May C 1909. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review. 



53 



Nursery Stock for Florists' Trade 



EVERYTHING WORTH PLANTING 



ROSES A SPECIALTY -ALL KINDS OF FRUIT TREES 



Ornamental Trees and Shmbs, ETergrreens, Berries, Herbaceous Plants. Send (or onr Trade List 



W. & T. SMITH COMPANY 



63 Years GENEVA, N. Y. 700 Acres 



Boxwood 

 Privet 



Berbsris Thunbergii 

 Hydrangea Tree 

 Spiraea Van Houttei 

 Koster's Blue Spruce 



Mention The Review when you write. 



New Rose 



NEWPORT 

 FAIRY 



Beet climber for in and out door. 

 Fine strong: field-Krown plants, 3 and 

 4 Bboota. 3. 4 and 5 ft. lonK. 50c eacb, 

 $80.00 per 100, $260.00 per 1000. 



JULIUS ROEHRS CO. 



RUTHERFORD, N. J. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



ROSES 



On Own Roots 



2-Year 



Crimson Bambler, extra strong, $7.00 per 100. 

 Dorothy Perkins, Baltimore Belle, Queen of 

 Prairie, Pink JThlte, Yellow Bamblers, etc., 

 15.00 per 100. H. P. Boses and Baby Bamblers, 



$8.00 per 100. 



6ILBERT GOSTICH, Rochester, N. Y. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Peonios a Specialty 



Write us for latest price list 

 PETERSON NURSERY, 



stock KxotaanKe Building, CHICAGO. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



HEDGE FOR COUNTRY HOME. 



Will you please tell me what is the 

 best hedge for a country residence where 

 cattle are likely to come in contact with 

 it? It will be a boundary line. It is 

 within the city limits, and Avill be ob- 

 served by many. I would like one that 

 l)io(ims or has fragrance to attract bees 

 iind birds, if possible. .1. R. 



<'rata>gus Crus-galii, cockspur thorn, a 

 well-known native variety with long 

 «i>iiies. makes a close hedge, and for de- 

 fensive purjtcses cannot be excelled. If 

 planted fairly close, neither men nor 

 animals will care to force a passage 

 through it. The flowers are sweet and 

 attractive to bees, while the scarlet ber- 

 ries persist until well into the winter, 

 'latiegus Oxyacantha, the popular hedg- 

 iiiR plant of England, also makes a fine, 

 jompact he<lge. In making a hedge of 

 liawthorns, make a double zigzagged row 

 !in<l cut the plants back hard, to insure 

 ii thick bottom growth. 



< ydouia .laponica, Japanese quince, is 

 i> brdliant, early flowering shrub, suitable 

 tor defensive hedges, but slower growing 

 than the crata-gus. Rhamnus cathartica, 

 tlie common buckthorn, is still another 

 •lesirable hedge plant, possessing de- 

 tensive properties, but I think one of the 

 •Tatirgus named will suit you best. 



W. N. Craig. 



GRAFTED ROSES 



On selected Manetti, clean, healthy wood, grown especially for grafting 



Bride, Maid, Chatenay, Kaiserin, Killaraey, Richmond, Wellesley 



$12.00 per 100; $100.00 per 1000 



My Maryland . . $20.00 per 100 Rhea Reid . . $15.00 per 100 



Orders booked now and plants held till you are ready for them. 



JACKSON & PERKINS CO., NEWARK, NEMf YORK 



Mention The Review when you write. 



The United States Nursery Co. 



RICH, Coahoma Co., MISS. 



Mention The Review when vou write 



HYDRANGEAS 



American 



Kverbloomice 



Strong, fie'd grown plants, 15 in. and up, 12.50 

 per doz., $15.00 per 100; 10 to 14 in., $1.50 per doz., 

 $10.CO per 100. 



Berberls Thunbergii, transplanted. 8 to 12 

 in., $20.00 per lOCO. Berberis Thunbersit, 5 to 

 7 In., $1.50 per 100, $12.00 per 1000. California 

 and Japanese Privet, l^ to 3 ft., cheap. 



THE E. Y. TEAS CO., Centerville, Ind. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



ANTIRRHINUM FOR CHRISTMAS. 



Would you please inform me as to the 

 time to sow seed of antirrhinums to 

 bloom at Christmas; also the time to jtut 

 in cuttings? .1. B. M. 



ROSES 



We have a fine stock of large, dormant, field- 

 grown plants, on own roots, of the following 

 varieties: 



Boule de Neige, Mme. Plantier, Alfred Colomb, 

 Perle dee Blanches, Climbing Clothilde Soupert, 

 Archduchess Elizabeth of Austria, Empress of 

 India, Glory of the Exposition of Brussels, Phila- 

 delphia Crimson Rambler, Fisher Holmes, Ches- 

 himt Hybrid, Climbing Wootton, Magna Charta, 

 Countess of Rosebery, Louis Van Houtte, Dor- 

 othy Perkins, Anna de Diesbach, Mme. Alfred 

 Carrlere, Vick's Caprice, Sir Thomas Lipton, 

 Francois Levet, Eugene Furst, Crimson Rambler. 

 Price, tl2.90 per 100; $120.00 per 1000. 

 Tausendschon, the great new climber, $20.00 

 per 100. Crimson Baby Rambler. $10.00 per 

 100. 



Fine plants from 2^-in. pots. Chrysanthemum 

 Glory of the Pacific, $3.50 per 100. 



Roaee, OaMlas and Cannae a specialty. 

 Catalogue free. 



The Oingee & Conard Co., West Grove, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Seed hi antirrhinum should be sown 

 now, in a frame or cool greenhouse in 

 flats. Transj)lant to flats or frames when 

 large enough to handle, and plant out- 

 doors later, in rows twenty-four inches 

 apart and eight to ten inches between 

 the j)lants. Keep the plants well culti- 

 vated all summer. They will run up to 

 flower. Let at least one flower truss de- 

 velop on each, to see if the varieties are 

 what you want. Pull up any poor sorts, 

 or mark those you wish to keep. Cut 

 the plants back fairly hard about the 

 end of August. This will cause them to 

 send up a crop of young shoots. Lift 

 carefully and plant in the benches about 

 the end of September. With careful 

 treatment, these will give you a good 

 Christmas crop in a temperature of 48 



In general 



assottment 



SHRUBS, EVERGREENS 



Fine specimen stock. 

 Catalogues upon request. 



HIRAM T. JONES, 



Uilsi CMMty Rsrtirits. KLIZABKTH, V. J. 



Mention The Review when you write 



BOX TREES 



and other EVEBGRBENS 

 for TUBS and BOXES 



Oar prices are always right. Catalog free. 



The New England Nurseries, Inc 



BBDFORD. BIIA88. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



to 50 degrees at night. Plants treated 

 thus will give you better returns than if 

 taken from cuttings in the summer. 



If you can get good cuttings now, get 

 them in at once. When rooted, pot off 

 singly, plant outdoors and treat other- 

 wise exactly as suggested for the seed- 

 lings. These plants will prove more sat- 

 isfactory than if carried along in pots 

 all summer. Cxrow and trejit them about 

 as you would carnations and vou will not 

 go far astray. " c.W. 



