246 



HORTICULTURE 



February 12, 1910 



WHOLESALE EXORISTS- 



Continned 



Minneapolis 



Rice Bros., 115 N. 6th St., Mimieaijolis, 



Mi nil. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



Hew York 



Ford Bros., 48 W. 28tli St., New Vorli. 



For :>a^e see Ijist of Advertisers. 



H. E. Froment, 57 W. 28tli St.. New Yorls. 



For pa^^e see .L ist of Advertisers. 



Alex. J. Guttman, 34 W. 28tU St.. New 



YorU. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



E. 



C. Horaii, 55 W. 1 

 For page see List 



:Sth St., New Yorli. 

 of Advertisers. 



A. H. Laugjalir. 55 W. 

 F^v page see List 



28tli St., New Yorls. 

 of Advertisers. 



James RIeMaiius, 42 W. 



For page see List_ 

 Jolin 1. Kayiior, 49 W. 



For page see List 



2Stli St., New Yorli. 

 of Advertisers. 

 28tli St., New York, 

 of Advertisers. 



F. Sheridau, 39 W. 

 For page see List 



2Sth St., New York, 

 of Advertisers. 



Moore, Hentz & Nasli, 55 and 57 W. 26th 

 St., New York. ■ 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



Wm. H. Kuebler, 28 Willoughby St., 

 Brooklyn, N. Y. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



Millang Bros., 41 W. 28th St., New York. 



For page see Lis t of Advertisers. 



Greater New York Florists' Association, 



162 Livingston St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



Phillip F. Kessler, 55 & 57 W. 26th St., 



New York. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



A. L. Young & Co., 54 W. 28th St., N. Y. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 

 J. K. Allen, 106 W. 28th St., New York. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



Charles Millang, 55 and .57 West 26th St., 



New Y'ork. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



B. S. Slinn, Jr., 55-57 W. 26th St., New 



York. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



PhUadelphia 



W. E! McKissick & Bros., 1619-1621 Ran- 

 stead St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 

 Leo Niessen Co., 12ti9 Arch St., Philadel- 

 phia. I'a. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



The S. S. Pennock-Meehan Co., 1608-12 



Ludlow St.. Philadelphia. Pa. 



For page see List of Advertisers. 



New Offers in This Issue. 



BURMESE DENDROBIUMS AND 



OTHER SEASONABLE ORCHIDS. 



Stuart Low & Co., Enfield, England. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



GLADIOLI AND DAHLIAS. 



Jantzen & Hoebel, Hicksville, L. I., N. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



HOT BED SASH. 



Parshelsky Bros., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 For page .see List of Advertisers. 



HOT WEATHER LETTUCE. ~ 



N. Simon &• Son. IMiiladelpliia, Pa. 

 I'or iiage see List of Advertisers. 



NIKOTEEN APHIS PUNK. 



Nicotine Mfg. Co., St. Louis. Mo. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



POTASH. 



German Kali Works, Baltimore, Md. 

 For page see List of .\dvertisers. 



RHUBARB SEED. 



Warren Shinn, Woodstown, N. J. 

 For page see IJst of Advertisers. 



SEED POTATOES, RADISH, CAB- 

 BAGE, ONION, ETC. 



F. H. Eheling, Syracuse, N. Y. 

 For page see List of Advertisers. 



CATALOGUES RECEIVED. 



George S. Woodruff, Independence, 

 la. — "The Gladiolus, Includins Groft's 

 Hybrids and Other Best Sorts." 



Wagner Park Conservatories, Sid- 

 ney, Ohio — Special Bargain Offers in 

 Palms, Perns, Roses and Hardy Plants. 



Henry A. Dreer, Philadelphia, Pa. — 

 Market Gardeners' Wholesale Price 

 List. "Reliable" vegetable and flower 

 seeds, garden requisites, implements, 

 fertilizers, insecticides in full variety 

 aie listed and well illustrated. 



Champion City Greenhouses, Good 

 & Reese Co., Springfield, Ohio — Spring 

 Trade List for 1910. This catalogue, 

 issued for florists, nurserymen and 

 dealers only, covers the field of roses 

 and young greenhouse stock quite 

 fully. It holds good till April. 



J. L. Moore, Northboro, Mass. — 

 Catalogue and Price List of Dahlias 

 and Gladioli for 1910. A reproduc- 

 tion of a vase of dahlias in many 

 colors makes a sparkling cover pic- 

 ture. The list is a good one and the 

 planting directions are concise and 

 practical. 



Schlegel & Fottler Co., Boston. — 

 Seed Catalogue for 1910. 7x9 size, 

 covers in soft grey tints, showing 

 sweet peas on one and Pull Measure 

 bean on the other. A well-arranged, 

 well-painted and readable catalogue 

 of carefully selected varieties in 

 flower and vegetable seeds, bulbs and 

 perennial garden material. 



