November 13, 1909 



HORTICULTURE 



69& 



List of Advertisers 



Page 



Advance, The Co 699 



AUeo J. K 689 



American Nursery 



(Eng.) 668 



American Woodcnware 



M'fgCo 698 



A^chmann Godfrey,. .661 



Banner J. L. 689 



BaiTOwsH.H.&Son.666 



BauT & Smith 667 



liayersdoriet H.& Co 686 



BexTen E. A . 689 



Bcrrydale Experiment 



Gardens.. 679 



Bobbink & Atkins C180 



Boddington \. I (83 



Boston Cut Flower 



Co 685 



Boston Florist Letter 



Co 68j 



Boston Plate and Win- 

 dow Glass Co 699 



Bowe M 684 



Breck Joseph & Sons 683 

 Bnitmeyer s J. Sons. 684 

 Brldgoman' s Seed 



Warehouse 683 



Blown A. C 667 



■nrpee W. A. &Co .683 



Carillo & Baldwin . 666 

 Chicago Carnation 



Co 667 



Clarke's David Sons.. 684 



CoweeW. J 689 



Craig, Robt,,Co 68c 



ClawbuckGeo.W....683 



Danker F. A 684 



Dawson Harry S 668 



Dincce & Conard Co. 668 



Doane, Geo. B 699 



Domer F. Sons & Co.6^7 



Dow Geo. E 683 



Drcer H. A 698 



Diiolop John H .684 



Dnrand & Marohn...638 

 Dytart, R.J 683 



Eastern Nurseries 668 



Edwards Folding Box 



Co 686 



Elliott Wm Si Sons.. .668 



Kaler J. G 699 



Imest W. H 698 



tyres 684 



Farquhar R & .1 .& Co 683 

 Fernwood Nurseries.. 680 

 FUke H. E. Seed €0.682 



Foley Mfg. Co 6(59 



Ford Bros 688 



FordC. S 667 



rrament H.E 688 



GaivinThos. F 685 



Grater N.Y, Florists' 



Ajsociation 688 



Grey T.J. Co 683 



Gudc Bros Co. 684 



Guttman Alex J 688 



Hail Asso 699 



Harrison Nurseries . .668 

 Hartmann Hjalmar & 



Co 68a 



Mauawirth the Florist 684 



Heacockjos. Co 666 



Herbert 667 



Hews A. H.&C0....698 



tiilfinger Bros 6<;8 



HUl,TheE,G.Co... 667 



Hltctiing5& Co 700 



Hoerber Bros 686 



Hofiman 684 



Home Correspondence 



Schools 680 



H<x>pes, Bro.&Thomas 



Co 667 



HoranE.C 688 



Hunt A. E. &Co 667 



Htuit Bros 667 



Hut £. H 697 



Jager, Oias. J. Co. . .697 

 KastingW. F. Co. ...689 



Kervan Co 68S 



fCcMler P. F 683 



King Cons. Co 699 



Knopf Chas 667 



Krick W. C 689 



Kroeschell Bros. Co. .699 

 Kuebler Wm H 688 



Lager &Hurrell 666 



Langjahr. Alfred H. . . 688 



Leesley Bros. 681 



Latmard Seed Co .683 



Leuthv A. & Co 681 



LittlefieldH. F 667 



Lord & Bumham Co. 7C0 

 McCarthy N. F.& Co.ieg 



MacMnBcin E. 684 



Mapes Rustic Works. 685 

 Matthews, The Florist685 



Page 



McConnell Alex 684 



McCullough's J. M. 



