 

 his profit would buy little gasoline. 



Charles Momm" has retired from the 

 nursery company of Charles Momm & 

 Sons, 613 Stuyvesant avenue, Irvington, 

 N. J., having sold out to his son, Walter 

 Momm, and William Metcraft, who are 

 now in full charge of the business. Mr. 

 Momm continues to work about the nurs- 

 ery, however, assisting the new owners 

 in every possible way. 



The Phoenix Nursery Co., of Bloom- 

 ington. 111., was incorporated May 6. 

 The incorporators are: W. E. Kossney, 

 Thomas S. Weldon and A. H. Eossney, 

 with A. E. De Mange as correspondent. 

 The capital stock is $2,500. This com- 

 pany includes the old concern, recently 

 bankrupt, of the same name, at Normal, 

 m., and continues the business at the 

 same place. 



PIJ^NT ACT RULES AMENDED. 



The rules and regulations for the en* 

 forcement of the federal plant quaran- 

 tine act have been amended to allow 

 the importation of tree seeds and or- 

 chids in commercial quantities from 

 countries which do not maintain nur- 

 sery stock inspection. Formerly no 

 stock was admitted from such countries 



Headauarters for 



HEDGE PLANTS 



I still have on hand lOO.OOO California 

 Privet 2 to 3 ft. and 3 to 4 ft.: fine stock 

 at low prices. Also a few thousand 

 Amoor Privet IMi to 2 ft. and 2 to 3 ft. 



Contracts solicited for California Pri- 

 vet, Amoor Privet and Berberis Thun- 

 bergrii in car lots for fall delivery. 



J. T. LOVETT, 



Nonmonth Nonery, Uttie Silver, N. J. 



except in limited quantities for experi- 

 mental purposes. Now the first sentence 

 of regulation 6, which covers this sub- 

 ject, has been struck out and the fol- 

 lowing inserted in its place: 



Nursery stock, except orchids and tree seeds, 

 from countries which do not maintain nursery- 

 stock inspection, will be admitted into the United 

 States only for experimental purposes and in 

 limited quantities, under special permit through 

 ports designated therein. (See regulation 5.) 

 Orchids and tree seeds may be Imported from 

 such countries In commercial quantities under 

 special permit. 



CULTXTKE OF HASDY SHRUBS. 



Planting. 



In his recent address on the culture 

 of hardy flbrubs, before the Massachu- 

 setts Horticultural Society, Arthur E. 

 Thatcher, of Bar Harbor, Me., superin- 

 tendent of the Mount Desert Nurseries, 

 said: 



"There has always been and prob- 

 ably always will be a difference of 

 opinion as to whether fall or spring is 

 the better time for planting. If the 

 work has to be done in the fall on ac- 

 count of the rush of work in the spring, 

 it is advisable to plant as early as 

 possible, when the ground is in a moist 

 condition, directly after the leaves com- 

 mence to fall. For my own part I am 

 ,strongly in favor of preparing the 

 ground in the fall, letting it lie rough 

 through the winter, and planting in the 

 spring. If the work is well done and 

 the requisite amount of attention is 

 given the shrubs afterwards, there is 



RENENBER 



— IF IT'S A HARDY PERENNIAL- 



or so-called Old-fashioaed Flower 

 worth growing, we have it in one 

 shape and another the year round. 

 We have the largest stock in this 

 country, all Made in America, 

 and our prices will average 



76c per Dozen 

 $6.60 per 100 



Why say more here? Send for our 

 Wholesale Price List of varieties 

 and benefit from the opportunities 

 this affords you. 



AddrcM R. W. Clucas, Mgr. 



Palisadas Nurs«ri«s, Inc. 



SparkiU, N*w York 



McatloB Th« lt»Tl»w wban yon write. 



small chance of failure. The best time 

 for planting is when the ground is in 

 a moderately moist condition, as the 

 soil can then be made firm wittout be- 

 coming pasty, and if possible choose a 

 calm day, as wind has a most detri- 

 mental effect upon the roots. 



"While the roots should be well cov- 

 ered, it is not advisable to plant too 

 deeply, especially on heavy land, and 

 the nearer the fibrous roots are to the 

 surface the greater warmth do thqK 

 receive and consequently start into 

 active growth more quickly than if 

 buried some distance from the surface. 

 When the planting is completed it is 

 an excellent plan to give the shrubs 

 a good mulching of any suitable mate- 

 rial at hand, such as decayed leaves or 

 long dressing. This is of the greatest 

 assistance if warm weather prevails, for 

 it keeps the roots moist and cool and 

 prevents the surface soil from becoming 

 baked. 



Watering. 



"Many people are under the impres* 

 sion that newly planted shrubs should 

 be copiously watered at the roots, but I 

 consider this unnecessary and often 



