86 



The Wcekdy Florists^ Review* 



AiKiL 6, 1011. 



California Privet Surplus 



3 to 4 ft., or more branches. |a 00 per 100; 

 120 00 per 1000 : 3 to 4 ft., extra, K or more branches , 

 h 00 per 100: $25.00 per 1000; TiOO at 1000 rate Still 

 lower in 5000 lots. All strong and well graded. 

 Smaller tizes sold. Packed to carry safely tree 

 of charge. Address 



CHAS. BLACK, HIghtstown, N. J. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AHEBICAN ASSOCIATION OF NUESEBYMEN. 



Officers for 1910-11 : Pres., W. P. 81»rk, Louisi- 

 ana Mo.; Vice-pres.. E. S. Welch, Shenandoah, 

 la.; Soc'y. John Hall Rochester^ N. Y.; Treas.. 

 C. L. Yates. Rochester. N. Y. Thirty-sixth an- 

 nual meeting. St. Louis, June. 1911. 



The U. S. Department of Agriculture 

 March 27 issued a pamphlet entitled 

 "Spraying Peaches for the Control of 

 Brown-rot, Scab and Curculio," by "W. 

 M. Scott and A. L. Quaintance. 



SCALE ON SYCAMORES. 



Will you please tell me what to do for 

 my sycamores They are full of scale. 

 I have several of them and they are 

 thick with this scale. E. B. 



The shoots forwarded were covered 

 with oyster-shell scale. You must get 

 rid of this or it will soon kill your trees. 

 Spray thoroughly with either the lime- 

 sulphur solution or one of the oil solu- 

 tions, of which there are a number on 

 the market. Be sure to damp every 

 portion of wood infested with scale. To 

 do this you must usfe a nozzle that 

 throws a fine, misty spray. Do the work 

 now, while the trees are dormant, as the 

 foliage would not withstand spraying 

 with a solution of suflacient strength to 

 kill the scale. C. W. 



BOOTING ROSE CUTTINGS. 



Please tell me when to put out rose 

 cuttings, and how to treat them in 

 order to root them successfully in this 

 Georgia climate. G. S. C. 



Cuttings from hard wood should have 

 been planted before this date. If the 

 scions are dormant, types like the 

 Prairies, Wichuraianas and ramblers 

 may be planted now, but without hope 

 of any great success. It takes from 

 two to three months for cuttings to 

 root in the field, and therefore top 

 growth will have started before root 

 action can begin, owing to the warm 

 weather which now prevails. If planted 

 in beds, properly shaded and watered, 

 a greater per cent would live, but at 

 this date the risk would be hazardous. 



Hard-wood cuttings should be taken 

 in the fall, as soon as sap action sus- 

 pends, following several sharp frosts if 

 possible — about November 20. Use the 

 current season's growth. The cuttings 

 should be about eight inches long, using 

 only such wood as is firm and thor- 

 oughly mature. If the plantings are 

 small, a good grafting knife will do the 

 work; if large, a French pruning 

 shears is by long odds the best imple- 

 ment. This shears makes a clean, 

 sharp cut and does not tire the opera- 

 tor. Tie the cuttings into bundles of 

 100. Plant as soon as made, into well 

 drained, sandy loam, in rows forty-two 

 inches apart and with four inches of 

 separation in the row, if for field culti- 



NEW IRIS Germanica, 

 INGEBORG, pure white. 



Interregna Type 



FRANK H. WILD FLORAL CO. 



List Free. SARCOXIE, MO. 



Mention The Review when you wnte. 



Hardy Perennials 



10,000 DELPHINIUM Belladonna, Ev^r- 

 blooming Hardy Larkspur, 1 year old 

 plants, $6.50 per 100; out of 2-lnch pots. 

 $2.50 per 100. Seed, $2.00 per ounce. 



DELPHINIUM Formosum, $3.00 per 100; 

 "Gold Medal" Strain, $4.00 per 100. 



STOKESIA Cyanea, Eupatorlum Agera- 

 toides, Lobelia Cardinalls, Saponaria 

 Caucasica fl. pi., Opuntia Rafinesquii, 

 Gaillardia, Coreopsis, Cassia Marilan- 

 dica. Salvia azurea grandlflora, Clema- 

 tis Davidlana, all one-year-old plants, 

 $3.00 per 100. 



PENTSTEMON Sensation, Clematis panl- 

 cuiata, $5.00 per 100. 



EUPATORIUM Coelestlnum, Calimeris in- 

 cisa, $5.00 per 100. One year old. 



DIANTHUS latifollus atroc. fl. pi., Ever- 

 bioomlng, 2»4-lnch pots, $2.00 per 100. 



VERBENA V e n o s a , Myosotis palustrls 

 semperflorens, Everblooming, 2 - inch, 

 pots, $2.00 per 100. 



CLEMATIS panlculata, 1 year, 2-lnch, 

 $2.50 per 100. 



CASSIA florlbunda, new, $2.00 per doz. 



PERENNIAL SEEDS, at lowest prices. 



Cash with order, please. 



A. HIRSCHLEBER 



Burlington Co., RIVBRSIDK. N. J. 



