458 



The Weekly Florists^ Review^ 



VAI I FY^Ht:.. LEO NIESSEN, 



T /ml I I I IN THE MARKET Wholcsalc FloHsf, 



^^^i^^KBS^mEBaH^^^H PHONE'^sVat-o"'/ N. W. Cor. 13lh& Filbert Sts., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



NOW 



is the time to plan for the coming 

 season. We have made our plans. 

 Can we help you make yours? 



OUf* PlOflS ^^"^^ ^^^" ^° '^^^^ '^'^ ^"'^ carried out that we 

 shall be in a position to give you the best ser- 

 vice of any house in this market. 



"Y^QII ought to have the benefit of it. May we have an oppor- 

 tunity to divide with you the benefits resulting from our 

 plans and our work? 



BCdUtiCS ^'^' ^^ ^ strong feature with us this season. The 

 results of one of our plans are already beginning 

 to materialize in the shape of fine buds from our new range of glass 

 at New Castle, Ind. 



Ail Other StOCK ^^'^ ^'^° ^^ received in larger quantities 



than ever before, and our facilities for 



handling it to the greatest satisfaction of customers are now unequalled. 



yV rite Us about what you may need this season. 



BENTHEY & CO., 35 Randolph St., CHICAGO. 



DENVER, COLO. 



Everything is very quiet in tlie floral 

 line, funeral work being the mainstay. 

 Most all have their carnations housed 

 and most of them are looking well. A. 

 J. Graham, president of the club and 

 Superintendent of the City Park, has 

 gone east to visit the parks, etc., in the 

 interest of the park commission, to pick 

 up any points of improvement that he 

 may find. He will take in the circle — 

 Chicago, Buffalo, New York, Washing- 

 ton, St. Louis and any place of interest 

 on the way. He expects to be gone about 

 a month. , 



The Floral Club gave a basket picnic 

 Aug. 26 to its members and its friends. 

 There were sports and games of various 

 kinds, and that with the dancing made 

 the hours fly only too fast. All had a 

 jolly time. Thobne. 



Seymour, Ind. — M. A. Barick, pro- 

 prietor of the Seymour Greenhouses, is 

 the only florist here. He has three 

 houses, containing 4,100 square feet of 

 glass, in addition to cold-frames, etc. 

 The houses are heated by water under 

 pressure. The party from whom Mr. 

 Barick bought in 1898 is not a florist 

 and should not receive wholesale cata- 

 logues. 



4000 



VINCA VARIEGATA 



Klegant 

 Stock for 

 4 and 5-ln 

 Pots. 



VINES 



$4.00 



Campbell Violet 



Clumps, Jer^OO 



...CASH... 



DAYTON FLORAL CO., DAYTON, 0. 



AMERICAN POMOLOGICAL 

 SOCIETY. 



The biennial meeting of the American 

 Pomological Society will be held Thurs- 

 day and Friday of this week in Buffalo, 

 N. Y. 



DuLUTH, Minn. — In a communication 

 to one of the daily papers, Thomas E. 

 Hill, secretary of the Duluth Improve- 

 ment Association, states that this city 

 needs an up-to-date nursery and that 

 there is a good opening for a good iiur- 

 servman. 



Are You Short 



ON 



GER4NIIMS ^:,;:': "-' '::z^^^ 



$20.00 per 1000: 'S, A 1,1, rcrklns.' 



Alp. Ricard. Grant, \li I '. iliil, lieaute 

 Poitevine, Mme. .Tauliii. .Mine, Iirnant. La 

 France, Athlete, La Favorite and Mme. J. M. 



ASpT PLIMOSIS NANIS, ^Xlf, 



from 2;i-in. pots, $2.75 per 100; $2.5.00 per lOOol 



ASP. SPRENGERI, ^^^^I'i^^ 



per 100; $15.00 per 1000. 

 SMILAX S'™"^ 2!i-inch, $1.'2.5 per 100, $10.00 



The W.T.Buckley Plant Co., Springfield, III. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



PERSICUM and GIGANTEUM 



for Christmas Blooming. 

 Fine large healthy plants. 

 3-inch. $5.00 per 100. 4-inch, fS.OO per 100. 

 Asparag-ns Pltiniosua Nanus. 3-in.. $5.00 per 

 100. Spreng-eri. 2-in., $2.00 per 100; 3-in., $5.00 

 per 100; 4-in.. $1.00 per doz. OlneraTlas, ready 

 for potting, from flats. $1.50 per 100. Chinese 

 Primroses, white and mi.xed, 3-in., S3.00 per 

 100; 3K-m.. $5.00 per 100. 

 SAMUEL WHITTON, 16-17 Gray Ave. UTICA.N.Y. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



CYCLAMEN. 



