For the 

 Spring 

 of 1904. 



Again it becomes my privilege to proffer sincere and profound 

 thanks to my many patrons of 1903 and previous years for the con- 

 fidence placed in me by them. It is with joy I announce a number of 

 good things for the coming Spring (both fruits and flowers), which surpass 

 any which have preceded them. I refer especially to the Morning Star 

 Strawberry, Alpha Raspberry, Missing Link Apple, Rossney Pear, Japan- 

 ese Golden Plum, Hypericum \'an Fleeti and Platycodon Leitchlinii: all of which 

 will be found illustrated and described in the following pages. 



Since the appearance of the last number of my catalogue, I have added to my 

 Small Fruit Farm and Nursery, known as "Clover Hill Farm," an adjoining farm of over eighty acres, 

 thus increasing the growing facilities of this Department to two hundred acres. During the same time, 

 I have bought for the Hardy Herbaceous Plant Department a farm at Little Sih er, w hich I shall devote 

 to this Department exclusively, and upon which I now have growing upwards of a half million plants 

 in addition to my former large and complete stock of them. 



NEW JERSEY STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. 



Office of the State Entomologist. 



No. 58-1903. 



New Brunswick, X. J., November 9, 1903. 



This is to certify, That I have this 2d day of November 1903. inspected the 

 general nursery stock growing on the Monmouth Nurseries, J. T. Lovett, Pro- 

 prietor, at Little Silver, in Monmouth County, New Jersey, and have found the 

 same apparently free from San Jose Scale and other dangerously injurious insect 

 pests ; also that the examined stock seemed healthy. 



I Further Certify, That the nursery has a properly constructed house for fumi- 

 gating with hydrocyanic acid gas, upon which I have marked the quantity of cyan- 

 ide of potassium required for an effective charge. 



This certificate expires June i, 1904, and covers only stock actually on the 

 nurseries when examined. 



JOHN B. SMITH, State Entomologist. 



PLANTS AND BULBS. 



FOR SUMMER BLOOM AND LAWN DECORATION. 



Such as Roses, Geremiums, Ceoinas, Dahliais, Hydreoigeas, Palms, Ferns, Gladiolus, Lilies, etc. All of 

 these I grow in great quantities and have thirteen large Greenhouses filled with them. My Spring 

 Catalogue, giving illustrations, descriptions and prices of a most complete assortment, will be ready in 

 April. It will be mailed without application to all patrons of the past two years and to all others who 

 ask for it. It is sent free of charge, and is well worth having. 



J. T. LOVETT, Little Silver, N. J, 



