"•V 



Febbuabt 28, 1907. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review. 



IJ27 



V, 



Forcing Plants 



Azaleas 

 Rhododendrons 

 Lilac Rubra de Marley 

 DeuUia Gracilis 

 Oimson Rambler 

 Magna Charta Rose 

 General Jacq. Rose 



Pyramidal Box Trees, 4-5 feet. Barberry Thunbergii 



Nursery Stock ^"t"" Florists 

 Trees, Shrubs, Roses, Clematis, Evergreens 



Scmd lor our wholesale trade list. 



W. & T. Smith Co., Geneva, N. Y. 



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BERBERiS THUNBERGII 



12-18-inch $6.00 per 100; $50.00 per 1000 



18-24-lDCh 8 00 per 100; 70.00 per 1000 



CAROLINA POPLARS 



$-10 feet $10.00 per 100; $80.00 per 1000 



10-12 feet 12.50 per 100; 100.00 per 1000 



Large stock and fine stuil. Sure to please. 

 Bend for price list of general stock. 



Anrora Nuraery Co.* Aurora* 111. 



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American White Elm 



Extra fine nursery-grown, by car-load lots. 



5000 2 to 2>^ inches diameter $80.00 per 100 



2000 2}^ to 3 inches diameter 100.00 per 100 



8000 3 to 3>i inches diameter 150.00 per 100 



500 8>^ to 4 inches diameter 175.00 per 100 



CHAS. HAWKINSON NURSERY 



KZCKL8IOR, MINN. 



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PEONIES 



Fine collection, all colors named, $1.50 per doz.; 



$10.00 per 100. 

 Clematla, large flowering, $2.50 per doz. 

 Clematis Panlcnlata, $1.00 per doz.; $8.00 per 



100. 

 Smllax, fall- sown, nice plants, $3.00 per lUOO, 

 Fauslea, transplanted from fall, fine plants, 



leaulng strains, $1 25 per 100; $10 00 per lUOO. 



F. A. BALLER, Bloominston, 111. 



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light mold and covered thinly. The 

 young seedlings need protecting by lath 

 shades or screens during the hot, dry 

 weather and should be kept moist but 

 not wet. Pinus Strobus, if soaked in 

 warm water for twenty-four hours be- 

 fore sowing, will germinate much quick- 

 er and more readily. 



The piceas, of which the blue spruce 

 is a representative, are chiefly increased 

 by seed sowing. The seed, if kept cool 

 during winter, can be sown early in 

 spring in beds outdoors or in cold- 

 frames. Seedlings will need the lath 

 screen protection afforded other coni- 

 ferae. The rarer sorts, like P. pungens, 

 are usually propagated by grafting on 

 Picea alba or excelsa, also by layering. 

 The stocks are potted up and kept close 

 and moist until established, usually in 

 late summer. They are then gradually 

 hardened. The grafting is done in the 

 greenhouse from January to March. 

 Veneer grafting is best where stock and 

 scion are of equal size, but side graft- 

 ing may also be done with success. Wax 

 the grafts over thoroughly, place in a 

 close frame and syringe freely until well 

 started. Gradually harden off. Picea 

 pungens seedlings are less desirable than 

 grafted plants, as they lack the beauti- 

 ful blue color and are more weedy in 

 habit. 



The various abies, of which A. pecti- 

 nata, silver fir; A. balsamea, balsam fir; 

 A. Nordmanniana, A. concolor, white fir; 

 A. Pinsapo, Spanish fir; and A. Fraseri 

 are well-known varieties, can be propa- 

 gated by either seed sowing or graft- 



20,000 LARGE 



CALIFORNIA PRIVET 



6 to 6 feet, $6.00 per 100; $50.00 per 1000. 

 6 to 7 feet, 9.00 per 100; 75.00 per 1000. 



It is bright and haadsome. I offer it at these low prices because 

 it is upon land that must be cleared at once. Speak quickly. 



J T. LOVETT, LITTLE SILVER, N.J. 



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American Beauty, Clothilde Soupert, Gloire de Dijon, 

 Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, La France, Mme. Caroline 

 Testout, Frau Karl Druschki, Crimson Rambler, Baby 

 Rambler, Dorothy Perkins, etc., SUITABLE FOR FORCING. 



ROSES 



STRONG DORMANT PUNTS 

 Immediate Delivery. Prices Rig^ht. General Catalog and Price Lists ready. 



Bay State Nurseries, North Abington, Mass. 



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47,960 Low Badded Roses in 26 Varieties 



I offer for February delivery from my cellars here, the entire Surplus Roses grown by the 

 Heikes-Biloxi Nurseries. No. 1, $95 00 per 1000; No. 1%. $65.00 per 1000. 



Privet CuttliiK*! tl.25 per 1000; 10,000 for $10.00. Correspondence solicited. 



HIRAM T. JONES, Union County Nursorles, ELIZABETH, N. J. 



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LARGE STOCK OP 



Peonies, M. L Rhubarb, 

 Lucretia Dewberry 



—For prices write— 



GILBERT H. WILD, Sarcoxie, Mo. 



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ing. The latter process is more easy 

 than in the case of Picea pungens. In 

 the case of juniperus, seeds do not 

 germinate until the second or third year. 

 Grafting and root cuttings are all used 

 as methods of increasing stock. Cuttings 

 should be of wood nearly mature, in a 

 frame or greenhouse. Layering may also 

 be resorted to. C. 



SHRUBS FOR A SUCCESSION. 



The importance of obtaining a suc- 

 cession of bloom in a shrubbery planting 

 scheme has been pointed out by the Na- 

 tional Council of Horticulture. In se- 

 lecting the varieties to produce this there 

 is room for a large variance of choice; 

 tastes will vary ; the climate, soil and the 

 care given the plants should be consid- 



ROSES »" j;^r 



Crimson Bkmblers, extra strong, at $7.00 per 100. 

 Dorothy Perkins, Pink, White and Yellow Ramb- 

 lers, etc., at $5.00 per 100. 

 H. P. Bosea and Baby Bamblera, at $8.00 per 100 



6ILBERTC0STICH,R0CHE$TER,N.Y 



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S.year.old 



4.1noli pota 



P. & W. Cochets and Crimson Rambler, 7c: La France, 

 Meteor, Hermosa and Soupert, 8c; Diesbach, Dins- 

 more, Charta and Laing:, 9c; Gen. Jacqueminot and 

 Paul Neyron, 10c; Marechal Niel, 15c; Baby Ram- 

 bler, 18c. 



101 choice aorta In SH-ln. pota. 



<gf I F F n I F f '■O'^AL COMPANY.^ 



^< H-L LULL \SPRIHQriECDOHtO. J 



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ered. But the following list of twelve 

 shrubs will be found to give good re- 

 sults with little care: 



Forsythia, or golden bell; Cydonia 

 Japonica, or Japan quince; Viburnum 

 OpuliS" streralis, or snowball ; Spiraea Van 

 Houttei, or white spiraea; Lonicera x 

 Tatarica, or upright honeysuckle; Wei- 

 gela rosea, or rose-colored weigela; 



