Keywords: The wonderful new rose hoosier beauty (16388757635).jpg Fine young plants 15 cents; strong <br> plants 50 cents <br> Teddy Junior Fern <br> THE TEDDY JUNIOR FERN Nephrolepis Teddy <br> Junior � Teddy Junior the Fern for every <br> household This grand Fern was introduced re- <br> cently by G R The fronds are broad and <br> beautifully tapered from base to tip; they droop <br> just enough to make a shapely graceful plant <br> permitting it to finish with a fine full center and <br> perfect symmetrical spread The pinnae are dis- <br> tinctly undulated giving the fronds an attractive <br> wavy appearance which adds materially to their <br> charming decorative effect Teddy Junior will <br> produce about four times more fronds than any <br> other Fern ever introduced finishing with fifty <br> to sixty fronds in a four-inch pot Fine young <br> plants 15 cents; strong plants 50 cents <br> Fronds of the Roosevelt Fern <br> THE ROOSEVELT FERN Nephrolepis Roosevelt <br> � It is our good fortune and great pleasure to <br> offer this wonderful new Fern having introduced <br> it in 1910 In this short time it stands second in <br> popularity of all the Ferns and will soon be more <br> popular than even the old favorite Boston Fern <br> In general characteristics it resembles the world- <br> famous Boston Fern but it will sweep that Fern <br> from the boards for two reasons; it produces <br> many more fronds than the Boston thus making <br> a bushier handsomer plant; then the pinnae are <br> beautifully undulated giving the Roosevelt a <br> pronounced wavy effect seen in no other Fern; <br> as the plant ages this effect becomes quite dis- <br> tinct A charming and most notable variety <br> Fine young plants 20 cents; strong plants 65 <br> cents <br> THE GOLD MEDAL FERN Nephrolepis Piersonii <br> � This Fern received a gold medal from the So- <br> ciety of American Florists and Ornamental Horti- <br> culturists and is the only gold medal ever <br> awarded by them for any plant whatsoever An <br> entirely new form of the Boston Fern The pin- <br> nae subdivide making miniature fronds which <br> are superimposed on the main fronds looking as <br> if two or even three were condensed into one <br> giving the plant a graceful feathery and plumy <br> effect Fine young plants 15 cents; strong plants <br> 50 cents <br> THE CRESTED FERN Nephrolepis Scholzeli � <br> The fronds are crested and stand erect with a <br> graceful arch forming a plant of ideal shape and <br> they never break down giving the plant a ragged <br> appearance as is so often the case with other <br> plumed forms; furthermore the loose elegant <br> arrangement of the fronds allowing a free cir- <br> culation of air through the foliage prevents the <br> center of even the largest specimen from becom- <br> ing defective or yellow The smallest salable <br> plants perfectly express the type and in every <br> size are models of beauty for table decorations <br> Fine young plants 15 cents; large plants 50 <br> cents 41856314 131010 64616 Page 17 Text http //www biodiversitylibrary org/page/41856314 1918 10 5962/bhl title 64616 Ella V Baines Firm ; Henry G Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection NameFound Nephrolepis NameConfirmed Nephrolepis EOLID 61678 NameBankID 2644730 NameFound Splendida NameConfirmed Splendida NameBankID 5329744 Biodiversity Heritage Library Miss Ella V Baines the woman florist Springfield Ohio The wonderful new rose hoosier beauty Garden Stories Bulbs Plants Catalogs Flowers Plants Ornamental Roses Seed industry and trade Seeds Trade catalogs U S Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Library bhl page 41856314 dc identifier http //biodiversitylibrary org/page/41856314 bhlGardenStories BHLinbloom bulbs plants plants ornamental u s department of agriculture national agricultural library bhlgardenstories bhlinbloom Information field Flickr posted date ISOdate 2015-01-28 CC-BY-2 0 BioDivLibrary https //flickr com/photos/61021753 N02/16388757635 2015-08-24 07 51 34 cc-by-2 0 PD-old-70-1923 The wonderful new rose hoosier beauty Photos uploaded from Flickr by Fæ using a script |