■832 



HORTICULTURE 



June 22, 1907 



New Offers in This Issue. 



AUCTION TRADE SALE: RUSTIC 

 HANGING BASKETS. 



■Wm. Elliott & Sous, 201 Fulton St., New 



York. 



For page see List ot Advertisers. 



AZALEAS. 



John Scheepers & Co., 4 and 6 Old Slip, 



New York. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



BAY TREES. 



N. F. McCarthy & Co., 84 Hawley St., 



Boston. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



BULBS. 



B. F. Michell Co., 1018 Market St., PUIa- 



delpliia. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



CATTLEYA GIGAS, LABIATA, 

 SCHROEDERAE. 



Julius Eoelirs Co., Rutherford, N. 3. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



CATTLEYA SCHROEDERAE. 



Ciirrillo & Baldwin, Secaucus, N. J. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



CYCLAMENS. 



■S. S. Skidelsky, 824 N. 24th St., Phila- 

 delphia. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



ENGLISH IVY. 



Chas. Lenker, Freeport, L. L, N. Y. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



GOV. HERRICK VIOLET. 



H. A. Molatsch & Son, Nanuet, N. Y. 

 For page see List of .\dvertisers. 



PAINT AND PUTTY. 



Benj. Hammond, i^ishkiil-on-Hudson, N. Y. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



ROSES FOR BENCHING. 



Baiir Floral Co., Erie, Pa. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



SALVIAS: GARDENIA VEITCHII. 



John Sfott, Rutland Rd. and B. 45th St., 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



For page see List of .Advertisers. 



STEVIA. 



C. Eisele, Philadelphia. 

 For page see List of Ad\e[tisers. 



VICK'S SUPERB PANSY SEED. 



Jas. Viek's Sons, Rochester, N. Y. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



HORTICULTURE'S REPRESENTA- 

 TIVES. 



The following named gentlemen 

 represent this paper in their various 

 local districts, and are authorized to 

 accept subscriptions, advertisements 

 and news items: 



BUFFALO, N. Y.— E. C. Brucker, 385-87 



Elllcott St. 

 COLUMBUS, OHIO— M. B. Faxon, 246 Oak 



St. 

 CINCINNATI, OHIO— Frank W. Ball, 31 



East 3d St. 



DETROIT Mica— Frank Daszer, 1487 

 15th St. 



INDIANAPOLIS, IND.— Georee B. Wle- 



gand. 1610 N. Illinois St. 

 NEWPORT, B. I.— DaTld Mcintosh, Ledge 



Road. 



PHILADELPHIA, PA.— George C. Wat- 

 sou. Dobson Bldg., 9th and Market Sta. 



PITTSBURG, PA.— James Hutchinson, 

 corner Dunmoyle and S. Negley Aves. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I.— Eugene Appleton, 

 204 Broadway. 



ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS— John A. 

 May, 163 Iglehart St., St. Paul Minn. 



TOLEDO, OHIO— J. L. Schiller, 929 Prontj 

 Ave. 



" Nothing except the mint can make 

 money without advertisinrj." — Gladstone. 



Niagara Falls, N. Y., June 17, 1907. 

 HORTICULTURE Publishing Co., 



Gentlemen: — Please discontinue our 

 adv. immediately, as we are being 

 swamped with applicants, both in per- 

 son and by letter, and we have secured 

 a good man. 



Thanking you for your courtesy and 

 promptness, and assuring you of our 

 future patronage, we remain. 

 Very truly yours, 



E. A. BUTLER & SON. 



I[?S*°" Gentlemen: — Kindly discontinue my 

 advertisements of Hanging Baskets as I 

 am way behind on orders. 



Respectfully, 



F. W. BALL. 

 Cincinnati, Feb. iS, jQoy. 



WS~ Please discontinue my ads. for now. 

 Will have some more stock to offer and 

 shall be glad to send my ad. to HORTI- 

 CULTURE. JOHN STAMM. 



Hutchinson, Kan., Mar. iS, IQOJ. 



ISS^ Please discontinue my geranium ad. 

 I have BO many inquiries for plants and I 

 am sold out of the small sizes I advertised. 

 WM. DOEL. 



