CHAMPION CITY GREENHOUSES, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. 27 
GOOD & REESE’S CHOICE STANDARD PHLOX—Concluded 
p Wd Ae many-branched, pyramidal trusses | RICHARD WALLACE—Pure white, with violet-rose eye; large 
‹ right reddish, almost royal purple; the freest and show- flowers in immense panicles. Too much cannot be said of 
iest in permanent border; a grand acquisition to the hardy | this variety. 
Phlox. 
MRS. JENKINS—The best tall early white for massing. RUBUS—A parti-colored variety, rosy-red shading to white. 
OBERGARTNER WITTIG—Brig * SR Т В. P. STRUTHERS—In our estimation the very best Phlox 
mine eye. Large flower See mascot, e ae grown today—it has no faults. Color clear cherry-red, suf- 
PEACHBLOW — Deli ae : 5 fused with salmon shades; deep red eye; fine large truss. 
poe ~- Delicate peachblow-pink, shading to white; The color is so clear and clean that each individual floret 
arge trusses; elegant. stands out as distinct as a cameo, 
s ee clear, deep, bright pink with faint halo; | VON HOCHBERG —The finest of all the dark colored Phlox. А 
М y. rich velvety crimson with maroon shades. Elegant. 
NEWER VARIETIES OF PHLOX 
SOME WONDERFUL CREATIONS IN THESE NEWER PHLOX. THEY WILL CERTAINLY BE A REVELATION TO YOU 
Price, one-year field-grown plants, 60 cents per dozen; $4.50 per hundred; $40.00 per thousand. 
ASIA—One of the most valuable recent introductions. А deli JULES 
EQ t . = CAMBON — Clear magenta with large distinct white 
cate shade of mauve, with crimson-carmine eye. star in center of each floret; superlatively rich and fine. 
ELIZABETH CAMPBELL — Very bright salmon-pink, with 
lighter shadings and dark crimson eye; an entra) new and MME. PAUL DUTRIE—A delicate lilac-rose, reminding 008 07 
much wanted shade in Phlox. some of the beautiful soft pink orchids. The flowers are 
FRAU ANTON BUCHNER ©те onest nita та КЕ сло very large and borne in panicles of immense size. 
duced, having a large truss and individual flower of dwarf PIERRE BAYLE — Crimson-carmine overlaid with orange- 
habit. scarlet. 
в. А. STROHLEIN—Orange-scarlet with bright carmine eye; RYNSTROM—An improved form of the popular variety Pan- 
Кс flowers in enormous trusses; a grand acquisition. theon, fine for massing; of a Paul Neyron rose color. 
L VON HEUTSZE — Immense trusses of very large | SIEBOLD—Bright vermilion-red, overlaid with orange-scarlet ; 
flowers; color of the most brilliant salmon-red, with white | crimson-red eye 
center; simply grand. ы ү 
: < WIDAR—In color а light reddish-violet, with very large white 
HENRY MARCEL—Pure red with bright salmon shadings. center which intensifies and illuminates the color. < 
WARNING! °° 9% hite Fern Scale 
IF YOU DON’T YOU HAD BETTER GET ACQUAINTED. 
About every dealer in the land has this White Fern Scale. That's what is making your Ferns look so sickly, and what is so 
serious about the whole matter is that even the big growers think it is a fly, and even then do not know how to rid themselves 
of it. It is a scale, and the most vicious insect that ever attacked any plant. It is the most difficult to get rid of. Our stock 
is clean because we know how to prevent it, and we also knowhow to get rid of it, should our stock ever become infested. 
You cannot afford to attempt to grow Ferns that have this scale, because you will fail; your plants will never look right. Buy 
G. & R. clean Ferns. 
TheGrand New Dwarf Fern, 
“Teddy Junior” 
“TEDDY JUNIOR,” the Fern |; 
for every household— This mag- 
nificent Fern has never before уж 
been offered for sale by any flor- 
ist or catalogue firm. It is a 
sport from the now famous 
Roosevelt Fern, and while its 
habit of growth is to produce a 
shorter frond it retains all the 
valuable characteristics of the 
parent plant. The fronds are 
broad and beautifully tapered 
from base to tip; they droop just 
enough to make a shapely, grace- 
i ful plant, permitting it to finish 
with a fine full center and т. 
е 
Photo of “ 
Teddy Junior.” wavy appearance, 
: materially to their 
decorative _ effect, 
Scraggy foliage is never seen in this variety. “Teddy” will produce about four 
times more fronds than any other Fern ever introduced, finishing with fifty to 
sixty fronds in a four-inch pot, while twelve to fifteen is the average number 
other varieties ya расы in ae same е pot. It M а сюре vigor- 
ous grower tha wi rive under most adverse conditions, making an excep- 
tionally rapid growth and producing a plant of rare beauty and perfection in the Fronds of “Teddy Junior," the wonderful 
average dwelling house without special care or attention. Owing to its habit new Fern. 
of producing the great quantity of massive foliage in small pots, this Fern 
makes the finest pedestal plant ever produced, and will prove indispensable for decorating dining room or library tables and 
numerous other places in the home where limited space will not permit using large pots or varieties with longer fronds. As 
a table decoration, Fern growers can appreciate the commercial value of a dwarf variety that will produce forty to fifty fronds 
twelve to fifteen inches long in a four-inch pot. "Such plants could readily be disposed of and every grower can produce them 
from “Teddy Junior" with as little care and expense as they can grow other varieties, Two and one-quarter-inch pots, $1.00 
per dozen; $6.00 per hundred. ! " ур ^ : 
