December 12, 1908 



HORTICULTURE 



811 



HARDY CUT FE RNS 



== Sprays, $1.00 per 100. $7.50 per 



1000. BOXWOOD, per bunch 35c, 50 lbs. $7.50. Sphagnum floss, Extra Large Bales, per bale, $1.25. 



Fancy and Dagger Ferns our specialty. A trial order will convince .you that we ship only first-class stock. 

 Headquarters for Florists' supplies and wire work. All cut flowers in season. 



FANCY and DAGGER 



Extra fine, $1.50 per 1000. Bronze 

 and Green (Jalax, $1.25 per 1000, 

 $7.50 case of 10,000. Leucothoe 



MICHIGAN CUT FLOWER EXCHANGE, INC., 



All 'phone connections 



38-40 Broadway, Detroit, Mich. 



J±. L*. YOUNG & CO. 



Wholesale Florists 



Receivers and Shippers of Cut Flowers. 



54 West 28th Street, 



TELEPHONE 3559 nADlSON SQUARE. 



Consignments Solicited. 



NEW YORK 



WILLIAM H. KUEBLER 



Brooklyn's Foremost and Best 



WH0LE8ALE COMMISSION HOUSE 



A First Class Market for all CUT FLOWERS 



28 Willoughby St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Tel. 4591 Main 



Greater New YorR 

 Florists' Association, 



Inc. 



Now Open for Cut Flower Consignments 



162 Livingston Street, BROOKLYN, N. Y. 



Geo.W. Crawbuck Telephone Connection 

 Manager 3642-43 Main 



H. C. BERNINC 



Wholesale Florist 



1402 Pine Street, ST. L0UI8, MO. 

 REED <£L KELLER 



122 West 25th St.. New York 



Florists' Supplies 



We manufacture all our 



lettl Designs, Baskets, Wire Work 4 Ho?eltIe» 



and are dealers in 

 tliuwir* Decorative Green* Sid fltrilte' lequltitM 



THE KERVAN CO. 



Wholesale Dealers aud Shippers of 



Decorative Evergreens 



Fern*. Galax, Lanrel, Fresh Cycas. Box- 



w«iml, Sph iir n ii m :iintall('liriMi!i:i. Greens 



Send to us for Quotations before Huying. 

 113 West 28 Street, NEW YOKE CITT 



E. A. BEAVEN 



Southern Wild Smilax, 

 Log Mosses, 



Natural and Perpetuated — at Wholesale 



EVERGREEN, ALABAMA. 



SAMUEL A. W00DR0W 



WHOLESALE PLANTSMAM 



Palms, Large and Small Ferns, etc. 



S3 West 30th Street, 



NEW YORK 



GEORGE GOTSONAS & CO. 



Wholesale and Retail Dealers In all kinds ot 



BVBRGHEEXS 



Fancy and Dagger Ferns 

 Bronze and (jreen Qalax 



Main Store 50 W. 28 St. 



Phone laca Mad. Sq. New York 



HENSHAW (§b FENRJCH 



WHOLESALE FLORISTS 



44 WeSt 28th St., 5583 nelson Sq. N. Y. 



Night and Sunday Phone 5582 Madison Sq. 



Our Specialty is Everything. 



Consignments of the best stock solicited. 

 The square deal guaranteed to all who ti ade here. 



WHOLESALE 1/ II Ml 106 W. 28th St. 



COMMISSION If A KIM NEWY0RK 



Open 6 a.m. Daily Ul l\l fflLLLIl Tel. 1 67 Madison Sq. 



All Grades of Flowers to Suit All Buyers. Consignments Solicited. 

 IreW YORKToUOTA flOWS PER 100. To Dealers 0nly~ 



CARNATIONS AND MISCELLANEOUS 



Last Half of 



ending De 



1908 



Week 

 c.5 



Carnations, Fancy and Novelties. . 



" Ordinary 



Chrysanthemums, Fan y 



•• Ordinary 



Cattleyxs 



Lilies 



Lily of the Vallev 



Nar ci *. , Paper White 



Poman Hya 



Sweet Peas, per ico bunches 



Gardenias 



VI. .lets 



Adiantum 



Croweanum.. 



Smilax 



Asparagus Plumosus, strings 



" " & Spren. (too behO. 



2.0c to 



.50 to 



to. 00 to 



5 on to 



40.00 

 5.00 



1. 00 to 



1 50 to 



1 00 to 



8.co te 



23. OO tC 



.50 to 



.50 to 



I. CO to 



8. ro to 



70.00 to 



15.00 to 



3.00 



1.50 



25.00 



8.00 



o 7=.oo 



to 8. o 



3.00 



2.0c 



2 OO 

 12 OS 



35 00 

 ■ 7; 

 ■75 

 1 25 



12. OO 

 35-03 

 25.OO 



First Half of 



beginning D 



1908 



Week 

 ec.7 



2 40 to 



■ 75 to 



10. 00 to 



5.00 to 



40 OO to 



8.. o to 



1.00 to 



1.50 to 



I OS tO 



800 to 



20.00 to 



.50 to 



.50 to 



l.oo to 



8 00 to 



20 00 to 



.5 OO tO 



4.00 

 1.50 



25.00 

 8.00 

 75.00 



12.00 



300 



3.00 



2 OO 



12 OO 



40.00 

 •75 

 75 



1.25 



12 OO 



35.CO 



25.CO 



Telephone 2083 Madison 



NEW YORK MARKET. 



Business in the wholesale flower 

 markets has been anything hut brisk. 

 Th disappearance, first of as f ers, then 

 dahlias, and lastly chrysanthemums, 

 from the field, on which successive pre- 

 dictions of genuine milk-and-b n 

 days have been based, seems to have 

 failed in the case of chrysanthemums 

 as well as with the chrysanthemum's 

 predecessors. While an occasional 

 spurt has been experienced, lasting a 

 few hours, or a day or two at most, 

 vet there has developed nothing this 

 season equivalent to the timely re- 

 vival which experience in the past has 

 led the grower and dealer to look for 

 as a regular thing in late Novem 

 and it can truly be said that all the 

 predictions of "old-timers" have gone 

 awry and few know "where they are 



at." It cannot be said that the prod- 

 uct coining to this market is excessive 

 in quantity, and it certainly is fully up 

 to standard as to quality, so it only re- 

 quires a bracing up of demand. In the 

 meantime prices are favorable for the 

 buyer and florists at a greater or less 

 distance from the city, who are trying 

 to slide through on local material of 

 varying quality would do well to *ake 

 advantage of the present opportunity 

 to stork up with high-class gilt-edge 

 material such as the New York whole- 

 salers are carrying, at prices which 

 afford them an ample profit — a course 

 which should have a very spiriting 

 i on their local patrons. Read the 

 big offers of the wholesalers in this 

 issue and take a try. A little sensa- 

 tionalism just now is needed to set the 

 wheels a-turning at winter speed. 