Sons Co 686 



McKellar Charles W. 686 

 McKeniu P. & Sons.. 684 

 McKlssick,W. E. & 



Bros 686 



McManusJas 688 



Metropolitan Material 



Co 699 



Meyer J. C & Co 689 



MichellH.F.Co 68/ 



Michigan Cut Flower 



Exchange 689 



MUlang Bros 688 



Millang Charles 688 



Millang Frank 688 



Miller E. S 679 



Moninger J. C 699 



Moore, Hentz & Nash 688 

 Morse C. C. & Co.... 683 

 Murray Samuel 684 



New Eng. Nurseries. 668 

 Nlessen Leo. Co 686 



Oechslin Frank 666 



Ordonez Bros 666 



Ouwerketk P 668 



PalethorpeP. R. Co.. 697 

 Palmer W.J. & Son.. 684 



Park Floral Co 684 



Parshelsky Bros 699 



Patten ^^ Co 667 



Peacock DahliaFarms 681 

 Penoock-Meehan Co. 687 

 Perkln.i^St. Nurseries- 681 



Peterson J . A 679 



Pieroe, F. O. Co. 698 



Pierson, A. N., Inc. .6^6 



PiersonF.R. Co 666 



Pierson U Bar Co. . . .700 

 Pittsburgh Cut Flower 



Co., Ltd 689 



PoehlmanD Bros. Co.. 686 

 Pollwonh C. C. Co.. 685 



Pratt B G. Co 697 



Quaker City Mach. C0699 

 Randolph & McCl*m- 



ents 666 



Rayner I. M 68t 



Raynor John 1 688 



Reed& Keller 688 



Reinberg Pe«er 686 



Renter S. J.&Son,Inc.667 



Rice Bros 686 



Rickards Bros 683 



Robinson H.M. &C0.686 

 Rock Wm. L Flo. Co. £84 

 Roehrs Julius Co. 



666-667-681 

 Roland, Thomas .... 681 

 Rolker August & Sons698 



Rosens 688 



Sander & Son 666 



Schlegel & Fottler C0.683 



Schmidt J. C <8i 



Schuliheis A 681 



Schulz Jacob 684 



Scott, John 666 



Sharp, Partridge & Co 699 



Sheridan W. F 688 



Siggers & Siggers. . . .699 



Sim Wm 681 



Skidclsky & Irwin.. ..666 



Slinn B. S., Jr 689 



Smith Elmer D. & C0.681 

 Smith W. &T. Co ...668 



Smyth Wm. J 684 



Standard Plate Glass 



Co 699 



Steams A.T. Lumber 



Co 609 



Stillman A. B 666 



Stoothoff H. A 697 



Stumpp & Walter Co. 697 

 Syracuse Pottery Co .698 



Tallby 685 



Talmadge Geo. E 676 



ThorburnJ.M.&Co.<82 



Totty Chas. H 677 



Valentine, J . A 684 



Vicks Jas. Sons 679 



VincentR.Jr.&Sons, 



667-681 



Wallace Ed 667 



Wants, For Sale, etc..f95 

 Ward R.M.&C0....678 

 Waterer John & Sons . 668 



Welch Bros 686 



Wilson 684 



Wlnterson.E. F. Co.. 686 



Wood Bros 667 



Yokohama Nurseries. 68r 



Young A. L ••• .689 



Young John 688 



Young & Nugent 684 



ZangenO. V 683 



Zinn Julius A 685 



Zvolaoek AC 683 



Obituary* 



Lyman Arnold Budlong. 



On Nov. Sib, at his home on Foster 

 ave., Chicago, there passed away a man 

 who had done much to elevate the 

 calling of the scientific market gar- 

 dener. His was a lite crowned by suc- 

 cess, not only financially, but because 

 by his example one of the best call- 

 ings has been dignified. 



Lyman A. Budloug met death at his 

 beautiful home after but three days' 

 illness and though eighty-two years of 

 age was still active in the business he 

 had established and which is now un- 

 der the management of his son, Jas. 

 J. Budlong. 



Born Dec. 22, 1829, Mr. Budlong 

 spent his early years in his native 

 town of Cranston, R. I., and received 

 more than a common education for 

 those times. After teaching for a few 

 terms he came West where he located 

 in that part of Chicago then known 

 as Jefi'erson, which appealed to him 

 and he has seen the prairies drained, 

 cultivated, built up into residence dis- 

 tricts and become a part of the city 

 itself. 



Lyman A. Budlong was the founder 

 of the pickle industry and from a 

 modest beginning fifty-two years ago, 

 teaching in winter to get a start, his 

 vegetable gardens now cover 800 acres. 

 The present firm, L. A. Budlong Co., 

 was organized in 1900, with L. A. Bud- 

 long, president; Joseph J. Budlong. his 

 son, vice-president: and son-in-law, 

 H. H. Chester, secretary. 



He leaves four children, Jos. J., 

 Edw. L., and Mrs. A. L. Jones of 

 Chicago, and Mrs. H. H. Chester of 

 Wheaton, 111. His wife passed away 

 five years ago. 



James S. Grant. 

 I regret to announce the death of 

 this talented gardener on September 

 10, at the Cape of Good Hope, at the 

 age of 33. The deceased was at one 

 time head gardener to the late Cecil 

 Rhodes at Groot Schuur; but at the 

 time of his death he was in the service 

 of Mr. H. M. Arderne at The Hill, 

 Claremont, Cape Colony. He was for- 

 merly ='mployed in the orchid depart- 

 ment of Messrs. Sander & Sons, St. 

