Jantjart 23, 1008. 



The Weekly Florists* Review. 



33 



Chrysanthemums "nXs 



The undermentioned are all fine, clean rooted cuttings, entirely free from rust, and are many of the leading English grown varieties. 

 Carefully packed in moss and orders dispatched in rotation. Orders are now being booked for delivery March and onward to planting 

 season, so order at once and secure the best of the leading sorts. Prices will be quoted for any other varieties not given below. liCRMS: 

 Casli with order. 



HnTC TUC DDIPCQi Itoot^ cuttings, $7.00 per 1000) Per goods carriage paid to nearest port. 



nillL inC rilluCO(Rooted Cuttlnrs, 1.00 per 100 /Per post, postage paid. 



KlTens White 



L>lKBle Adcook Yellow 



gollel d'Octobre ...Yellow 



luintna White 



nlntua Pink 



laeen of Kx« White 



oeen of Exe Pink 



neen of Exe Yellow 



onnaffon ....Bronze 



Tuxedo Bronze 



Petite Ami White 



"W. H. Lincoln Yellow 



A. J. Balfour Pink 



Carrie Yellow 



Ooaoher's Crimson ....Crimson 



Oolden Standard Yellow 



Nellie Pockett White 



Source d'Or Bronze 



Triumpbant Yellow 



J. E. Laicer Yellow 



L.ady Selborne White 



Harry Parr Yellow 



BfroD White 



Mikado Bronze 



Wbite Queen White 



Crimson Bride Crimson 



Wbite Victoria White 



B. MiUer Yellow 



Snnstone..^ Yellow 



Slid or HodKSon Scarlet 



Holmes' White White 



Market Bed Red 



Victoria Yellow 



Brooks' Tellow Yellow 



Mrs. Oreenfield Yellow 



CnllinKf ordii Crimson 



W. H. King White 



M. Camot .....Pink 



Madam RoKers Oreen 



R. H. Pearson Orange 



Niveos Yellow 



Pink Ivory Pink 



Framfield Pink Pink 



Latest of All Wbite 



Hooper Pearson Yellow 



J. C. Cooper Bronze 



Annie Holden Yellow 



Mary Anderson Yellow 



Lilacina Mauve 



Pluice d'Or Yellow 



Bonnie Dundee Yellow 



Globe d'Or Bronze 



Source d'Or Crimson 



N. C. S. Jubilee Mauve 



Market White... ~.. White 



DesKranKe Yellow 



Desgrange White 



Pilan Yellow 



Victor Semoine Bronze 



Lord Brooke Yellow 



Red Canning Red 



Panckoncke Yellow 



W. Holmes Crimson 



Mme. J. Valet White 



Perfection White 



Mrs. W. A. Hobbs Rose 



White Point. Red 



Arthur Creepy Primrose 



Pearlie Pearl 



Wells' Massey Blush 



Orange Massey Orange 



Victor Men White 



Rosie Rose 



Nina Bllck Scarlet 



Dora Bllck Pink 



Champ d'Or Yellow 



Boule de Nelge Yellow 



Janson Crimson 



Blush Beauty Blush 



La Pactole Bronze 



Frankie Golden 



Rabble Bums Rose 



Ryecroft Gold Yellow 



Nivette White 



Caprice du Printempts.-.Pink 



Captain Bellamy Yellow 



C. H. Curtis Yellow 



Dacsler Sc arlet 



Ernest Flerens White 



Eynsford Wbite White 



Kathleen Thompson;. .Crimson 



Mabel Bntler Bronze 



Mile. M. Fabre Pink 



M. Loisean-Bosseau Pink 



Miss Doris Raeburn White 



Miss May Church Orange 



M. Joanny Molin Crimson 



Moneymaker White 



M. Quetier Yellow 



Mrs. Dixon Yellow 



Robert Halliday Yellow 



Saiin Rose Pink 



Sunshine Yellow 



Adonis White 



Crepuscule Amaranth 



Dolly Prince White 



Edmund Duval White 



Flambeau Salmon 



Gertrude Hobbs Crimson 



James Bateman Pink 



JInunie Purple 



Jules Fournier Pink 



Buttercup Yellow 



Gladiator Red 



Heston White White 



Lady Helper White 



Lady Conyers Yellow 



Omega Yellow 



Richness Crimson 



Romance Yellow 



Sir Henry Clifford White 



Thos. Shove White 



True Gold Yellow 



White Bouquet White 



W. J. Crossley Crimson 



Winter Konigen White 



Nymphe Pink 



Mrs. Bailey Wbite 



La Vestale White 



Rol-des*Jannes Yellow 



Roi-d^s-Precoces Crimson 



Lady Mary Hope White 



Harvest Home Yellow 



YeUow Boy Yellow 



GRAND KEW CHRYSANTHEMUM MRS. CHARLES LOWTHIAN BELL 



Unique border and decorative Marsnieilte. Beat yet raised. Produces blooms in abundance 7 Inches across, about 20 inches 

 high. 8 weeks earlier than other sorts. More blooms you cut off the better it blooms. Grand for pot work. Rooted plants, $5.00 per 

 100, delivered. PLEASK ADDRESS IN FUU. 



I W RRflSS Old Grammar School, Wisbech, England 



J I WW I UIIUVll| SPECULTIES: Set4 Pstatsis. Mnsi. Sarin Seeds, Mk* sf tvtry ttntifOm. lead far itt. CaUt: Patataas, Witkach. tw^aai 

 Mention The Review when yon write. 



Lily of the Valley 



MANN'S EXCELSIOR 



Are the flneat in existence and their flowers 

 bring the best prices in the London market. 

