778 



II II I,"!' I CULT i: H E 



Juno 3, 1916 



E»t. 176S 



Pot Maker* for a 

 Century anda Half 



HEWS 



STRONG 



RED 

 POROUS 



POTS 



Inc. IWM 



World'* Largaat 

 Maniifacturara 



Standard, Azalea, Bjib, Orc'ild. Fsrn, Hinslic, Ernbossvd, Rs**. Carnation, Palm, Cyclaman, Cut Flower. 

 S})- Jl Sllpii t> )'d»r. Clilcked fount*. Pigeon Neet*, Baan Pot*, Etc. 



Writr fnr Ca 

 and fhacount 



':"""' il. H. HEWS & CO., Inc., Cambridge, Mass. 



(AM mil IX. K. HA*^ 

 ^ K\» ^ IIM K. N T. 



KING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, North Tonawanda. N. Y. 



GREENHOUSES 

 We Claim Maximum Strength and Minimum Shadow. Investigate 



UU&10.N Uir'tlCK: 



113 Stute bt., Boaton, Miu*. 

 OR 



riIII.AU£I.l'ULjV UFriCE. UarrUon UilldlnK. IStli unil Murkrt His., I'blUdrlpbia, I'e. 



GREENHOUSES BUILDING 

 CONTEMPLATED. 



Mentor, O.— C. Merkel & Son, four 

 houses. 



Coldwater, Mich. -Van Aken Bros., 

 additions. 



Painted Post, N. Y.— J. A. Sanders, 

 one house. 



Kennebunk, Me.— Paul I. Andrews, 

 house 311 X 100. 



New Britain, Ct.— Volz Floral Co., 

 range of bouses. 



Toledo, 0.— Dr. J. J. Lasalle, two 

 vegetablo housps. 



Hutchison, Kan. — Walter Under- 

 wood. T.V) ft. house. 



Philadelphia. Pa. — Henry J. Muller, 

 Falls road, one house. 



Gallipolis, C— S. White, rebuilding 

 and one house 25 x 140. 



Chicago, III.— John G. Witt & Son, 

 two houses, each 20 x 126. 



Newport, R. I. — J. J. Van Alen, Law- 

 rence avenre, three houses. 



Kansas City, Mo.— A. D. Mohr, 76th 

 and Broadway, two houses. 



West Hartford, Ct.- W. W. Thomson 

 Co , Lord & Burnham house. 



Syracuse, N. Y. — Russell Bros., Inc., 

 grower.-;, capital stock $50,000. 



Edwardsville, III. — Henry Blixen, 

 two DiPtsch houses, each 35 x 150. 



Whitestone, N. Y. — Frank Pileski, 

 11th avenue, four houses 25 x 100. 



Kansas City, Mo.— Stockdale Green- 

 houses, ISth and Longwood, two 

 houses. 



Louisville, Ky. — E. G. Reimers & 

 Son Co., Taylorsville road, house 30 x 

 150, house 28 x 150. 



Williamsport, Pa. — W. J. Evenden's 



r— STANDARD FLOWER— i 



If your prppnhniiRes are wtttitn 500 

 imIIp's of thp Tiipitol. write us, we can 

 save you ninney. 



W H. CRMEST 

 — Mth ft M 8ts., Wasblncton, D. C 



J 



Sons, range of three greenhouses, 250 

 feet long. King construction. 



W. .1. Muth, for the King Construc- 

 tion reports the following list of re- 

 cent contracts: 



Sewell, N. J. — IT. C. Wanner, house 

 18 by 25 n. 



Patchogue, L. I. — Hernard Rodgers, 

 house 511 by 100 ft. 



Garrettford, Pa. — James Verner, 

 house 42 by 1S3 ft. 



Oak Lane, Pa. — Mrs. Phoebe Brom- 

 ley, house 18 by 25 ft. 



Devon, Pa. — John A. Brown, house 

 1", by .'.0 ft. with service building. 



Blue Point, L. I. — Julius Chevalley, 

 iron-frame flat-rafter house, 60 by 200. 



Chalfont, Pa. Sam F. Lilley, house 

 35 bv 250; propagating bouse 16 by 

 135. 