 Albans, England; from whence he 

 emigrated to the Cape, taking servicf 

 in the Municipal Gardens, Cape Tow-n. 

 He was an expert cultivator of orchids, 

 and his death is greatly regretted. 



F. M. 



IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUD 



I WANTS, FOR SALE, ETC. | 



S Advertisements in this column one s 



S cent a word. Initials count as words. S 



S Cash w^ith order. AU correspondence S 



= addressed "care HORTICUL- = 



= TURE " should be sent to 1 1 Ham- 3 



S ilton Place, Boston, S 

 ffllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIHilllllllllllffl 



HELP WANTED 



Hlppolyte Millet. 

 A famous Belgian horticulturist, 

 died recently in the person of H. Mil- 

 let, of Tirlemont. Sixty years have 

 flown since M. H. Millet assumed a 

 leading part in the organization of 

 the Agricultural Committee of that 

 town; and he organized horticultural 

 lectures and took part in them for 60 

 years, encouraging a taste for arbori- 

 culture, and for plants and fruit in 

 general. Two months ago the deceased 

 celebrated his 60th year of teaching, 

 and his pupils and old students took 

 that opportunity to present him with 

 a testimonial of their affection and 

 esteem. F. M. 



David Thomson. 

 Our English contemporaries give 

 considerable space to obituary notes 



HORTICULTURE needs a wide- 

 awake representative In every town 

 In the land. Good commission paid 

 on advertising and subscriptions. If 

 you are ambitious, write for terms. 



MISCELLANEOUS WANTS 



W.^NTED — Rose plants of any kind an* 

 seedling perennials, cheap. Melrose Gar- 

 den Co.. 90 Melrose St.. Providence, B. I. 



FOR SALE 



FOK SALE— Special 16 Jt 18 and 10 z M 

 double thick glass In "A" and "B" qnall- 

 ties. Buy now and save money. Writ* 

 PARSHELSKY BROTHERS, INC., ■• 

 Montrose Ave., Broofclyn. N. T. 



FOR SALE— At Southampton, L. I., H 

 acre, 8-room house, hot bouse, 100 ft. long, 

 and bam. All newly painted and In good 

 condition. Easy terms. Inquire Padflc 

 Fa int Co., 27 Sixth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 ~FOR SALE — Greenhouse property, with 

 stock and all; 12.000 sq. ft. glass, 1 13-room 

 house, 1 5-room house with all Improve-. 

 ments; a nice big store front; good retail 

 trade; established 15 years; acre of ground, 

 with lot on main street. 7710 Lorain Ave., 

 Cleveland. Ohio. 



TO LET 



TO LET — Part of large store with largo 

 basement. Situated In the center of the 

 wholesale florists' trade. Good opportunity 

 for florists' supplies, green goods, Ferns, 

 etc., or any business connected with the 

 florist trade. Address Manhattan Flower 

 Market, Wholesale Florists, 46 West 28tb 

 St., New York City. 



SITUATIONS WANTED 



SITUATION WANTED— By g.irdener 

 and florist; German, single man; life ex- 

 perience in growing Carnations, Chrysan- 

 themums, Christmas and Easter stock and 

 bedding plants. Address R. S., care of W. 

 Hening, Lock Bos 73, Watertown. Conn. 



of this eminent gardener who died on 

 October 22 at Esk Bank, Scotland, at 

 the age of 87 years. Mr. Thomson 

 was the recipient of the highest hon- 

 ors during his life that could be con- 

 ferred upon a man horticulturally, in- 

 teilectually and socially a giant among 

 his fellows. His influence and the in- 

 spiration of his life is indelibly writ- 

 ten in the annals of British horti- 

 culture and in the hearts of the gar- 

 dening fraternity. 



Albert Relchspfarr. 



Albert Reichspfarr of Richmond, 

 Ky., died November 1. Mr. Reichs- 

 pfarr was up to about ten years ago 

 employed by Nanz & Neuner, Lexing- 

 ton, following which he went into 

 business as a florist in Richmond. 



A. W. Stelncke. 

 A. W. Stelncke, 64. a Woodmere 

 florist for 3G vears, died of dropsy at 

 his home, 2450 Fort St., W., Detroit, 

 this morning. He was senior member 

 of the firm of Steincke & Son. 



Mrs. William Falconer. 

 Mrs. William Falconer, wife of the 

 superintendent of Allegheny Ceme- 

 tery, Pittsburgh, Pa., died on Novem- 

 ber 2, following a stroke of paralysis. 