 For aaotstlon please apply to , 



OTTO MANN, Leipzig, Saxony, Gemnany 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



materials. It appears from the evidence that 

 these plants at the time of Importation were 

 in a condition to germinate and grow. If the 

 bulb may be used either to plant for flowering 

 purposes or to raise a product Intended for ulti- 

 mate conversion into a Oiug, It can not be said, 

 therefore, to be dutiable under paragraph 548. 



The following view expressed by the Board In 

 Abstract 12933 (T. D. 27636) Is pertinent to 

 this case: 



"Sonae stress Is laid upon the fact that the 

 United States Dispensatory refers to asparagus 

 as having reputed medicinal qualities and to 

 pumpkin seed as furnishing a remedy for tape- 

 worm, but this can not be the test. Many table 

 vegetables, or the plants or seeds producing 

 them, contain medicinal principles and are men- 

 tioned In the Dispensatory, such as lettnce, 

 pelery, potatoes, tomatoes, beans. It would 

 be opposed to common knowledge and sound 

 construction to class such articles as drugs un- 

 less the particular substance imported was of 

 such variety, quality, condition, or stage of 

 growth as to be unfit for Its common use and 

 to be adapted to the uses of the drug trade, 

 inis was true of the celery seed held to be 

 a drug In Clay v. Magone (40 Fed. Rep., 230), 

 which was not In such condition that it could 

 t* sold for planting purposes. We conceive 

 that It might also be true of lettuce after It 

 naa reached the period of Inflorescence, when It 

 [S unfit for food and yields the drug known as 

 laotnearlum." 



The claim that the goods are free Is plainly 

 untenable. 



THE KENTUCKY SEED LAW. 



The annual report of M. A. Seovell, 

 ■lirector of the Kentucky Agricultural 

 Experiment Station, was filed with Gov. 

 Willson January 13. Several recom- 

 mendations which will give the station 



DAHLIAS 



Awarded 100 

 Gold Medals 



during the last ten 

 years. 



POT ROOTS 



POST FRKK 

 TERMS. 



POT ROOTS FOR SHIPMEIT AT ONCE f.-;^ «&T Sfdil'^a^S^FnXl^St^i^SJS 



100 in 25 sorts. Better and newer kinds at $8.00 and SltOO per 1(X). These are post free 

 terms. Note this when comparing prices. Terms cash with order. 



TFUPTINR RARfiimC Those who prefer to have their goods carriage forward through a 

 I LMI I inu unnilflllf « forwarding house instead of by parcels post can be supplied in 



every section, including Cactus, Show, Fancy, Pompon, Single, etc., at $4.00, $5.00 and 



$6.00 per 100 in 25 sorts. 



19 CFFnillifi niPTIIQ niUI IIQ -A.H 1905 sorts and certificated by the Dahlia Societies 

 iZ ObCULIRQ UMUIUO UHIILIAO in England; post free for $2.50— Alexander, Antelope, 

 Alf. Morgan, Charm, Comet, Fairy, Cockatoo, Harbor Light, Jeannettc, Nero, Rosy Morn 



and W 



1' 



Dickson 



IQflfi CFPDI lllfi ftlPTIIQ mill IIQ ^ ''Ar^ opporttmity: only a few to ofTcr. One each 

 ISUD OCCULIilD llAbiUO UAIILIAd of the following 12 kinds post free for $.3.00 -Daisy, 

 Daisy Laston, Edward Druery, Ivanhoe, Mrs. G. Stevenson. Mrs. MacMillan, Mrs. S. Gas- 

 kill, Pink Perfection, Primrose, Silver Wings, Victoria and W. Marshall. 



I on? CFFni IMC PArTIIC nAUl IAC one each of the following new varieties, which have 

 loUf OCCULIilD liAblUO UAnLIAO been awarded, post free for $4.00— Queenie, Wil- 

 liamsonii. Queen of Norway and Rev. C. Digby. 



PFnHY PI nWFRFfl niUI liC (New.) Duke Henry, Germania, Queen Emma and Queen 

 rCUm-rLUITCnCU UAIILIAO Wimelmlna, pot roots. $10.00 per 100, post free. 



Terms cash with order. Catalogue free on application. 



HOBBIES LIMITEO -- Norfolk Nurseries -- DEREHAM, EN6. 



LONDON DEPOT, 17, Broad Street Place, E. C. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



greater power in regulating the sale 

 of seeds, so as to prevent their adultera- 

 tion, are made by Mr. Seovell. His 

 report is as follows: 



An act to prevent the adulteration, mixing 

 and misbranding of orchard grass seed and other 

 seeds, and fixing a punishment therefor, approved 

 March 22, 1904, and amendment thereto made 

 by the Legislature In Its session of 1906, re- 

 quires the Director of the Kentucky Agricultural 

 Experiment Station to enforce Its proTlsions. 



Section 2 of the above act provides that the 

 Director of the Kentucky Agricultural Experi- 

 ment Station is required to make, or cause to be 

 made, under rules and regulations to be pre- 

 scribed by him, examinations of specimens of 

 seeds of orchard grass, Kentucky bluegrass, red 

 clover, mammoth clover or alfalfa (and the 



LARGK8T STOCK OV ALL 



BELGIAN PLANTS! 



Asaleaa, Araneariaa, Sweet Bays* 

 Palma, Begonias, Oloxiniast etc. 



LOUS VAN HOUTTE PERE 



GHENT, Belirium. 



amendment thereto of timothy), offered for sale, 

 which may be collected from time to time In 

 various parts of the State and report violations 

 thereof to the various Commonwealth Attorneys. 

 Under the direction of Professor Garman, En- 

 tomologist and Botanist of the Station, 1,498 



