July 17: 1909 



HORTICULTURE 



85 



91^^ NOTICE 



__ . , , H| HH I ■ WHOLESALE FLORI5T5 



Manhattan Flower Market '« ' ''' " *•'«' '«»' 



Telephone: 1016 Madison Sq. 



Ship us some stock. 

 Stock, etc . for our new ston 



WHOLESALE FLORISTS 



94 West 28th St. 

 NEW YORK 



We need a large supply of all kinds of flowers, Roses, Carnations, Sweet Peas, Narcissus, Summer 

 store. Reliability and responsibility first-class. Good prices and prompt returns, Good opportunity. 



1l L YOUMfi & CO. 



RECEIVERS & SHIP» 



PERS OF CUT 



FLOWERS. 



ooHvaHMeiiTs aouanm 



122 Wast 25th St., New York 



Florists' Supplies 



We manufacture all our 



letal Designs, Baskets, Hire Work & Novelties 



and arc dealers in 

 eiaiswirfi Deoorstive Greens and Florists' Requisites 



MICHIGAN CUT FLOWER 

 EXCHANGE, Inc. 



WHOLESALE COMMISSION FLORISTS 



Consignments Solicited 



Hardy Fancy Fern Our Specialty 



38-40 BROADWAY, DETROIT. MICH. 



FOR FLORISTS' USE 

 There's NQTHI NQ asSoo''"s 



MEYER'S SILKALINE 



Don't let them sell you anything else 

 JOHN C.nEYER & CO., Boston, Hass. 



KRIGK'S FLORIST 

 NOVELTIES 



Manufacturer and Patentee of the Per- 

 fect Adjustable Pot Handle or Hanger. 

 Perfect Adjustable Plant Stands and 

 the » riginal Genuine Immortelle Let- 

 ters, etc. Every Letter Marked. 



1184-66 Greene Av.. Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 For Sale by all Supply Houses 



Wired Toothpicks 



Manufactured by 



W. J. COWEE, BERLIN, N. Y. 



•Bpooo $1.75; 50,000 $7.50. Sample fn*. 



Per sale by dealers 



FLOWER MARKET REPORTS. 



{Continued from page S3) 



The past week has 

 INDIANAPOLIS been one of ex- 

 tremely hot weath- 

 er, and there has been little doing ex- 

 cept an occasional wedding. The in- 

 tense heat has told on the sweet peas 

 and they are about gone. Carnations, 

 and roses with exception of Beauties, 

 Kaiserins and Killarneys. are of in- 

 ferior quality. Bright colored gladioli 

 are arriving in good shape and are very 

 much in demand. A fine lot of lilies of 

 all kinds are in but meet with little 

 demand. Green goods are in good sup- 

 ply. Chrysanthemums are looking well 

 with all of the florists and the indica- 

 tions are that there will be a good 

 supply this fall. A few asters are now 

 on the market, but it is a little early 

 for the outdoor crop. 



The supply of green- 

 NEW YORK house-grown flowers 



in this market has 

 been steadily diminishing, but there is 

 an abundance for all the requirements 



WILLIAM F.KASTING GO, 



WHOLESALE FLOR/STS 

 383-387 Ellicott Street 



BUFFALO, - N. Y. 



ROBERT J. DYSART 



Public Accountant and Auditor 



Simple method* of correct aeconntlnj 

 especially adapted for florist*' a>«. 



Books Balanced and Adjusted 



Mercbanta Bank Building 

 28 STATE STREET, - BOSTON 



Telephone, Main C8. 



1887 ESTABLISHED 



KEEPING OPEN HOUSE THIS SUMMER 



TO RECEIVE CONSIGNMENTS OF .-^LL CUT FLOWERS IN SK.^SUN 



TOP PRICE AND PROMPT RETURNS 



106 W. 28th St., N.Y. 



Tel. 167 Madison Sq. 

 Open6 A. M. Daily. 



J. K. ALLEN 



NEW YORK QUOTA nONS PER 100. To Dealers Only^ 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Cattleyaa 



LIHm 



Lily of the Valley 



Daisies (.per bunch) 



Stocks (per bunch). 



Sweet Peas (per ico bunches). 



Gardenias 



Adlantum 



SmHa X 



Asparagus Plumosus, strings 



'* " & Spico. (loo bcfafi) 



First WfirfWe* 



bMinnIng July 12 

 1909 



15.00 



3.00 

 1.00 



.10 



.tS 



1. 00 



S-oo 



■ 50 

 8.00 



30.00 

 15.00 



Of the trade at this time when the 

 flower store neighborhoods are for- 

 saken by everybody who is not com- 

 pelled to show up. "Outdoor material 

 is, of course, in heavy supply with but 

 few takers for a large part of it, but 

 the economically inclined retail dealer 

 finds in it a welcome resource for a 

 few vases of any garden or pasture 

 flower at a trifling cost sufBces to fill 

 the show window and if, perchance, 

 a customer for something more choice 

 should drop in, the ever-ready tele- 

 phone will put him in prompt touch 

 with all the goods he wants without 

 taking any risks at all. The whole- 

 sale section is a great and inexhausti- 

 ble reserve supply — the best asset that 

 the New York retail trade enjoys. Lil- 

 ies are less abundant and prices are ap- 

 proaching normal. Sweet peas are an 

 avalanche and do not pay for picking. 



John Congdon, traveling representa- 

 tive of the W. W. Castle Company, 

 Boston, has just returned from a trip 

 in western Massachusetts with a big 

 list of orders for Castle hot water 

 boilers and Automatic Circulators. 



SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA NOTES. 



Edward W. Davies, late of Denver, 

 Colo., has taken a position as rose 

 grower for J. W. Wolfskin, Los 

 Angeles. 



P. D. Barnhart of Los Angeles, has 

 taken the position as 'editor of the 

 Pacific Garden, the Pasadena horticul- 

 tural paper. 



A few weeks ago the members of the 

 Pasadena Gardeners' Association paid 

 a visit to Jno. Dodger & Sons' sweet 

 pea farm at Gardena. 



J. R. Norris and son of Troy, Ohio, 

 who spent the winter months in Los 

 Angeles have gone east, and thence to 

 Europe to replenish stock for next 

 season. 



Charles Winsel, seedsman and nur- 

 seryman of Los Angeles, has just pur- 

 chased five acres of land at Montibello, 

 which he intends to stock with palms 

 and high grade shrubbery. 



Rei-ent visitors in Pasadena: Leonard 

 Vaughan, Chicago; W. Atlee Burpee, 

 and H. M. Earl, Philadelphia; Mr. Kir- 

 by of Henderson & Co., New York; 

 Ernest Senary, Jr.. Erfurt. Germany. 



