Mat 20, 19lS. 



The Florists'^ Review 



91 



HYBRID PEEPETUALS. 



Doz. 100 1000 

 Ball of Snow (Boule de Niege)..$ .50 $ 3.50 $30 



General Jacqueminot 50 3.50 30 



Paul Ney ton 60 4.00 35 



Vlck's Caprice 50 3.50 30 



TEAS. 



Blumenschmldt , 50 3.00 25 



Duchcsse de Brabant .50 3.00 25 



EtoUe de Lyon .50 3.00 27 



Mme. Constant Soupert 60 4.00 35 



Mme. Lombard 50 3.00 25 



Marie Lambert (Snowflake) 50 3.00 25 



Mrs. Foley Hobbs 60 4.00 35 



Rainbow 50 3.00 25 



Safrano 50 3.00 25 



Souv. de Pierre Notting 50 3.00 27 



HYBRID TEAS. 



Killarney (Pink) 60 4.50 40 



Lady Plrrle 60 4.50 40 



Mme. Caroline Testout 75 5.00 45 



Mme. P. Euler 60 4.50 40 



Mme. Valere Beaumez..". 60 4.00 35 



My Maryland 75 6.00 50 



Ophelia 1.50 10.00 00 



Pres. Taf t 60 4.0O 35 



Prince E. C. d'Arenberg 75 5.00 40 



Radiance 60 4.50 35 



Rena Robblns 60 4.50 40 



Robin Hood 60 4.50 40 



Souy. de Pres. Carnot 50 3.50 30 



Striped La France 50 3.50 30 



Sunburst 75 6.00 65 



White Killarney 60 5.00 45 



BOURBON. 



Souv. de la Malmalson 50 3.50 30 



StronK one-year plants from 

 2>«-incb pots. 



i@£04R6 



POLYANTHA OR FAIRY. 



Doz. 100 1000 



Mile. Cedle Brunner $0.60 $4.00 $35 



Mignonette c«.SO 3.00 25 



Paquerette • .50 3.00 25 



HYBRID POLYANTHA. "^ \j 



Gruss an Aachen (New Yellow) . . 1.00 7.00 60 



f 

 BABY OR DWARF POLYANTHA. 



Aennchen Mueller (Pink) 50 3.00 27 



Baby Tausendschoen 60 4.50 40 



Catherine Zelmet (White) 50 3.50 30 



Jeanne d'Arc (White Baby) 50 3.00 27 



Jessie (Scarlet Baby)... 60 4.00 35 



Louise Welter 60 4.50 40 



Mrs. Taf t (Red Baby) 60 4.00 35 



Orleans (Pink Baby) 60 3.50 30 



Phyllis (Pink Baby) 60 3.50 30 



Sunshine (Yellow Baby) 1.00 7.00 60 



HYBRID RUGOSA. 



New Century (Pink) 00 4.00 35 



Sir Thomas Lftton (White) 60 4.00 35 



CLIMBING POLYANTHA OR RAMBLERS. 



Aglala (Yellow Rambler) 50 3.00 25 



Bordeaux 50 3.00 25 



Climbing Baby Rambler 60 4.00 .SS 



Crimson Rambler 50 3.00 25 



Flower of Fairfield 50 3.00 25 



Graf Zeppelin 60 3.50 30 



Keystone 60 4.00 35 



Kom W. Rautenstrauch 60 4.00 85 



Miss G. Messmann 60 4.00 .SR 



Philadelphia Crimson Rambler.. . .50 3.00 25 



Tausendschoen 50 3.50 30 



Trier 50 3.00 25 



Mention The ReTlew when yoo writ*. 



CLIMBING HYBRID POLYANTHA. 



Doz. 100 1000 

 Climbing Clothllde Soupert. $0.50 $3.0<) $25 



SETIGERA OR PRAIRIE. 



Baltimore Belle 50 



Prairie Queen '. 50 



Tennessee Belle .' .50 



GrevUle 



MULTIFLORA. 

 (Seven Sisters) 



.50 



CLIMBING CHINA OR BENGAL, 



Empress of China '. 50 



James Sprunt 50 



HYBRID WICHURIANA. 



Carisslma 50 



Excelsa (Red Dorothy) 50 



Manda's Triumph 50 



Shower of Gold 60 



Silver Moon 50 



Sweetheart 50 



White Dorothy Perkins 50 



CLIMBING HYBRID TEA. 

 Mme. C. Testout 50 



CLIMBING HYBRID NOISETTE. 



4.50 40 



Mme. Wagram (Cl'g P. Neyron) . 



.50 3.00 27 



CLIMBING TEAS. 



