INTRODUCTION 
NOTHER YEAR has rolled around and this our Annual Catalogue 
comes freighted with our best wishes to you friend customer, and we 
hope for a continuance of our pleasant business relations. 
On all sides we hear of improvements in business and surely the beautiful pro¬ 
ducts of nature should not be the last to feel the uplift! 
The phenomenal attendance at Flower Shows continues, and the Garden Club 
movements are meeting with enthusiastic approval on all sides. That it is fashion¬ 
able to know flowers and to grow flowers is merely incidental to the fact that thou¬ 
sands of people today are gathering renewed vigor to “carry on” by interesting 
themselves in their gardens, and growing their own flowers and vegetables. 
No saner suggestion was ever proposed than the present one of the Government 
in getting the people “back to the land,” which many of them should never have 
left and where they can develop character and self-reliance. Give a man a piece of 
land and a shelter and he will take root in the soil and the various “isms” will leave 
him cold. He has a “stake” in his country and a legacy to leave his family and he 
realizes to the fullest extent what it means to be an American citizen. 
New Roses are numerous this year. Our “Retter Times” and “Token” of last 
year have taken the Rose world by storm. You will simply have to grow “Easlea’s 
Golden Rambler”—the finest yellow hardy Climber to date, which is our 1935 
Novelty. Others are “Nigrette,” The Rlack Rose of Sangerhausen the European 
sensation; “Crimson Glory,” “Fluffy Ruffles,” “Glowing Sunset” and a 
dozen other beauties to enrich your collection. 
In Carnations, “E. H. Wilson,” is the finest scarlet ever sent out. “Rountiful” 
and “Sonny” are also well worthy of your attention. 
Chrysanthemums are represented by an ever-increasing list of outdoor varieties, 
“Princeton,” “Valencia” and “Drops of Gold,” being outstanding. 
Write us any time about Chrysanthemums for any purpose. Chrysanthemums 
have been our specialty for a quarter of a century and we know what should be 
sent you. 
“The New Dwarf Asters” are the leaders in Perennial Hardy Plants this year. 
Look them over carefully and remember— 
II e are ahvays at your service 
99 
MAD 
■ son C ^Qrt^jJgL 
NEW JERSEY 
