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90 



The Florists^ Review 



NOVEMBEB 14, 1912. 



3,000,000 



California Privet 



Fine 2-year-old plants. For years we have grown Privet for Specialisis and large dealers 



FOR CASH ONLY 



Per 10,000 



Per 1000 



2^ to 3 ft., 8 to 12 branches, $26.60 $213.75 

 2 to 2^ ft., 6 to 8 branches, 20.90 190 00 



Per 1000 Per 10,000 



1^ to 2 ft., 3 to 6 branches, $17.10 $156.75 

 1 to 1 >^ ft., 2 to 4 branches, 14.25 1 18.75 



Also larger stock at special prices 

 You should see this stock, it Is superior to others 



GUARANTEE NURSERIES 



Edlnburg Road, R. F. D. No. 2, Trenton, N. J. 

 814 Stephen Girard Hldg., Philadelphia, Pa. 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AlCEBICAK ASSOCIATION OF NXmSERYlCEN. 



Offlcenr for 1912-191S: Pres., Thomas B. 

 Ifeeban, Dresher, Pa.; Vlce-Pres., J. B. PllkinK- 

 ton, Portland, Ore.; Sec'y, John Hall, Rochester, 

 N. Y.; Treaa., C. l>. Yates, Rochester, N. Y. 

 Thirty-eighth anonal meeting, Portland, Ore., 

 7nne, 1818. 



H. A. Alspagh, superintendent of 

 parks at Sacramento, Cal., has placed 

 before the park board a plan for the 

 establishment of a municipal nursery. 



Ray Preston, a nurserjTnan residing 

 near Kendall, N. Y., accidentally shot 

 and killed his 8-year-old son recently, 

 while cleaning a gun, which he thought 

 was unloaded. 



The Gardner Nursery Co., of Osage, 

 la., has completed the erection of an ad- 

 dition to its buildings and will use the 

 new space largely for the housing of 

 everbearing strawberries. 



One of the most important recent land 

 projects is that of the Gibraltar Invest- 

 ment & Home Building Co., of Los 

 Angeles, Cal., which has bought four 

 tracts, totaling 1,897 acres, adjoining 

 the town of Bloomington. This tract is 

 being cut up into five, ten and twenty- 

 acre orchards and planted to trees 

 grown in the company's nurseries. 



"Judging from the number of im- 

 porters who are coming to the Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture," says a Washing- 

 ton dispatch, "the plant quarantine law 

 has begun to awaken interest. The 

 board having charge of the enforcement 

 of the law is meeting practically every 

 day and it is said that frequently their 

 deliberations are interfered with by 

 some representative of an importer, pre- 

 senting before it some individual case. 

 In many instances these protests are 

 carried directly to Secretary "Wilson, but 

 in no instance will the department 

 divulge the nature of the interviews." 



This week's obituary column contains 

 a report of the death of two pioneer 

 California nurserymen: J. F. C. Lude- 

 mann, of San Francisco, and Henry 

 Gresens, of Alameda. 



The San Benito Nursery has been in- 

 corporated, with its principal place of 

 business at Hollister, Cal. There are ten 

 incorporators and directors. The capital 

 stock of the company is $10,000, consist- 

 ing of 100 shares at $100 a share. Of 

 this stock $7,500 worth has already been 

 taken by the incorporators in blocks of 

 seven and one-half shares each. The en- 

 terprise will be in charge of the Kennedy 

 brothers, who are practical nurserymen 

 with years of experience. 



THE NEW ENGLAND QUAEANTINE. 



A partial quarantine was ordered 

 November 7 against the interstate 

 movement of Christmas trees and other 

 stock in New England by the Horti- 

 cultural Board in the Department of 

 Agriculture. The quarantine is to take 

 effect November 25. Within particular 

 areas in Maine, New Hampshire, Massa- 

 chusetts and Bhode Island an absolute 

 quarantine is declared on account of 

 the gypsy moth, and out of these areas 

 no one is to be permitted to move conif- 

 erous trees, such as spruce, fir, hemlock, 

 pine, juniper and arbor-vitee (known as 

 Christmas trees), and decorative plants, 

 such as holly and laurel. 



When a certificate of inspection by 

 federal authorities is shown, interstate 

 shipments will be permitted from the 

 quarantined areas of forest plant prod- 

 ucts, including logs, tan bark, posts, 

 poles, railroad ties, cordwood and lum- 

 ber and field-grown florists' stock, such 

 as trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings and 

 other plants, excepting buds, fruit pits, 

 seeds of fruit and ornamental trees and 

 shrubs, field, vegetable and flower 

 seeds, bedding plants and other herba- 

 ceous plants and roots. 



Stated portions of Maine, New Hamp- 

 shire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connec- 



SURPLUS PRIVET 



TO BE MOVED THIS FALL 



1000 

 25.000 CAL. PRIVET. 18 to 24-inch, heavy, 



5 to 8 brancbes $12.50 



fOOO CAL. PRIVET. 2 to 3-feet, 5 to 8 

 branches 16.00 



5000 CAL. PRIVET. 2 to 2ia feet, 6 to 12 



branches 20.00 



80.000 AMOOR RIVER SOUTH. 18 to 24- 

 inch, well branched 16.00 



20,000 AMOOR RIVER SOUTH. 2 to 3-feet. 



well branched 20.00 



4000 IBOTA PRIVET. 18 to 24-inch, well 

 branched 20.00 



5000 AMOOR RIVER NORTH PRIVET, 

 15 to 20-inch, well branched 20.00 



500 at 1000 rate. 



Southslde Nurseries 



CHESTER, VA. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



HARDY CHOICE 



ORNAMENTALS 



Ask for Prices 



Hiram T. Jones 



Uaioi louaty Nurseries. ELIZABETH, IH. J. 



CALIFORNIA PRIVET 



First-class 2-year plants, 15 to 20 inches, 3 or 

 more branches, $1.50 per 100, $10.00 per 1000 (will 

 please); 18 to 24 inches tflne), 4 or more 

 branches. $2 00 per 100, $15.00 per 1000; 2 to 3 feet, 

 (strong selected). $3.00 per 1(0. $25 00 per 1000. 

 Well {Traded, well packed, and satisfaction truar- 



CHARLES BLACK, Hightstown, N. J. 



Mention The Rerlew when joa write. 



LARGE TREES 



OAKS AND MAPLKS, PINKS 

 AND HKMLOCKS 



ANDORRA NURSERIES 



Wm. Warner Harper, Prop. 

 CliSBtnat Hill, riillad«lplil«, Pa. 