K. G Hill Co., Richmond, Ind.— The 

 well-known name of the house and a 

 superb cover page portrait of the Lyon 

 Rose on this 1910 spring list will be 

 sufficient inducement to turn over the 

 piiges and peruse the contents. There 

 are some roses portrayed on the inside 

 pages in half-tones of rare finish. New 

 roses, carnations, chrysanthemums and 

 fi-eranitims are fully listed. 



Welch Brothers, Boston, Mass. — 

 Wholesale Price List of Plorists' Sup- 

 plies. This well-known firm has iu 

 this publication, placed before the flor- 

 ist trade a production that will com- 

 pare favoiably with any similar cata- 

 logue published. It is printed on 

 heavy coated paper, freely illustrated, 

 and furnishes a very complete list of 

 the thousand and one daily requisites 

 ot the modern florist. 



Stumpp & Walter Co., New York 

 City.— Seed Catalogue for 1910. This 

 is one of the standard lists of the 

 country and it is fully up to expecta- 

 tions. Hohenzollern asters have the 

 place of honor on the title page, in 

 modified tints and beautiful of out- 

 line. Printing and arrangement of the 

 contents are "all to the good" and no 

 extraneous or superfluous matter en- 

 cumbers the reading pages. 



Henry P. Michell Co., Philadelphia, 

 Pa. — Michell's Wholesale Price List 

 for Florists and Market Gardeners — 

 The name of the concern back ot this 

 catalogue gives it a standing which we 

 can hardly enlarge tipon. As a whole- 

 sale catalogue on live goods it is in- 

 imitable and nobody doing business 

 as a florist or gardener should lose any 

 time before sending for a copy and 

 then giving it a careful reading. 



H. R. Fiske Seed Company, Boston. 

 — 1910 Catalogue and Price List of 

 Seeds, Bulbs, Plants and Poultry Sup- 

 plies. An admirable production — espe- 

 cially so for a young firm. But this 



young firm is rapidly growing in 

 strength and lustre and a host of 

 friends, including HORTICULTURE, 

 are glad to see it move up into the 

 front rank. The catalogue in ques- 

 tion bears evidence of careful indus- 

 try baclied by that indisiiensable quali- 

 fication — "knowing how." 



D, Landreth Seed Co., Bloomsdale 

 Seed Parms, Bristol, Pa.— The 1910 

 catalogue of this well-known firm re- 

 minds us on its cover page that it is 

 in its 126th year. The make-up of the 

 book shows that the time since 17S4 

 has not been wasted by the Landreth 

 people, but that they are well in touch 

 with a goodly section of the people 

 who want to buy seeds. We hope be- 

 fore long to help them still further 

 on this commendable course by intro- 

 ducing them through our advertising 

 columns to a few more whom they do 

 not yet reach. 



Holler Brothers Co., New Castle, Ind. 

 — "The Roses of the Garden." A se- 

 ductive title which it would be difficult 

 to improve upon as a selling phrase for 

 the goods which this firm offers. The 

 covers are handsomely adorned with 

 rose portraits in natural colors, inside 

 as well as outside, the subjects being 

 American Beauty, Robert Hiller, 

 Climbing Killarney and Jeannette Hil- 

 ler. The pages are profusely illustrat- 

 ed and the text matter is bubbling over 

 with the sentiment and expression 

 which inspires the reader and makes 

 him an enthusiastic purchaser. 



DURING RECESS. 



Twin City Bowlers. 

 On Jan. 27th the first tournament 

 of the season was played in Minne- 

 apolis. Scores were as follows: 



MINNEAPOLIS. 



Th. Wirth 127 165 155 



L. Boeglin 150 116 119 



E. Meyer 150 169 123 



K. E. Carlson 140 150 146 



C. N. Ruedlinger 144 176 192 



H. Will 134 137 146 



C. A. Bossen 90 121 146 



935 1034 1027 

 ST. PAUL. 



S. J. Dysinger 158 111 138 



Ch. Hangan 107 138 164 



Will. Swanson 154 134 152 



I/eo Hermes 115 126 150 



Henrv Puvogel 153 153 142 



O. J. Olson 145 189 227 



Christ. Hansen 92 174 119 



924 1025 1092 

 Minneapolis won 2 out of the 3 games. 

 O. J. Olson from St. Paul made the 

 highest score of the evening, 227. 



The St. Paul brethren felt so badly 

 after the first bowling tournament 

 that they sent a challenge to Minne- 

 apolis the very next day. The games 

 were rolled on Feb. 2 at the Court 

 House alleys in St. Paul. The scores 

 are as follows: 



ST. PAUL. 



Dvslnger 175 175 119 



Hangan 132 157 142 



Puvosei 132 107 122 



Hermes 154 118 125 



Swanson 183 153 150 



Olson 177 157 137 



953 867 795 

 MINNEAPOLIS. 



Wlrth 141 95 134 



Mever 122 138 150 



Will 133 126 141 



Boeglin 139 87 130 



Carlson 186 139 135 



Ruedlinger 148 115 186 



869 700 878 

 St. Paul won 2 out of the 3 games, so 

 the two clubs are even again. From latest 

 reports we understand that the pulses and 

 tempers of St. Paul bowlers la about nor- 

 mal again. 



