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60 



The Weekly Rofists' Review* 



Max 5, 1910. 



AROSE 



For every greenhouse 



GRAFTED ROSES 



White Killarney, My Maryland, Pink 



Kiilarney, Richmond. 



Rose pots $15.00 per 100 



SViiich pots 18.00 per 100 



Brides, Bridesmaids, La France, 

 Kaiserin. 



Rose pots tlO.OO per 100 



3^-inch pots 15.00 per 100 



OWN ROOT ROSES 



White Killarney, My Maryland, Richmond, 

 Pink Killarney, American Beauty. 



3-inch pots I 9.00 per 100 



4-inch pots l-'.OO per 100 



Brides, Bridesmaids, Perles, Chatenay, 

 Kaiserin. 



3-inch pots $ 7.00 per 100 



4-inch pots 10.00 per 100 



We will have large quantities of Ameri- 

 can Beauty rose plants of the best (juality 

 for Spring Delivery. 



Verbena and Coleus Plants, ready for 

 shipment, 120.00 per 1000. 



Send For Circulars. 



J. L. DILLON, Bloomsburg, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



ROSESl ROSES! 



We offer for immediate delivery the follow- 

 ing Roses on own roots, dormant, field-grown 

 plants, lirst-class in every way : 



1000 Helen Qould (Balduin) . . . .|0.12 



300 Pink Baby Ramblers .12 



500 Newport Fairy 12 



1000 Dorothy Perkins 12 



2000 Tausendschon 20 



Also a limited number of dormant, field- 

 grown plants, own roots, of the following 

 Roses AT 12c Each : 



Sweetheart, Lady Gay, Debutante, 



Trier, La Flamma, Hiawatha, 



Taunus Blumchen 



Clematis Paniculata, field-grown, 1-year, 5c. 



Clematis Paniculata, fiel<l-grown, 2-year, 8c. 



Hydrangea Paniculata Grandiflora, 18 to 



24-in., 6c. 

 Hydrangea Paniculata Grandiflora, 2 to 3 



ft., 9c. 

 Viburnum Plicatum, 2 to 3 ft., l'2c. 

 Chinese Sacred Lilies, $3.00 per 100; $25.00 

 per 1000. 

 As a work of reference, our catalogue is 

 almost indispensable and was produceti at a 

 cost of $10,000. FREE to all who ask for it. 

 Write todiay. 



THE DINGEE&CONARD CO. 



West Grove, Pennaylvanla 



MentioD The Review when you write. 



OF 

 ROSES 



Bench Plants 



Beauties, $50.00 per 1000. 

 Ridunondt 130.00 per 1000. 



GEORGE REINBERG, 



51 Wabaali Avenue, CHICAGO 



CHAS. D. BALL 



PGBOWKR OV 

 ALMS, ETC. 



Send for Price List 



H0LMESBUR6. PHILADELPHIA. PA. 



Mention The Review when you writa 



rather poor, owing to severe winter and 

 late frosts. Demand promises strong. 

 We have more orders on our books than 

 ever before. 



H. M. Simpson & Sons, Vincennes, Ind. 



The spring has been so short that sales 

 were not up to the usual amount. With 

 us the fall business is always much 

 greater and we really had little to offer 

 for spring. We grow cherry mostly and 

 noticed that the Montmorency had an 

 exceptionally strong call — more than we 

 could furnish from our own stock. Col- 

 lections are coming pretty fair and we 

 hope for a good clean-up. 



For fall we expect to have our usual 

 supply of first-class trees, planting about 

 the same or possibly a little more on all 

 lines at this point. 



Ugenfritz' Sons Co., Monroe, Mich. 



We have handled the largest volume of 

 business this spring that we have ever 

 shipped in one season. Sales have been 

 particularly large in apple, cherry and 

 peach, together with a general assort- 

 ment of other fruit stock and orna- 

 mentals. Prospects are unusually favor- 

 able for the coming season's business. 



D. Hill, Dundee, 111. 



This season is surely a most peculiar 

 one, and the warm weather in the early 

 part of April cut short our season some- 

 what. There has been a heavy demand 

 for evergreens and other ornamentals this 

 season and some lines were quite short. 

 However, the season will undoubtedly 

 wind up satisfactorily. 



Stark Bros., Louisiana, Mo. 



Business with us has been good and, 

 although we had a much larger stock 

 than usual to dispose of this season, we 

 are sold close on everything. As to vol- 

 ume of business, this season is the largest 

 in our history, and with us the most satis- 

 factory in every respect. The season here 

 o.pened up unusually early and for a while 

 it looked as though we would have a large 

 surplus, but the season was lengthened 

 out far beyond our expectation. 



Jewell Nursery G>., Lake City, Minn. 



Our business this spring has been some- 

 what heavier than a year ago. The most 

 important feature of it has been the ex- 

 tremely early season. May 1 we find 

 ourselves fully two weeks ahead in the 

 amount of work done at the same date 

 last year. There has been considerable 

 damage here to young stock by the cold 

 wave of the last weeks, but not as much 

 as appeared at the time. The demand for 

 fruit stock has never been so great as 

 this year, caused principally by the enor- 

 mous planting going on from Montana to 

 the Pacific. 



C M. Hobbs & Sons, Bridgeport, Ind. 