Bryn Mawr, Pa. — Mrs. Ellison Wal- 

 baun. house 1." by 25 ft. with service 

 buildiiiK. 



Wallingford, Pa. — Bickmore Green- 

 houses, house 54 by 380 ft.; bulb 

 house 16 by 38 ft. 



Cazenovia, N. Y. — Mrs. Henry Bur- 

 den, two iron-frame houses, 38 by 150 

 ft., with service building 18 by 85 ft. 



Warrenville, N. J. — A. H. Hofheimer, 

 iron-frame flat-rafter house, 50 by 200; 

 fire-proof boiler house 40 by 25 ft. 



Scranton, Pa. — Scranton society 

 ladies made substantial profits for a 

 worthy charity and incidentally had 

 a good time at the "Flower Market" 

 - an outdoor garden fete given for the 

 benefit of the Home for the Friendless 

 on May 23rd. So successful was the 

 first occasion that it is planned to 

 make it an annual event hereafter. 

 The market was laid out along three 

 walks at the east of the Court House. 

 There was a tea garden, handsomely 

 furnished, and tables and booths for 

 flowers, plants, seeds, garden furni- 

 ttire and clothing, miniature landscape 

 planting. Japanese garden, insecti- 

 cides, birds, etc. Baldwin, Clarke, 

 Bauniann and others connected with 

 commercial floriculture supported tb^ 

 affair very generously and made :i 

 tractive exhibits. One of the most ii 

 tive ladies in the management was 

 Mrs. Chas. S. Weston and she was ably 

 assisted by Mrs. Everett Warren and 

 her other associates on the executive 

 committee. The local newspapers 

 gave large space to the account of the 

 affair. 



For Grcenbouacs 



Dn'« «&*T «Dd tnir, brciuie 

 bou be 'ell ti« on thr fime 

 ■id* Can I twill and brrak 

 \tt fflaii Id diiving. Galvan- 

 la*4 and wUI Dot nut. 

 ntku of Irfta 



lk« P*«Tlesa Glazing Poin 

 !■ »«trDtcd Noothrnlikc 

 It Owei fmm youi dealrix 

 or dlr*ct hom tu. 

 lOM. T^c pofllpaid. 

 S^nit>l*l lice 

 BE>rBT A DBEE*. 

 714 Jb-ktDDt Btr««i> 



Win last a life-time. 



$1.26 EACU 



Ailjusublo — can and 

 frame sc-ijiirale — 

 easily c I i* a ii e d. 

 l'"ruiiie all one piece, 

 of uialleahle Irua, 

 More practical and 

 uiore eiiHJI.v H|M*raled 

 liiuu any otber. 



Sral-tlchl liquid pnttr at tl.Zi prr Kullon. 



M£rR3P0LITA*l MATERIAL CO. 



ISU.'-:JII .Mrlnipoillan A\r., ltroiikl>n, .N. T. 



DREER'S 



Florist Sprriallies, 



N(-\^ Hr.mJ. New Style. 

 Hos- /RIVi^KTON." 



!■ urnish t\ in IctiKtht up 

 V • ^cr. It, w nhntit *icani or 



Ibe'HOSEIorthe FLORIST 



^ inch. per ll.. 15 c. 

 Kctl of son ft . " 14HC. 

 2 keels looofl.," 14 C. 

 H'inch. ■' 13 c. 



Keel*. 500 ft.. " 13%:, 

 Louplin^s furnished 



HfNRr t DREEI, 



714 Chc-^'niit St., 

 PiirLADtLpniA. Pa. 



NJN-KINK WJVEN HOSE 



^^^^^^^^^ In Itc 



^K^^^^^f foot. With couplings. L'n- 

 ^^^^^^^^v c'luallcil at tliH 

 ~ <«^^^^^ Koinnnnts shnrtpr than 25 

 ffct lOo por foot, coupled. 



METROPOLITAN MATFRIAL CO. 



I3U'.;-MI4 Metrupolltan A\r. Brooklyn. N. T. 



When wrrtinf to advertit^r* bindfy 

 mention HORTICULTURE. 