Chromatella (Cloth of Gold) !50 3 



Climbing White M. Cochet 50 3 



Pillar of GoW: .w 3. 



Reve d'Or (Ci'g Si^^ano) 50 3. 



CLIMBlNd-NOISETTES. 



Lamarque 50 3. 



Marechal NIel 50 Z. 



Solfatare 50 3! 



On ovm roots; 

 summer grown; winter rested. 



detrimental. If a good watering is 

 given immediately after they are 

 planted, which will settle the soil about 

 the roots, and a mulching is applied, 

 little water will be needed for some 

 time by the roots, but it is an excellent 

 practice to spray them overhead fre- 

 quently. This keeps the wood moist 

 and greatly assists the buds to develop. 

 "Many beautiful American shrubs 

 are notoriously fond of peat and if the 

 conditions are not naturally favorable 

 for their cultivation, liberal additions 

 of this material should be incorporated 

 when preparing the ground, if it can be 

 obtained. Peat, however, is not always 

 available, neither is it absolutely neces- 

 sary, for many peat-loving subjects will 

 succeed admirably in a mixture of 

 fibrous loam, decayed leaf-mold and 

 sand. 



Pruning. 



"The pruning of hardy shrubs is one 

 of the most important matters con- 

 nected with them, but at present it is 

 imperfectly understood and we see far 

 too often the lamentable results accru- 

 ing from a lack of knowledge of their 

 individual requirements. All that is 

 generally considered necessary is for 

 an incompetent workman to give the 

 shrubs an annual trimming with a pair 

 of shears, with the result that when the 

 work is finished the shrubs all have 

 about the same rounded, stiff «.ppear- 

 ance, much of the old growth which 

 should have been removed is left and 

 forms a mass of useless growth and the 

 young wood, which should be carefully 

 preserved for future blossom, is cut 

 away. It is not possible to lay down 

 any hard and fast rule, as shrubs differ 

 80 much in their individual require- 

 ments, but it is better not to prune at 

 all than to prune indiscriminately. The 

 large majority of flowering shrubs pro- 

 duce their blossoms during the spring 

 and summer months and some of these, 

 such as the philadelphus, deutzias and 

 forsythias, which produce their flowers 

 OJI ^Wood of the previous season's 



NURSERY STOCK for Florists' Trade 



Fruit Trees, Ornamental Trees. Shrubs, Small Fruits, 

 Roses, Clematis, Peonies, Herbaceous Plants. ..... 



Write for our wholesale trade list. 



W. & T. SMITH CO., - - GENEVA, N. Y. 



68 YEARS - 1000 ACRES 



Maatlqe Th« Brlgw whca yog write. 



Bobbink & Atkins 



NURSKRVIIKN. 

 FLOMSTS ami PIANTERS 



ROTHERrORD. HEW JERSEY 



August Rdlker & Sons 



General Horticultural Importers 



for the trade only. Send for estimates or 

 price list to 



51 BARCLAY ST., NEW YORK 



or P. O. Box 782 



ROSES-CAIOUS 



CONARD A, JONES CO. 

 West Oravo. Pa. ' 



growth, are improved by having some 

 of the flowering stems cut clear out as 

 soon as the blossoms have fallen. This 

 will help to strengthen the new growths 

 sent out from the base and give them a 

 better opportunity of becoming well 

 ripened before winter sets in. The 

 majority of hardy shrubs, however, re- 

 quire little pruning beyond occasion- 

 ally removing the old growth so as to 

 keep them shapely and open, to enable 

 them to receive the full benefit of the 

 sun and air." 



IRIS Surplus List Ready 



Sprinir shipment 



PETERSON NURSERY 



so N. La Salle St.. CHICAGO 



Mcntloo The lUTlew when y<f writ*. 



The Storrs & Harrison Co. 



PAINESVILLC NURSERIES 



Nurserymen, Florists and Seedsmen 



PAINESVIIiLE, OHIO 



Mention The ReTlew when ynp writ». 



HILL'S EVERGREENS 



Be«t for OT«r Half a Oentruy. Firs, Spmca, 

 PlDM, Junipers, Arborrltaea, Tewa, In smali 

 and large Hxea. Price List Now Ready. 



THE D. HILL NURSKRY CO.. 



Evergraen Spedalisto. LarveitGrowen in America 

 Box 403. Dumloo. IIL 



MantloB Tb» Review whea yea write. 

 MTLWAUEEC 



The Market. 



The market last week remained 

 steady. Of course the price of flowers, 

 especially carnations, dropped some- 

 what after Mothers' day, but stock 

 was not overabundant and the prices 

 did not go below a fairly good aver- 

 age. Stock, with but few exceptions, 



