April 1, 1916 



HORTICULTURE 



465 



Flower Market Reports 



i^Contiitued frctn page J!_i) 



fancy grades, while the great majority 

 are much lower. Colored stock, un- 

 less cheap, is left over. Bulbous stock 

 does as well as any other. 



Roses of all kinds 

 WASHINGTON are selling well 



and the market is 

 about cleaning up daily. There are 

 more American Beauty roses than 

 there have been and this has brought 

 the price down considerably. There 

 are still more violets on the market 

 than can be absorbed by sales to the 

 stores and these consequently find 

 their way into the baskets of the 

 street men. Sweet peas also are m 

 oversupply with the same result. Lily 

 of the valley is not as good as it 

 might be regardless of the fact that 

 the price is a dollar per hundred high- 

 er than normal in this locality. Car- 

 nations are selling fairly well. There 

 is a good market for callas and lilies. 



VISITORS' REGISTER. 



Philadelphia — Hundreds of the wide- 

 awake florists and gardeners of a con- 

 tinent. 



St. Louis — A. M. Sanders, rep. Poehl- 

 mann Bros. Co., Chicago; Cabot Ward, 

 New York City. 



Cincinnati: Chas. L. and Carl 

 Baum. Knoxville, Tenn.; N. Cheese- 

 man, repr. R. M. Ward & Co., New 

 York; D. MacRorie and A. Rossi, San 

 Francisco. 



Chicago — Vincent Gorley, St. Louis, 

 Mo.; Henry Duernberg, St. Louis, Mo.; 

 Sam Murray, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss 

 Elizabeth Hayden, Kansas City, Mo.; 

 James Forbes. Portland, Oregon. 



Pittsburgh: Julius Dilhoff, New- 

 York; Charles Baum and son, Knox- 

 ville, Tenn.; A. Lange, Chicago; John 

 A. Evans, Richmond. Ind.; Charles 

 Netsch. Buffalo; William Desmond, 

 Minneapolis, Minn. 



Washington, D. C: W. B. Vander- 

 bis, Boskoop, Holland; Stephan Green. 

 Phila.; Joseph J. Goudy, repr. H. A. 

 Dreer, Phila.; Theodore Wirth. Minne- 

 apolis, Minn.; J. J. Hess. Omaha, 

 Neb.; S. A. Star, Goldsboro. N. C; 

 Henry W. Rieman, Indianapolis, Ind.; 

 Edward B. Morris, Jr., Phila.; Stephan 

 J. Mahoney, Henry C. Kraus and J. A. 

 Cannon, Buffalo. N. ¥.; Mr. and Mrs. 

 William J. Smyth and dauglitprs. Chi- 

 cago; W. D. Howard. Milford. Mass.; 

 J. W. Niestlee. Wilmington, N. C; 

 Will Rehder, Wilmington. N. C. 



BUSINESS TROUBLES. 



Newark, N. J.— Harry C. Strohell, 

 florist, involuntary petition in bank- 

 ruptcy, filed by Nathan Hildor, repre- 

 senting Wm. G. MuUer and others. 



HEADQUARTERS 



For High-Class Roses 



Foil line of BIII-BOITS STOCK. BOD- 

 VABUI-\S, SWEET PE.4S ond other 8ea- 

 Aonable Flowers. 



J. J. COAN 



lis WEST 28TII STREET, NEW YORK 



Tel.. Farragut 0413-5891 



CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED 



PATRICK WELCH, WHOLESALE FLORIST 



262 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. 



TELJCPIIOITE MAIN S6S8 

 American Bcantles, Orchids, Vadley, Carnatloni. All the noveltlM In the Oat Fl*wa 

 Market furult«he<] on short notice. Prices qnoted on application. No retail er4«v 

 accepted. Flowers shipped out of Boston on earlj trains. 



STORE OPEN FOR BUSINEISS AT 6 A. M. 



NBW lORK QUOTATIONS PER 100. To Dealers Only 



MISCELLANEOUS 



CattUrn* • 



Dendrobnim f ormosum 



Lilies. Lontfifk>niin 



" Rubnan 



Calla» 



Lily of th* V«Uey 



Daisea 



ViolaU 



Mignonette 



Snapdrasoo 



Daffodils 



Gladioli 



Tulips 



Hyacinths 



Freesia 



Calendulas 



Lilac (per bunch) 



Sweet Peas 



Gardenias 



Adiaatum 



Smilax 



Aaparasnu Phimosus. Sc Spren (loo bunches) . 



Ust Half ef Wiek 



MHling Mar. 25 



1916 



15.00 

 20.00 



4.00 

 2.00 

 6.0D 

 1. 00 

 .50 

 -15 



a.oo 

 3.00 



1. 00 



6.00 



J. 00 



1. 00 



.50 



1. 00 



.50 



.25 



8.00 



•SO 

 8.00 

 15.00 



Fint lbl( of Wnli 



btfkiniiii Mir. 27 



1916 



30,00 



35.00 

 6.00 

 6.00 



10.00 

 4.00 

 2.00 



5.00 



8.00 



3.00 



8.00 



3.00 



3.00 



2.00 



3.00 



1. 00 



1. 00 



25.00 



1. 00 



12.00 



35.00 



Are You Dissatisfied ? 



I have an unlimited market for yonr flowers, any variety. In any quantity. Prompt 

 returns of sales on consigned goods. Ready cash when due. A clean record of twenty- 

 eight years In the Cut Flower CommUslon Business. 



Write for Information or call and talk It over. 



XelepHov\e 

 107 &iS05S « arragt&t 



J. K. ALLEN 



118 \irest 28th Streat 

 NE'W YOR.K 



IF YOU WANT QUALITY ORDER YOUR 



LILIES AND CUT FLOWERS 



At Lowest I'osslble Market Prices of 



N. F. McCarthy & CO., '^fS^rJ^st^ Bostsn, Mass. 



New England Florist Supply Co. 



SPECIAL 



10 H.VRREL 

 M.VLE 



Sphagnum Moss, $3.50 



276 Devonshire Street, BOSTON, MASS. 



HERMAN WEISS 



Wholesale Florist 



Experienced, ProercBsive and can h&ndU 



shipments of growers' product 



sutisfiietorily. 



106 West 28th St., NEW YORK 



Tel. I'arragut 3086. 



Open 6 a. m. to 7 p. m. 



EstabUsbed 1888 



Tel. 6S1 Farrarnt 



GUNTHER BROS. 



Wholesale Comtnistion Floritts 



110 West 28th St., New York 



We Solicit Consignments of New 

 England Grown NoreltleB. 



RIEDEL & MEYER, Inc. 

 Wholesale Commission 



READY FOR BUSINESS 



49 WEST 28th ST. NEW YORK. 



GUTTMAN & RAYNOR, Inc. 



A. J. GlITTJllAf;, President. 



Wholesale Florists 



101 W. 28th St., NEW YORK 



We have 20 years' experience behind n*. 

 Telephone, Farrngut lO.'ie-SOST-BSS. 



0. C. Arnold & Co., Inc. 



Wholesale Florists 



112 West 28th St., N. Y. CITY 



Telephone, 2'1^1 Farraffut. 

 Consign nientn Solicited. 



UNirtDCUT FLOWER CO., INC. 



Flowers Sold on Commission 



Consignments of 

 Good Stock Solicited 



PERCY W. RICHTER, Mgr, NEW YORK 



III W. :8th street 



