THE NATIONAL NURSERYMAN 
33 
two; Hawks Nursery Company, three; Hooker Wyman & Company, 
six; George Jenny; J. B. Kiley; R. D. Leutchford; W. H. Mead; 
George Moulson & Company; Oliver Brothers; National Nursery¬ 
man 'Pub. Co., two; C. H. Peck; H. C. Peck; H. D. Pratt; Roch¬ 
ester Lithograph Company; Irving Rouse; D. A. Skuse; Rochester 
Nursery Company, W. W. Steele, one each; Taylor Nursery Com¬ 
pany, four; Western New York Nursery Company, two; Allen L. 
Wood, C. L. Yates, two; James Vick’s Sons, two; Vick & Hill, two; 
Vredenburg & Company, two. 
The out-of-town firms represented were: Nelson Bogue, Batavia; R. 
G. Chase Company, Geneva, two; Clark Nursery Company, Waterloo; 
George Brothers, East Penfield; Hill Brothers, Irondequoit; F. M. 
Hartman, Dansville; Jackson & Perkins Company, Newark; George 
Josselyn, Fredonia, two; Maloney & Son, Dansville, two; Morey & 
Sons, Dansville, two; J. Frank Morris, Brighton; Peirson Brothers, 
Waterloo; W. &. T. Smith Company, Newark, five; Storrs & Harrison, 
Painesville, Ohio. J. H. Dayton, representing the last named company 
was the only person present from other than New York State. 
At the tables were: G. C. Perkins, Charles J. Maloy, A. D. Pratt, 
F. G. Moulson, J. B. Morey, Jr., John Craig, William Pitkin, S. B. Nelson 
Geogre S. Josselyn, George T. Keith, F. M. Hartman, W. C. Barry, 
J. H. Dayton, Nelson Bogue, Irving 
Rouse, R. D. Leutchford, H. C. Peck, 
John C. Shaw, G. E. Wyman, 
borne, E. O. Graham, Joseph M. Charl¬ 
ton, G. T. Walters, C. H. Peck, E. C. 
Brown, F. E. Grover, A. H. Stuart, W. 
M. Gould, D. S. George, F. M. Phelps, 
F. V. Taylor, T. W. Benedict, C. C. 
Yaky, F. T . Burke, H. J. Bowden, 
Ernest J. Bowden, Edward Dern, Lo- 
rane Hayward, John I). Kase, C. L. 
Yates, F. J. Peirson, J. A. Charlton, E. 
B. Oliver, H. P. Hill, R. A. Mayo, 
George M. Pappert, Thomas Marks, P. 
W. Butler, William W. Steele, William 
T. Fonda, Gilbert Costich, Thos. McGlen- 
non, Albert Vick, Fred W. Vick, J. A. 
Ryan, H. P. Freeman, James S. McGlen- 
non, F. F. Andrews, J. F. Farber, Phillip 
F. Farber, I). H. Bradstreet, II. C. Phil¬ 
lips, George S. Taylor, W. B. Truesdell, 
Edward McCawley, J. S. McGlennon, A. 
E. Bicknell, N. B. Herrick, E. S. Finley 
B. F. Allen, H. S. Taylor, Arthur N. 
Christy, Jr., Charles J. Brown, J. M. Pit¬ 
kin, Jr., H. W. Meade, C. G. Hooker, 
G. Chase, W. W.Wyman, Horace Hooker, 
John Drechsler, C. W. Vredenburg, H 
W. Clark, A. H. Dale, W. R. Love, J. 
A. Gillies, J. M. Campbell, Fred H. 
Lewis, L. E. Dake, Peter F. Willems, 
L. G. Pendill, W. J. Webb, H. B. Phillips, George C. Jenny, C. L. Bootli- 
by, D. A. Skuse, J. F. Dale, J. Francis, C. G. Schoener, G. Watson, 
C. S. LeClare, John Kusse, S. M. Allen, W. E. Miller, C. H. Haks, Allen 
L. Wood, A. A. Mosher, M. B. Fox, Ralph T. Olcott. 
Resolved —That the entertainment committee know how to run a 
banquet. 
