■-*'*■ •'/^("^•i >:., 



1488 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



Mabch 28, 1907. 



Forcing Plants 



Spiraea Van Houttei 



Azaleas 



Lilac Rubra de Marley 



Detitzia Gracilis 



Ctiaaon Rambler 



Magna darta Rose 



General Jacq* Rose 



Pyramidal Box Trees, 4-5 feet. Barberry Thunbergii 



Nursery Stock ^-r*" Florists 

 Trees, Shrabs, Roses, Clematis, Evergreens 



Send lor our wholesale trade list. 



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



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



ROSE PLANTS. 



c. N. NiurrER, 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Write for prices on Hybrid Per- 

 petuais, Hybrid Teas, Teas* 

 Climbers, Ramblers, etc. 



Springfield, Ohio 



poplar is also suitable for screening ob- 

 jectionable buildings or other objects, 

 because it goes ahead without a halt to 

 do the work expected of it and does it 

 effectively in short order. 



Evergreens. 



Arbor-vitaes make hedges with little or 

 no prompting or gui(Ung, and, when 

 growing ill the form of a hedge, they 

 retain all the characteristics natural and 

 peculiar to the unrestrained plant; and 

 that is more than can be said of most 

 other things used for hedges. 



Colorado blue spruce (Picea pungens 

 glauca) is a fine thing in its specimen 

 stage, and it is surprising how rapidly it 

 gets to that stage after a certain period. 

 It is not so much because this variety is 

 still rare that it is still valuable, and 

 very valuable, but because of the in- 

 creased demand that has to be met by a 

 still somewhat limited supply of certain 

 siz^s. Planted when young, they will 

 grow in time to be worth something. 



CIimbiii£ Roses. 



In the list of available roses for the 

 transformation of ugly fences and the 

 bare walls of sheds and other outbuild- 

 ings into things of beauty, will be found 

 varieties, which, if selected with that end 

 in view, give a long succession of blooms. 

 In connection with such use of roses, 

 should it not strike the commercial man 

 forcibly that one of the best inducements 

 he could offer to purchasers would be the 

 suggestion such an example would be? 

 There are many other ways, akin to the 

 foregoing, by which nurserymen and flo- 

 rists could materially increase their sales. 



Herbaceous Stock. 



The herbaceous or perennial phlox is in 

 the race to stay; it is used in immense 

 quantities in its cut state, and it is also 



Slanted very extensively- in herbaceous 

 orders. 



Peonies overdone? No such thing! 

 The craze has not yet got to its full 

 height. They are only now making a 

 slow, but sure, reentry after a rather 

 long period of modest retirement, which 

 but fitted them for the strenuous time 

 ahead. 



About the easiest thing in the world 

 to handle successfully is the funkia in 

 any variety. If it is desired to increase 

 the stock the plants may be cut up in the 

 spring just as the leaves are beginning 



^^^V ^^ K?^Z^ American Beauty, Clothilde Soapert, Gloire de Dijon, 

 ■i^lB^^F\^^ Kaiserin _Aagasta Victoria, La France, ^me. Caroline 



STRONG DORMANT PUNTS 



Testout, Frau Karl Druschki, Crimson Rambler. Baby 

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



Immediate Delivery. Prieea Rigrlat. General Catalog and Price Lists ready. 



Bay State Nurseries, North Abington, Mass. 



Mention The Berlew when yon write. 



47,960 Low Bndded Roses in 26 Varieties 



I offer lor immediate delivery from my cellarfi here, the entire Surplus Roses grown by the 

 Helkes-Biloxl Nurseries. No. 1. $96.00 per 1000; No. l3^, $65.00 per 1000. 



Privet Cuttlnca, 11.25 per 1000; 10,000 for 110.00. Gorrespondence solicited. 



HIRAM T. JONES, Union County Nursorlos, ELIZABETH, IS. J. 