Pascoag, R. [. , A pril 13, iQoy. 



lEF" Take out the geraniums and salvias 

 from my advertisement. Through this ad- 

 vertisement in HORTICULTURE I have 

 disposed of my surplus stock of both. 



R. L. GOINSALVOS. 

 IValtham, .Mass., April 2y, tgoy. 



1EF~ Would say and glad to say that I 

 am sold out of my pansy stock. Thanking 

 you very kindly for the immense business 

 your paper has alone favored us with, 

 Yours truly, 



WM. DOBBERTIN. 

 Rochester, N. }'., April zq, jQcrj, 



WW You win please not repeat our large 

 advertisement of last week, as the goods 

 we offered have all been sold. Over $500 

 worth of direct sales from one offer pays 

 us well, as in fact all our advertising In 

 HORTICULTURE does. 



A. H. HEWS & CO., Inc. 

 Catnbridge, Mass., April 2'i, iQoy. 



" When you pay more for the rent of 

 your business house than for advertising 

 your business, you are pursuing a false 

 policy." — Franklin. 



If you want to do business 

 Advertise in Horticulture. 



BETWEEN YOU AND ME, What 

 do you think of the Buyer's Directory 

 and Ready Reference Guide of HORTI- 

 CULTURE? I always look It over be- 

 fore I do any buying. 



WANTS, FOR SALE, ETC. ' 



Adverkisetnents in this column one 

 cent a word. Initials count as words. 

 Cash with order. All correspondence 

 addressed "care H O R T I C ^j L- 

 TURE" should be sent to IJ Ham- 

 ilton Place, Boston. 



HELP WANTED 



HORTICULTURE needs a wide- 

 awake representative in every town 

 in the land. Good commissions paid 

 on advertising and subscriptions. If 

 you are ambitious, write for terms. 



SITUATIONS WANTED 



SITUATION WANTED 



.\s working foreman or head gardener. 

 Age 38; married. Best of reference. New 

 England preferred. H. W., care HORTI- 

 CULTURE. 



GARDENER wishes position on gentle- 

 man's place as head; competent in all 

 branches of gardening, landscape work and 

 improvements; care of live stock; capable 

 of taking full ctiarg'^; age 39; married, two 

 children, eight and eleven years; best of 

 references. Address Gardener, bos 137, 

 Springfield, N. J. 



POSITIONS WANTED for bead gardan- 

 erg and asBlstants; for farther iDformitlon 

 apply to W. W. RawsoD & Co., 6 Union 

 St., Boston. Mass. 



SITUATION WANTED as foreman of 

 good place. Twenty years all-round ex- 

 perience with cut flowers, vegetables, pot 

 plants and nursery stock. Good worker. 

 Good wages and good treatment expected. 

 Good references. State wages in first let- 

 ter. Address, Box 82, Millbrook, N. Y. 



FOR SALE 



FOR SALE— 45 H. P. Boiler, built two 

 years ago. No reasonable offer refused. 

 A. H. Westhaver, 11 Huntley St., Maldeu, 

 Mass. 



A DESIRABLE GIFT FOR YOUR 

 EMPLOYEE. 



There can be no more useful and ap- 

 propriate present tlian a subscription 

 to HORTICULTURE. The more he 

 reads HORTICULTURE the, better 

 service he will render you. If you 

 want to give five or more we will be 

 glad to make a special discount, on 

 application. 



Other Useful Books. 



The Horticulturist's Rule-Book. 

 Bailey. Price, 75 cents. 



Chrysanthemum Manual. Smith. 

 Price, 40 cents. 



The Chrysanthemum. Herrington. 

 Price, 50 cents. 



How to Make Money Growing 

 Violets. Saltford. Price, 25 cents. 



Dwarf Fruit Trees. Waugh. Price, 

 50 cents.' 



The American Carnation. C. W. 

 Ward. Price, $3.50. 



The Dahlia. By L. K. Peacock. 

 Price, 30 cents. 



The First County Park System. F. 

 W. Kelsey. Price, $1.25. 



Manual of the Trees ot North Ameri- 

 ca. C. S. Sargent. Price, $6.00. 



PRICES QUOTED IN THESE COLUMNS ARE FOR DEALERS ONLY ^.^ls"e'K.'^'n^".lr;'>HVrrSS^S 



