' ;';W!V.'';'' i- Jww.;; 



48 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



Apbil 16, 1908. 



tick; J. W. Adams & Co., Springfield; 

 H. W, Field, Northampton; Peirce 

 Bros., Waltham; William Sim, Clifton- 

 dale; F. B. Fierson Co., Tarrytown; S. 

 J. Goddard, Framingham; H. H. Sogers. 

 This exhibit will be open to students 

 and townspeople and should have con- 

 siderable educational value. The col- 

 lege will pay express charges if any 

 others care to send exhibits. 



The trustees of the college are ask- 

 ing for a legislative appropriation of 

 $34,000 for a new range of greenhouses 

 of modern commercial type, with an at- 

 tached teaching building for use of the 

 floricultural department. It is not the 

 intention of the college to engage in 

 commercial floriculture, but a new 

 range, adapted to giving the students 

 up-to-date instruction in methods of 

 growing cut flowers for the trade, is 

 badly needed. It is expected to build 

 an instruction building costing about 

 $15,000. This will contain a large lab- 

 oratory and workroom to accommo- 

 date at least fifty men at one time, a 

 classroom for 100 men, smaller class- 

 rooms, office, and a room for the exhi- 

 bition of material used in greenhouse 

 construction. The basement will con- 

 tain a soil and fertilizer room, a cool 

 room for bulbs, and rooms for storage 

 of pots and implements. 



The greenhouse range as now planned 

 will consist of a palm house 30x40 on 

 the east end of the general workroom. 

 From the south side of this workroom 

 a house 12x180 will run directly s»uth. 

 This will be used for propagation and 

 for general plants. On the east and 

 west sides of this low, narrow house 

 the special houses of the range will be 

 built. This will provide for a full 

 southern exposure for each house. The 

 range as planned includes a students' 

 house for special student work, 30x50, 

 violet house 24x50, chrysanthemum and 

 bedding-plant house 24x50, lettuce 

 house 24x50. These will be even-span 

 houses. The range will also include a 

 rose house 24x50, a carnation house, 

 cucumber house and tomato house, each 

 of the same dimensions. These will be 

 three-quarter-span houses. This range 

 will be built as durably as possible, 

 with iron frame and cement foundation 

 tmd benches. 



Results bring advertising. 

 The Eeview brings results. 



Groses, own roots^ 



2^-inch pots, summer propagated. 

 500 at 1000 rate. 

 S3.00 *er 100; $25.00 $3.00 ler 100; $27.50 

 »er 1000. per 1000. 



Baby Rambler Maman Coobet 



Clotbllde Soupert Wlilte Cochet 



Mme. Cecile Berthod Tellow^ Cocbet 



Snowflake Helen GoiUd 



Safrano Bessie Brown 



Mosella Caimbing: Kaiserin 



Coquette de Lyon Cnimbins: Meteor 



Isabella Sprunt Meteor 



Marie Van Houtte Malmaison 



Tbe Bride Papa Gontier 



Bon Silene Wlilte Boueere 



Cbatenay Gruss an Teplltz 



Dnchess de Brabant Hermosa 



Queen's Scarlet 

 Crimson Rambler 



Lady Gay 



$3.50 per 100. 



$3 SO per 100; $30.00 Sunrise 



per 1000. 

 Kaiserin 



Perle cies Jardins 

 Maxnafrano 

 Paul Neyron 



Etoile de France 

 Joe HiU, per 100. $4 00 

 Helen (Jood, " 5 00 

 Baby Rambler, in 



bud and bloom. 4-in. 



8trlped B. M.Henriette pots, $8.00 per 100 

 Wbltmani Ferns, 4-in., $10.00 per 100. 



\jmn A. DOYLE, SpriiigfleU, Olilo. 



Mention The Rerlew when jron write. 



•-■K."*'- 



60,000 

 GRAFTED ROSES 



Chatenay, Killarney, Richmond, Liberty, La France, 



in rose pots, $16.00 per 100; 3X-in. pots, $18.00 per 100. 



Bride, Bridesmaid, Golden Gate, Kaiserin, in rose 

 pots, $10.00 per 100; 3>^-in. pots, $16.00 per 100. 



OWN ROOT ROSES, 3-in. pots, $9.00 and $7.00 per 100. 



Orders Received for Early Delivery. 

 Send for Circulars of VERBENA and CARNATION CUTTINGS. 



J. L. DILLON, Bloomsburg, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



GRAFTED ROSES 



FOR FORCING 



BRIDE 



BRIDESMAID 



KAISERIN 



KILLARNEY 



RICHMOND 



WELLESLEY 



$12 per hundred. $100 per thousand 



JACKSON & PERKINS COMPANY 



Wholesale Florists and Nurserymen 



NEWARK, WAYNE COUNTY, NEW YORK 



Mention The ReTlew when yoo write. 



Tausendschon 



or in EDcrlish Thousand Beauties, Is the sensational new Climbing Rose 

 of the year. Every florist should have it. It is not excelled lor forcing pur- 

 poses and for general planting by any Climbing Rose now known, not even 

 baninB: Crimson Rambler. This is the coming forcing Rose. Get your 

 stock early. It is beautifully illustrated in ten colors and gold in Our Ne'w 

 Ouide to Rose Culture for 1908, the Leading Rose Catalogue of America. 

 Copy free for the asking. 



Strons plants of Tausendsobon from S-lnch pots, 

 10 for $1.50; $12.00 per 100; $100.00 per 1000. 



THE DINGEE & CONARD CO., '^^^'p^^o^^- 



ROSES ""W"'^ 



Crimson Bambler, extra strong, $6.00 per 100. 



Dorothy Perking, Baltimore Belle, Qneen of 

 Prairie, Pink, White, Yellow Ramblers, etc., 

 $.5.00 per 100. H . P. Boses and Baby Ramblers, 



$8.00 per 100. 



GILBERT GOSTICH, ROCHESTER, N,Y, 



SCRAMBLER ROSE i? 



— NEWPORT FAIRY... ^ 



To be disseminated Spring 1008. 

 Ask for illustrated pamphlet and prloes. 



JULIUS ROEHRS CO., 



RUTHKRFORD, N. J. 



Always Mention the. 



Florists' Review 



When Writing Advertisers 