Mention The Review vr . » \- • yrtt^ 



California 

 Privets ^ 



till 



ave a 

 good stock 

 in aU grides 

 I California 

 Privet, and have a 

 stirpltis of 3 to 4 feet. 

 Let me qtiote yoa be- 

 fore buying. 

 I can ship you stock that 

 will make you trade. 



[In 13 C.A.BENNEn,RobbiiisviUe,N.J. 



Grow'i\ by a 



Sell 



Mention The Review when you write.' 



ROSES 



On Own Roots, 

 Nammer Grown, 

 Winter Rested, 

 Strong and Healthy. 



2 



Hybrid PerpetualN p^^ 



Alfred Colomb $i.i6 



American Beauty . .8» 



Anna de Dicsbach 60 



Black Prince 60 



Ball of Snow (Bonle de NelRe.) .60 



Captain Hay Hard l.oo 



Clio 60 



Dlnsmore 60 



Fraacols Levet 60 



Frau Kai 1 Draschkl (Snow 



Queen) .. loi^ 



Oeneral Jacqueminot 60 



Giant of Battles 60 



(ilolre de Margfottln 76 



Ololre Lyonnaise 60 



John Hopper 76 



Jubilee 60 



La Relne 60 



Madame Charles Wood 60 



Maduini! Masson 60 



Madame Plantler 60 



Magna Oharta 60 



Vj-ln. 



100 1000 

 $lH2t40. 



Paul Neyron 



Pilnce Camllle de Rohan. 



.60 

 .60 



Robert IJuncau 75 



Vtck'sCiiprice 60 



White American Beauty 1.00 



ClimbinK Hybrid Perpetual 

 CIlmblnK Frau Karl Druschki. 1.75 

 Moss Roses 



Henri Martin 75 



Mousseline 75 



Princess Ade'aide ^ 75 



Hybrid Teas 



Bessie Brown m) 



Orace Molyneanx 85 



Helen Gould (Balduln) 50 



Instltuteur Slrdey '.60 



Jacob's Perle 60 



Kalserln Aug. Vic 60 



La France (Pink) 50 



Mme. Jenny Guillemot 50 



Meteor 60 



Mrs. Aaron Ward 3.60 



Mrs. David Jardine 60 



My Maryland 1.00 



Weliesley .60 



White La France — . . .60 



Climbing: Hybrid Tea 



Climbing Eillamey 60 



Teas 



Bougere 60 



Coquette de Lyon 60 



DucheB*e de Brabant 50 



EtoiledeLyon 60 



Golden Gat -« 60 



Isabella Spnint 50 



Mile. Franz.isca Krueger 50 



Marie Lambert (Snowflake) ■ ■ .60 



Marie Lou ixe 60 



Marie van Houtte 60 



Papa Gontler 60 



Rainbow 60 



White Bougere 50 



Wm.R.Smith .50 



Climbing Tea 

 Reve d'Or (Golden Cliain or 



Climbing Safrano). 50 



Ramblers 



Crimson Rambl«r 50 



Flower of Fairfield (Ever- 

 blooming Crimson Rambler) 1.76 



Key*tone 50 



Philadelphia Rambler 50 



Pink Rambler (Euphrosyne).. .50 



TauBondschon 60 



Trier .50 



Veilchenblau (Blue Rambler). 1.00 

 White Rambler (Thalia). ..-.. .60 



Yellow Rambler ( Aglaia) 50 



Mnltiflora 



Seven Sisters (GrevUle) 50 



Hybrid Wlrhoraiana 



Debutante 60 



Dorotbv Perkins. .. 50 



Hiawatha 60 



LadyOay 60 



White Dorothy Perkins 86 



Climbing Noisettes 



Lamarque .50 



Mary Washington 60 



Reine Marie Henriette 60 



Solfatare 50 



Wm. Allen Richardson 60 



Dwarf Raml>lers 

 Aennchen Mueller (Anny 



Muller). .50 



Catherine Zelmet (White Baby 



Rarobi«»r) 60 



Phvllis (Mrs. Cutbush or Pink 



Babv Rambler) 60 



Hybrid Polyantha 



Clothllde Soupert 50 



MosePa (Yellow Roupert) .")() 



Climbing Hybrid Polyantha 

 Climbing C'othllde Soupert... .50 

 Bonrbon 



Burbank 50 



HTTUosa 50 



Mi-8. Degraw iV) 



Bengal or China 



Queen's Scarlet 50 



Hybrid Rngosa 



Conrad P. Meyer 60 



NewCentury .50 



ft. 



31-2 



4. 



3>-2 



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3'-i 

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60. 

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 .16. 

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 60. 

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 36. 

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5. 

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45. 

 35. 

 35. 

 36. 

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 85. 

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4-in. 

 lOO 

 $10. 

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16 

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10. 

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10. 

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121^ 100. 



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40. 12, 

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26. 

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26. 

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35. 



10. 

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15. 

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10. 

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 16. 

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12. 



10. 

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10. 

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26. 

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15. 

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*^ ^ LL L U LL '^PRIMGnCLDOHIO^ 