That tree peonies are things of the not distant future. 
That the Presbyterian parson ought to have been a nurseryman. 
That iceberg blackberries were roasted often enough to at least 
thaw the ice. 
That according to the professor’s tell there, is still something for the 
nurseryman to strive for. 
februar? Crade jottings. 
Grape cuttings in quantity are offered by D. C. Benton, Lake View, 
Miss. 
Hoopes Bro. & Thomas, Westchester, Pa., are headquarters for park 
and avenue trees. 
Rhododendrons, roses and azaleas are offered by P. Ouwerkerk, 
Jersey City, N. J. 
The Vincennes nurseries of Vincennes, Indiana, are long on apple, 
peach and plum trees. 
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., offer special varieties 
of barley, oats and wheat. 
The Dayton Fruit Tree Label Company of Dayton, Ohio, are in 
the field with a full line of standard labels. 
Dorothy Perkins (rose) is still at home to callers in the office of 
Jackson & Perkins Company, Newark, N. J. 
Thomas Meehan & Sons’ spring catalogue is something that 
belongs strictly in the elite class of periodicals. 
The Forest Oak Nurseries of Quincy, Ill., are making a specialty of 
Bayard & Rohes favorite apple and the Illinois peach. 
Holland & Company of Plymouth, Indiana, are wholesaling 
maple, catalpa, black walnut and evergreen seedlings. 
Northern dealers will do well to consult the trade lists of E. M. Sher¬ 
man, Charles City, la., for hardy fruits and ornamentals. 
The man who has the idea of planting forest trees, wind breaks or 
shelter belts should consult Fairbury Nurseries of Nebraska. 
H. M. Simpson & Sons, Vincennes, 
Ind., have a fine stock of one year old 
cherries, which it will be well for the re¬ 
tail trade to investigate. 
Nurserymen should consult the 
special makes of nursery and vineyard 
sprayers offered by E. C. Brown Com¬ 
pany, Rochester, N. Y. 
The catalogue of J. G. Harrison & 
Sons promises to be a very attractive 
pamphlet if the handsome covers are 
any indication of what they contain. 
Ornamentals, Climbers and Roses 
in variety constitute an important part 
of the Charlton Nur- 
Rochester, N. Y., for Feb- 
Lord & Burnham Co., Irvington on 
the Hudson. N. Y., are preparing for the 
special gardening trade and have on 
hand a large quantity of hot bed sash 
and frames. 
The Mount Arbor Nurseries, Shenan¬ 
doah, Iowa, are offering a very full as¬ 
sortment of all lines of ornamentals and 
fruit trees. “Complete” is their watch 
word for 1905. 
J.G.Harrison &Sons, Berlin,Maryland, 
illustrate two parts of their interesting 
nursery in the advertising pages of this 
issue. The strawberries and Kieffers are not in the same class with the 
peaches in buggy. 
In the advertising columns this month is the announcement of the 
Mount Arbor Nurseries of Shenandoah, Iowa, E. S. Welch, proprietor. 
They are fully justified in claiming to be a complete nursery as there 
are few in the country with larger plants and none carrying a more com¬ 
plete assortment. They want to send their wholesale lists and bulle¬ 
tins to all in the trade. 
The M. J. Wragg Nurserv Company of Des Moines has recently 
been organized with M. J. Wragg former president of the Iowa Horti¬ 
cultural Society as manager. This company expect to grow and deal 
in a general line of plants, fruits and ornamental shrubs especially 
adapted to the Mississippi Valley. The company is to make a spec¬ 
ialty of Landscape Gardening. We wish them all success. 
—Henry Schroeder the veteran nurseryman of Sigourney, Illinois, 
prefaces a little talk to his patrons with the following reminders: “ That 
the first year after the wedding is called the cotton, the second the 
paper, the third the leather, fifth the wood, seventh the wool, tenth 
tin, twelfth the silk, fifteenth the crystal, twentieth the porcelain, 
twenty-fifth the silver, fortieth the ruby, fiftieth the golden and 
seventy-fifth the diamond anniversary.” Mr. Schroeder has been a 
resident of Keokuk thirty-five years and a lover of trees all his life. 
