HENRY A. DREER, PHILADELPHIA, PA., WHOLESALE PRICE LIST 



37 



]\ew French 



Hydrangeas 



No other novelty of recent years has so quickly and 

 safely assumed a commanding position in floriculture as 

 the French Hybrids of Hydrangea Hortensis. Tlicy have 

 come to stay. Some varieties may ultimately be dropped . 

 because others are superior or improvements supersede V ' 

 them, but none will be discarded because they failed to 

 fulfill promises made for them. 



Every florist should have a good stock of them to add 

 variety to his list of Easter and Memorial Day offerings 



Our five, six and seven-inch pot-grown plants, if brought 

 in in January can make Easter nicely this year. If brought 

 along slowly they will be excellent for Memorial Day. 



We call special attention to the two novelties — "E. G. 

 Hill" and "Radiant." Try them. 



Avalanche. A splendid large white with a well established 

 reputation; an easy variety to force. 



Botaniste Peltereau. Enormous flowers of a pretty mauve rose. 



Bouquet Rose. Large trusses of rosy amber turning to bright 

 pink; a favorite with all growers. 



Oentelle. Entirely distinct, deeply fringed flower of a creamy 

 white color; it is not suited for forcing, but for Decoration Day 

 and later flowering it is very valuable. 



E. G. Hill. This is by far the best pink variety for early forcing 

 that we have yet tried. Trusses of immense size, color a most 

 pleasing shade of pink which does not fade, growth vigorous, 

 foliage of a pea green color, large and attractive. It is one of 

 the easiest to force, coming into flower as early as Mme. Emile 

 Moulliere. 



Fraicheur. Very large, regularly shaped flowers, white, delicately 



suffused with rose, very free flowering. 

 Oeneral de Vibraye. A favorite wherever seen; very large heads 



of bright rose colored flowers, a splendid early forcing variety. 

 La Lorraine. Very large flowers, pale rose, turning to bright 



pink; has become a general favorite. 

 Mme. A. Riverain. Superb bright rose color; very vigorous and 



floriferous. 



Mme. E. Moulliere. Probably the most popular white variety on 



the market today, an early easy variety to force. 

 Mme. Maurice Hamar. A delicate flesh-rose color, a vigorous 



grower, the individual flowers as well as the trusses being very 



large. One of the easiest to force early. 

 Mme. Raymond. Large trusses of perfectly round flowers of a 



transparent white, passing to a tender rose. 

 Mile. Agnes Barillet. A splendid white; flowers large and very 



freely produced. 



Mile. deTremault. As the result of our own trials we are con- 

 vinced that this variety is the best very large flowered white yet 

 introduced. As free flowering as any, of splendid erect habit, 

 producing flower-heads as large as the old popular Otaksa. 



Mile. Renee Gaillard. Very large panicles of milky white, irregu- 

 larly dentated flowers. 



NEW FRENCH HYDRANGEA 



Mousseline. A beautiful mauve-rose with cream-colored centre; 

 the flower heads are large and held erect; a fine acquisition. 



Mont Rose. Immense panicles of clear-flesh rose, entirely distinct, 

 one of the best very early flowering varieties. 



Mons. Q. Renault. Very large flowers of a bright rose with car- 

 mine reflex; very free and easily forced. 



Ornement. Large pretty-mauve-pink flowers, very free flowering. 



Radiant. At the International Show in New York last spring 

 Radiant was the one variety which attracted much attention. It 

 is an easy variety to force, of a splendid rich, live rose-carmine, 

 entirely distinct from all others. 



Ronsard. Flowers and trusses very large, of a beautiful rose-tint. 



Souvenir de Mme. E. Chautard. One of the very best, of splendid 

 erect habit, very robust, medium sized heads, of bright rose- 

 colored flowers; one of the very best of the Bouquet Rose type. 



Senateur Henri David. Another splendid rose-colored variety, 

 with red reflections, flowers produced in immense large heads; 

 on the style of La Lorraine, but an earlier bloomer. 



2 50 



1 25 

 1 25 



Avalanche 



Botaniste Peltereau 



Bouquet Rose 



Oentelle 



E. Q. Hill 



Fraicheur 



<jeneral de Vibraye ... 



La Lorraine 



Mme. A. Riverain 



Mme. E. Mouillere 1 25 



Mme. Maurice Hamar 1 00 



Mme. Raymond 



Mile. Agnes Barillet 



Mile, de Tremault 



Mile. Rene Qaillard 1 00 



Mons. Q. Renault 1 25 



Mont Rose 1 00 



Mousseline 1 00 



Ornement 



Radiant 2 50 



Ronsard 



Senateur Henri David 1 00 



Sv'nr de Mme. E. Chautard .... 100 



Price of New 



3=in.pots 



00 per doz., 7 00 per 100 



French Hydrangeas. 



20 00 



8 00 

 8 00 



8 00 

 7 00 



7 00 



8 00 

 7 00 

 7 00 



20 00 



7 00 

 7 00 



5=in 

 $2 50 per doz 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



4 00 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " •' 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " 



2 50 " " 



4 50 " " 



2 50 •' " 



2 50 " " 



2 50 " " 



pots 



, $20 00 per 100 



20 00 " •' 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



30 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 " " 



20 00 

 20 00 



6<in.pots 7= 



$4 00 per doz., $30 00 per 100 $0 

 4 00 " " 30 00 



20 00 



4 00 

 4 00 



4 00 



4 00 



5 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 

 4 00 



6 00 

 4 CO 

 4 00 

 4 00 



30 00 

 30 00 



30 00 

 30 00 



30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 



30 00 

 30 00 

 30 00 



in. pots 



50 each 

 50 •' 



50 " 



50 " 



50 ■' 



