October 22, 1910 



HORTICULTURE 



583 



MICHIGAN CUT FLOWER 

 EXCHANGE, Inc. 



WHOLESALE COMMISSION FLORISTS 



Consignments Solicited 

 Hardy Fancy Fern Our Specialty 



38-40 BROADWAY, DETROIT, MICH 



REKD (SI HELLER 



(22 West 25th St., New York 



Florists' Supplies 



We manufacture all our 



MetalDesigDS,Baskets,Wiretfork&ISIo«veltles 



and are dealers in 

 Slassware Decorative Greens and Florists' RerulsHes 



Galax and LeuGOthoe 



Quality, Packing and Price All Right 



Wholesale Only. 



Send for Quotations. 



J. L. BANNER, montezuma 



Flower Market Reports 



(ContiHtud from page 581) 



ing them up with water. These neg- 

 lects cause the blooms to flag very 

 quiclily in store or living rooms. 



Lots of outside 

 PHILADELPHIA stuff around yet, 



and as business is 

 nothing above normal, the past week 

 was anything but wonderful in the 

 way of cleaning up the big shipments 

 of all iiinds of materials arriving. We 

 have had one slight frost but not 

 enough to do any material damage. 

 Chrysanthemums are getting more 

 plentiful all the time, and while the 

 quality is improving, they cannot as 

 yet be called very classy — except small 

 lots here and there. Pacific Supreme 

 is the best light pink just now. Polly 

 Rose leads in white, with Monrovia 

 and Golden Glow in yellow. Robert 

 Halliday and Virginia Poehlmann are 

 expected in a few days. There are 

 far more dahlias arriving than the 

 market can absorb. Jack Frost is a 

 w"eek overdue (as compared with last 

 year), so until his arrival the dahlia 

 men are glad to get all they can out 

 of the situation. The rose market con- 

 tinues fairly satisfactory. American 

 Beauties are good and are selling 

 right up. but it is expected there will 

 be bigger cuts soon and the present 

 figures are liable to ease up within the 

 next ten days. No one looks for 

 much improvement in Richmonds and 

 Liberties until we have had cooler 

 weather. There are some very fine 

 pink Killaruey coming in. This weath- 

 er just suits Kaiserin, which is at top 

 notch still. White Killarney is also 

 fine. Brides and Bridesmaids do not 

 amount to much any more, although 

 there are still a few around. Duchess 

 of Wellington is in and looking fine. 

 We see no Harry Kirk this year. A 

 lovely variety and fine tor outside, but 

 they say not enough dollars and cents 

 to the square foot indoors. Carna- 

 tions are more plentiful and showing 

 something like form at last. White 

 Perfection. Enchantress, Beacon and 

 O. P. Bassett lead the procession. Or- 

 chid prices are hardening up some 

 consequent on an increased demand 

 but supply still quite plentiful. Gar- 



WILLIAM H. KUEBLER 



Brooklyn's Foremost and Best 



WHOLESALE COMMISSION HOUSE 



A First Class Market for all CUT FLOWERS 



28 Willoughby St., Brooklyn, N. T. 



Tel. 4591 Mala 



TlRIClT'S FLORIST 

 NOVELTIES 



Maniiacturer and Patenlei o< tka fm- 

 fect Adjmtable Pot H asdic of HufN, 

 Perfect Adjuitable Plant Stands aarf 

 the ( Iriginal Gcauiiie ImmortclW \j^ 

 lexa, etc. Every Letter Marked. 

 1164-68 Greww A«., Br*okl;i, 1.1 

 For Sale by all Supply HoM«r 



Palm Leaves, $5.00 per thousand 



Magnolia Grandiflora Leaves, $S.OO per ten thousand 



Florida (gray) Moss, 200 pounds for $5.00 



CASH WITH ORDER. 25 YEARS' EXPERIENCE. 



VICTOR SCHMELZ & SONS, R. 2, Sanford, Florida. 



NEW Y ORK QUOTATIONS PER 100. To Dealers Only 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Cattleyas 



Lilies, Longlflorum 



" Spedosum 



Lily ol toe Valley 



Violets. ■ 



Snaparagon 



Qladioll 



ChrysBnthemums 



Gardenias 



Adlantum 



Smllaz 



Asparagus Plumosus, strings .. 



" " & Spren. (loo bcns). 



Last Half of Week 



ending Oct. 15 



1910 



30.00 

 5.00 



3. 00 



1. 00 



,20 



3.0* 



1. 00 



5.00 



8.00 



30 



8.00 



15.00 



IC.OO 



to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 

 to 



30 00 

 6.00 

 3. CO 



3.00 



.40 



:i.oo 

 2,00 

 30.0* 

 12.00 

 1. 00 

 12.00 



35.00 



2;. 00 



First Half of Wer' 



beginning Oct. 17 



1910 



20.00 



3 -00 



2.00 



l.oo 



.20 



2. CO 



1. 00 



5.00 



8.00 



.50 



6.00 



15.00 



10.00 



to 

 to 



30.00 

 8.00 



3.eo 

 3.0c 

 .50 

 3.00 

 a. 00 



30. CO 



13 00 

 1. 00 

 12 00 

 35.00 

 35.00 



denias and lily of the valley are both 

 selling well. It is too warm yet for 

 violets. The stock is all right but 

 they don't keep well. Any amount of 

 splendid cosmos to be had at buyer's 

 price. 



This market is heav- 

 NEW YORK ily oversupplied with 



flowers of every sort, 

 and there seems to be no possible 

 outlet for half of them, A week of 

 balmy Indian summer has coaxed 

 everything and everybody out, and 

 with so much of charm in the air and 

 the landscape, people lose no time 

 contemplating florists' products, Roses, 

 carnations, chrysanthemums, orchids, 

 gardenias and a host of lesser things 

 are piling In rapidly and they are 

 jostled on all sides with barrels 

 of cosmos, dahlias and such garden 

 material which, in the usual order of 

 things, should have vacated the 

 premises bv this time. As a rule, 

 everything "is of excellent quality. 

 As the days pass the chrysanthemums 

 advance in variety and quality and 

 there are plenty of flowers around 

 which would do credit to an exhibi- 

 tion table. More seasonable weather 

 conditions will, no doubt, improve 

 matters. Already it looks as if the 

 crest of the wave had been reached 

 with Cattleya labiata. The supply 

 has been, and still is, enormous, and 

 these noble flowers have had to strug- 

 gle for a market at prices hitherto 

 unheard of in the orchid trade. 



INCORPORATED. 

 Martinsburg, W. Va.— The Hart- 

 Clohan Co., agricultural and horticul- 

 tural. Capital stock, $75,000. Incor- 



porators, Charles B. Hart, Morgan O. 

 Hart, Wheeling; Alexander Clohan, 

 Nathaniel T. Frame, of Martinsburg. 



SOUTHERN WILD SMILAX 



Now ready in limited quantity. 



E. A. BEAVEN 



EVERGREEN, ALABAMA. 



ROBERT j7 DYSART 



Public Accountant and Auditor 



simple methods of correct accoontlng 

 especially adapted for florists' n»«. 



Books Balanced and Adjusted 



Merchants Bank Building 

 as STATE STREET. - BOSTOM 



Telephone, Main 58. 



