-"X^ AUGUST 18, 1910. 



The Weekly Rorists' Review. 



73 



fRELMBLE 'S SEEDS, SOW NOW!* 



ALTHJEA, Sosea Flore Pleno, Charter's extra double Prize Hollyhocks, as: 

 Crimson, Maroon, Pink, Salmon, White, each Color 



Charter's Engrlish Double, Prize Hollyhocks, Mixed 



ANTIRRHINUM, Majus Qrandiflonim, Oiant Tall Snapdragon, as: Deep-Pink, 

 Scarlet, Striped, White, each Color 



Giant-flowered Tall Snapdragon, in splendid Mixture 



ASPARAGUS, Sprengeri, a special imported fine Strain, 1000 Seeds $1. 



10,000 Seeds $6. 



BEGONIA, Bedding Queen, real pink Wax Begonia 6 Tr. Pkts. $2.50 



£rfordii, fine Bedder, profuse Bloomer, rosy-pink 6 Tr. Pkts. 2.50 



Gracilis Luminosa, with large Scarlet Flowers 6 Tr. Pkts. 2.50 



BELLIS, Perennis Flora Pleno, Double Daisies, large-flowered varieties, fine 



Mixed ; 



BROWALLIA, Speciosa Major, fine winter bloomer 6 Tr. Pkts. $2.50 



CALCEOLARIA, Hybrida, Tigered and Spotted 6 Tr. Pkts. 2.50 



CARNATION, Hardy Garden, the finest double flowered Mixture 



Hardy Garden Dwarf Grenadin, Fiery Scarlet, extra double 



Hardy Garden Early Dwarf Vienna, Mixed, extra double 



CINERARIA, Hybrida Grandiflora, Semi-Dwarf, Mixed 6 Tr. Pkts. $2.50 



Hybrida Grandiflora, Dwarf Hybrids, Mixed 6 Tr. Pkts. 2.50 



CLEMATIS, Faniculata, hardy climber and profuse bloomer 



CYCLAMEN, Fersicum Giganteum, Strain of highest completion. Blood-red, 

 Carmine, Pink, Pure White, Rosa von Marienthal day-break. White with 

 Carmine Eye, each color 1000 Seeds $6. 



The above colors, even mixed 1000 Seeds 5. 



Rooooo, beautiful New Class 1000 Seeds 10. 



Salmoneum, new Salmon color, very striking 1000 Seeds 8. 



Victoria, new Fringed variety, very showv ,1000 Seeds 10. 



DRACAENA, (Cordyline) Australis, Cleaned Seed 



Indivisa and Lineata, Cleaned Seed, each separate 



FORGET-ME-NOTS, (Myoaotit) , Robusta Grandiflora Blue 



Victoria, Blue, best for pots ' 



Winter Queen, for greenhouse use only 



MIGNONETTE. New York Market, for greenhouse 



Zangen's Triumph, large flowered, new, fine for greenhouse 



FANSIES, Special Cemetery Mixture 



Special Florists' Mixture 



Bugnot's Oiant, very showy colors 



Cassier's Giant, Improved Mixture 



Caasier'a Giant, Yellow-Grounded, best of all 



Cassier's Giant, White-Grounded, best of all 



Trimardeau Giant, Elite Mixture 



Giant-Flowered Varieties: Lord Beaconsfield, Black King, Emperor William, 

 Golden Yellow, Pure Yellow with black eye. Purple, Pure-White, each 



color 



FINKS, Hardy Garden, Double Dwarf Early, mixed 6 Tr. Pkts. $2.50 



PRIMULA, Chinensis. Giant Flowered, Fringed, mixed 1000 Seeds 1.50 



STOCKS, Frinceas Alice, Pure White selected Strain for Greenhouse use 



Giant-Perfection, Snow- White, fine for Cut 



Beauty of Nice: Carmine^ per <». $3. Day-break Fink, per oz. $3. Rosy-Lilac, 

 per oz. $3. Snow- White, per oz. $3 



Fink and White Column, very fine for cut, each Color 



SWEET FEA8, Christflias, White and Pink, each Lb. $1.00 



Earliest of All, Pink and White Selected Strain Lb. .50 



Mont Blanc, Pure White, Selected Strain Lb. .50 



SWEET WILLIAM, Dwarf Growing, double in finest Mixture 



Large Flowered, double. Mixed tall sorts 



VINCA ROSEA, as: Pink, Pure White, White with Eye. each Color 



Mixed Colors 



WALLFLOWER, Double Dwarf Bush, Dark Brown 



Single Dwarf Bush. Dark Brown 



Doubled Flowered Mixture 



Single Flowered Mixture 



0. V. ZANGEN, Seedsman, Hoboken, N. J. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



botanically, and the general climatic 

 ..^./"■JBid soil coDditions requisite for the best 

 •levelopment of the two are very sim- 

 ilar, says W. W. Tracy, in his mono- 

 graph on seed growing just published 

 by the Department of Agriculture. Peas 

 require for their most profitable de- 

 velopment a cool, moist climate, and 

 they cannot be profitably grown in a 

 hot, dry one, or where there is a lia- 

 bility of such conditions occurring for 

 even a few consecutive days. Clear, 

 bright weather, free from drerMTBlng 

 rains, is essential to the ripening; and 

 curing of the seed. It not infrequently 

 happens that because of wet and catchy 



weather at harvest time the seedsman 

 fails to get any usable seed from fields 

 of peas which had given promise of a 

 large yield. 



Trhe sections where seed peas can be 

 profitably grown are still further lim- 

 ited by liability to injury from the pea 

 weevil. Injury from this insect is less 

 common north of latitude 42 to 43 de- 

 grees than farther south, and crops 

 grown on clay soils, particularly if they 

 be near large bodies of water, suffer 

 less than those grown on sandy soils. 

 For these reasons the growing of seed 

 peas in America is generally confined 

 to the sections bordering on the Great 



I*akes and to a few locations in Wash- 

 ington, Oregon and northern California, 

 where the climatic conditions are fa- 

 vorable. 



There is no garden vegetable in which 

 uniformity in habit of growth and in 

 maturing of the fruit in all the plants 

 of a culture (a single planting of the 

 same sort) is of greater importance than 

 with green peas. The character of the 

 plant and the cultural methods com- 

 monly employed in growing it are such 

 that the gathering of the first one or 

 two pickings of green pods is likely to 

 so check the growth of the plants that 

 the later maturing pods aye decidedly 