Our business consists largely of fruit 

 and ornamental trees and plants. We 

 grow and handle large quantities of orna- 

 mental shrubs and perennials. The ship- 

 ping season opened unusually early and 

 warm, crowding our shipping beyond any- 

 thing we have ever known before. We 

 have had an extremely satisfactory vol- 

 ume of spring business and will clean up 

 closer than usual. Planting is mostly 

 done and stock is starting off well. 



PETERSON WOODS FOR PARK. 



When the sanitary district of Chi- 

 cago was seeking a right of way through 

 the Peterson Nursery for its north canal, 



ROSES 



PLENTY 



IF YOU ORDER THESE VARIETIES 



Teas 



. 2i2-in. 



Doz. 100 



BouKere , iW.50 



Bridesmaid 50 



Catlierlne Mei-met 50 



Christine de Noue 50 



Coquette de Lyon 50 



Devoniensls 50 



Oolden Gate 50 



Isabella Sprunt 50 



Madame Lombard .5» I 



Mile. Franzlsca Kruger 60 



Maman Cochet, Pink 5(1 



Marie GuUlot 50 



Marie Louise 50 



Marie van Houtte 50 



Papa Gontler 50 



Souv. de Pierre Netting 5(1 



The Bride 50 



Tlie Queen 50 



White Bougere ivt 



White Maman Cochet .50 



Hybrid Teas 



Blumensclimldt 50 



Cherry Ripe .50 



Helen Gould (Balduin) 50 



Jacob's Perle .50 



Killarney 00 



Kaiserin Augusta Victoria .50 



La Detroit 50 



Mme. Jenny Guillemot 50 



Mile. Helene Gambler 50 



Meteor 50 



My Maryland 1.00 



KheaReld CO 



Striped La France 50 



Wellesley 50 



Hybrid Perpetuals 



Ame rican Beauty 



Anna de Dlesbacb 



Ball of Snow 



Clio 



Cotjuette des Alpes 



Dinsmore 



Frau Karl Druschkl 1 



Giant of Battles 



Glolre Lyonnaise 



Jubilee 



La Reine 



Madame Charles Wood 



Madame Masson 



Madame Plan tier 



Magna Charts 



Paul Neyron 



Ulrich Brunner 



Vlck's Caprice 



.*> 

 .50 

 .50 

 .50 

 .50 

 .60 

 .00 

 .50 

 .50 

 .60 

 .60 

 .60 

 .50 

 ..50 

 ..50 

 .50 

 .75 

 .60 



Climbers 



Climbing Soupert 50 



Climbing Devoniensls. 50 



Climbing Meteor 50 



Cloth of Gold 50 



Empress of China 50 



James Sprunt SO 



Lamarque 50 



Marechal Nlel — 50 



Mary Washington 50 



Reine Marie Henriett« 50 



Solfatare 50 



Hardy Climbers 



Baltimore Belle 50 



Crimson Rambler 50 



Debutante 50 



Dorothy Perkins 50 



Lady Gay 60 



Manda's Triumph .50 



Philadelphia Rambler 50 



Pink Rambler 50 



Seven Sisters 50 



South Orange Perfection 60 



Sweetheart .50 



Tausendschoen .50 



Tennessee Belle 50 



Universal Favorite .50 



Wlchu raiana 50 



Miscellaneous 



Aennchen Mueller 50 



Catherine Zelmet .50 



Clothllde Soupert .50 



Gross an Teplltz (V. R. Ooxe) .50 



Henri Martin (Red Moss) 75 



Louis Philippe 50 



Mousseline (White Moss) 75 



Mrs. Degraw (Bourbon) 50 



Queen's Scarlet 50 



3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

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 3. 

 3. 

 3. 

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 3. 

 3. 



3. 

 3. 

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 4. 



41-2 



1000 



125. 

 2S. 

 25. 

 27 ^a 

 25. 

 25. 

 25. 

 25. 

 27 "a 

 •25. 

 27 >3 

 25. 

 26. 

 25. 

 2^h 

 25. 

 25. 

 25. 

 25. 

 27 "a 



3. 



319 



3. 



7. 



4. 



3. 



3. 



6. 



3^! 



4. 

 4. 

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3'-2 



6. 

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3. 



3. 



3. 



3. 



3. 



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SHi 



3. 



3. 



3. 



3. 

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3. 

 3 "2 

 3. 

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 3. 

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4-in. 

 100 



$8. 

 8. 



■M). 



27 "a 



40. 



40. 

 3I3 30. 

 3. 27 "a 



30. 



.30. 



271a 



60. 



35. 



27 "q 



30. 



50. 

 30. 

 30. 



3 "a 30. 

 3>a 30. 



36. 

 60. 



34 30. 

 3'a 30. 



35. 

 35. 

 35. 

 30. 

 30. 



3Vj 30. 

 3>2 30. 



50. 

 38.' 



26. 



26. 



27 >« 



26. 



26. 



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26. 



30. 



26. 



25. 



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26. 

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 •28. 

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 28. 

 25. 

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 30. 

 26. 

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25. 

 30. 

 26, 

 27 >a 

 40. 

 25. 

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 27 >3 

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8. 



8. 

 8. 



10. 

 15. 



10. 



8. 



10. 



16. 



8. 



7. 

 7. 



10. 



10 



8. 



On own roots, summer grown, winter rested. 

 Mention The Review when you write. 



