'♦.i*' 



66 



The Florists' Review j.^s, ms. 



HILL'S EVERGREENS 



Beat for Over Halt a OentTUT* Fin, Spraee, 

 Pines, Juniper*. Arborrltaes, Tews, In small 

 and lar^e slus. Price Xilst Now Beadr, 



THI D. HILL NURSERY CO- 



Evergreen Si>ecialists. Largest Growers in America 

 Box 40S. Dund««. IIL 



Mention Tbe Berlew wtien Ton write. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AHEBICAN ASSOCIATION OF NtmSERTMEN. 



President, E. S. Welch, Shenandoah, la.; Vice- 

 president, John. Watson, Newark, N. Y.; Secre- 

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

 Peter Youngers, Geneva, Neb. 



Forty-flrst annual meeting, Milwaukee, Wis., 

 June 22 to 24, 1916. 



The T. C. Thurlow's Sons Co., New- 

 buryport, Mass., is holding flower shows 

 at various places in the state. For one 

 week a show was held at the Chalifoux 

 department store, in Lowell. 



The latest news-letter. No. 18, of 

 the federal horticultural board is a list 

 of the hosts on which pests have been 

 found since the organization of the 

 board, together with the names of the 

 pests found thereon, the country of 

 origin, and the number of times re 

 ported. 



Office employees of Chase Bros. Co., 

 Rochester, N. Y., held an outing Satur- 

 day, June 26, which included a 15-mile 

 ride on Lake Canandaigua. After din- 

 ner, at the Canandaigua hotel, the party, 

 which numbered sixty-five, made a trip 

 through Sonnenberg, the estate of Mrs. 

 F. F. Thompson, and made use of the 

 ball grounds there. 



FRENCH APPLE SEED POOR. 



It is stated that as a result of the 

 ' present European war approximately 

 half of the apple seed obtained from 

 France this year has been of inferior 

 quality. The scarcity of workmen, par- 

 ticularly of those experienced in hand- 

 ling the seed, is held to be the prime 

 cause of the low grade of seed received 

 this year. For instance, of the 700 

 employees of the firm handling most of 

 the seed, 400 have been called to the 

 front. 



The seed is procured from crushed 

 apples at the cider mills. If the seed 

 is not extracted soon after the juice 

 is pressed out of the apples, its vitality 

 is impaired. It is thought that the 

 shortage of men resulted in careless- 

 ness in regard to this matter. 



Enough seed has been ordered, how- 

 ever, to enable the apple seedling grow- 

 ers of the Kaw valley, in Kansas, to 

 produce enough seedlings to meet the 

 present demand, and it is believed that 

 there will be no shortage. 



NEW ENGLAND QUARANTINE. 



July 1 there went into effect the new 

 regulations in regard to the quarantine 

 established by the federal horticultural 

 board on account of the gipsy and 

 brown-tail moths. The quarantine cov- 

 .ei-s about half of New England, and 

 affects shipments of the various conif- 

 erous trees, such as spruce, fir, hemlock, 

 pine, juniper and arbor-vitffi, generally 

 designated as Christmas trees; plants, 

 such as holly and laurel, described as 

 Christmas greens; forest-plant prod- 

 ucts, which include various forms of 



iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllillllllllllilllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllic: 



PEONIES and IRIS 



Catalogue Now Ready 



PETERSON NURSERY 



Stock Exchange Buildinsr, 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



OUR GUARANTEE: We will replace with three all plants 



.^__— ^— ^-— — ^^ not proving true to description. 



rilllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllii? 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



NURSERY STOCK for Florists' Trade 



Fruit Trees, Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Small Fruits, 

 Roses, Clematis, Peonies. Herbaceous Plants 



s Write for oar wholesale trade list. 



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



^8 YEARS - 1000 ACRES 



II— tioa The Beview when yoo write. 



HEADQUARTERS 



CALIF0RNI4 rRIVET 



in any Quantity and any size desired. 

 My Privet has more branches than that 

 usually sent out and I grade it better. 



Carloads a specialty. Also 



Amoor River Privet 



Berberis Thunberg^ii 



Well grown and in large supply. 



J. T. LOVETT, 



Ntimiitk Ninery, Little Silfer, N. J. 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



Bobbink & Atkins 



FLOnSTS and PLANTERS 



RDTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY 



MentioB The Reriew when yon write. 



JACKSON & PERIQNS COMPANY 



Wholesale Growers 

 for the Trade 



Trees ud Plants of All Kinds 



Send for List 



NEWARK. .-. .-. NEW YORK 



lumber; and field-grown florists' stock, 

 trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, and other 

 plants and plant products for planting 

 and propagation, "excepting fruit pits, 

 seeds of fruit and ornamental trees and 

 shrubs, field, vegetable and flower 

 seeds, bedding plants and other herba- 

 ceous plants and roots." Coniferous 

 and other evergreen trees are not af- 

 fected by the brown-tail moth regula- 

 tions. 



The territory quarantined for the 



REMEMBER 



I — W IT'S A HARDY PERENNIAL- 



or so-caUed Old-fashioned 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 Doien 

 $6.60 per 100 



Why say more here? Send for our 

 Wholesale Price List of varieties 

 and benefit from the opportunities 

 this affords you. 



Adclraae R. W. CIncaa, Mfr. 



Palisades Nnrsarias, Inc. 



Sparkill, Naw York 



Mention Tlie ReTiew when yon write. 



ROSES 



See ad May 20, or send for stock list. 



^■^si LI-L LULL \spRiworicLDOMio. J 



If entloB TTie Rerlew wlien yon write. 



ROSES-CAMASl 



CONARD & JONES CO. 

 Wast «revs. Pa. 



Mention The R«>t1pw whPn ymi wrtt» 



brown-tail moth is larger than that 

 quarantined for the gipsy moth. It lies 

 between the Atlantic ocean and a line 



A 



