July 20, 1912 



HORTICULTURE 



91 



NEW ENGLAND 



FLOWER DELIVERIES 



5«od flower ordfiTs for ddtauT in BfMton 

 And all New Englaad points to 



THOS. F. GALVIN 



124 TrMn*nt St.. Boston 



TRANSFER 



Your orders for flower or pUnt daUv- 

 •17 in Eastern New England 19 



JULIUS A. ZINN 



1 Park St., Boston 



BOSTON'S BEST 



la QtMrflty aM 



Oia be retied ■pon when 70a truMitf |>aa> 

 retail orders to 



EDWARD MACMULKIN 



IM BoyUCoo Street. 



CARBONE 



Mambar FlorUts' Trlegraph Deltvary 



342 Boylston St., Boston 



TaiM, Garden Furniture, Art Gooda aad 

 New DeelEni In Tuscany Baskets for 

 riorlsts' Use, In Wholesale Department. 



H. F. A. Lange 



MTORCESTER., 



MASS. 



IMtron to all PetnU la New Barlaad. 

 Mi,4M staare fact t€ iten. 



FOR NEWPORT 



Narraganaett Pier and All Other Rhode 



Island Points 



Transfer Your Order* to 



GIBSON BROTHERS 



3( WASHINGTON SBUARE. - • - NEWPOKT, R. L 



Rochester, N. Y. 



J. B. KELLER SONS, 



FLORISTS 

 25 Clinton Avenue, N. 



Socbester Phone 506. Long Dist. Bell Phooe iiSg 



Members Florists Telegraph Delivery 



THE J. M. GASSER COMPANY, 



CLEVEL 



Euclid Avenue 



The Far-Famed Flowers of 



TORONTO 



DdlTered on mall or tdeffrapk order (at 

 aa7 accasloo, 1q aor part of th* DomlnlsB. 



JOHN H. DUNLOP 



9C Yonse St., - - Toronto, Otit. 



WELLESLEY COLLEGE 



Dana Hall, Walnut Hill and Rockrld^ce Hall 



Schools. TAiLBY, Wellesley, Mass. 



Tel. Wellesley 44-1 and S. Nleht «-S. 



Of Interest to Retail 

 Florists 



"FLOWERS BY TELEGRAPH." 



Leading Retail Florists Listed by 



Towns for Ready Reference. 



Albany, N. Y.— H. G. Eyres, 11 N. Pearl St. 



Albany, N. Y.— The Kosary, 76 Maiden 

 Lane. 



Amsterdam, N. Y. — John C. Hatcher. 



Boston— Thos. F. Galvln, 124 Tremont St. 



Boston— Edw. MacMulkln, 194 Boylston 

 St. 



Boston— Penn, the Florist, 37-43 Brom- 

 field St. 



Boston— Julius A. ZInn, 1 Park St. 



Boston— Philip L. Carbone, 342 Boylston 

 St. 



Brooklyn, N. Y.— Robert G. Wilson, Ful- 

 ton St. and Greene Atb. 



Buffalo, N. y.— Palmer's, 304 Main St. 



Chicago — William J. Smyth, Michigan 

 Ave. and 31st St. 



Chicago— A. Lange, 25 E. Madison St. 



Cleveland, — J. M. Gasser Co., Euclid 

 Ave. 



Denver, Col.— Park Floral Co., 1643 B'way. 



Detroit, Mich. — J. Breitmeyer's Sons, 

 Miami and Gratiot Aves. 



Kansiis City, SIo.— Samuel Murray, 812 

 Grand Ave. 



Kansas City, Mo. — Wm. L. Rock Flower 

 Co.. 1116 Walnut St. 



Indianapolis, Ind.— Florists' Telegraph 

 Deliveries, 241 Massachusetts Ave. 



Louisville, Ky.— Jacob Schulz, 550 Sooth 

 Fourth Ave 



Newport, R. I. — Gibson Bros., 36 Wash- 

 ington Sq. 



New York— George M. Stumpp, 781 Fifth 

 Ave., cor. E. 58th St. 



New York— David Clarke's Sons, 2139- 

 2141 Broadway. 



New York— Alex. McConnell, 611 5th Ave. 



New York— Young & Nugent, 42 W. 28th. 



New York— Dards, N. E. cor. 44th St. 

 and Madison Ave. 



Providence, R. I. — T. J. Johnston & Co., 

 171 Weybosset St. 



Rochester, N. Y.— Salter Bros., 38 Main 

 St., West. 



Rochester, N. Y.— J. B. Keller & Sons, 25 

 Clinton Ave., N. 



St. Paul— Holm & Olson, Inc. 



Toronto, Can.— J. H. Dunlop, 98 Yonge 

 St. 



Washington, D. C— Gude Bros., 1214 F. 

 St. 

 Wellesley, Mass.— Tallby. 



Worcester, Mass. — H. F. A. Lange. 



BOSTON, MA.SS. 



"Pama^ Th« Tele^rapb Flarlftt" 



Member of Florists' Teieicrapb Dellvrry 



S7 • 43 BROMFIELD STREE.-r 



WASeniGTOH, 

 D. C. 



QUDE'5 



OUOE BROS. CO 



FLORISTS Hankm noiteur 



:i!s*-r.c^.'i*c T«<t«Ta»k l.««T»rr. 



Chicago. 



A. LANGE, 



25 E. M ADISON ST. 



Flower Deliverie* In 



ROCHESTERaN.Y. 



M MAIN STREET, WEST. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I. 

 Mdall T. J. JOHNSTON & CO. 

 Hi* Ei«luil Poinb 171 Wqbossct Sheet, Prev'idiiici 



PERSONAL. 



William Plumb is superintending 1 

 the building of some driveways on an ' 

 estate in Short Hilis, N. J. 



Thomas Beattie, foreman for E. S. 

 Stroud, at Stafford, Pa., tell off a roof 

 Sundaj- and brolie two of his ribs. 



A card from David Welch of Boston 

 announced his arrival at Queenstown, 

 Ireland, in best of health and spirits. 



Robert Tyson of Convent Station, N. 

 J., sails for Europe to visit the Bruges 

 exhibition on the Mauretania, July 23. 



Ralph Freeman Arnold, son of Geo. 

 P. Arnold, florist, of Winchester, 

 Mass., was married on June 26 to Miss 

 Evelyn Grace Wallver. 



Robert Robertson, formerly of Glen 

 Cove, N. Y., has tal^en thel position 

 (July 1st) of head gardener to Mr. 

 Crocker, Fitchburg, Mass. 



William Churchill succeeds Robert 

 Robertson as outside foreman at Pem- 

 broive, the country estate of Captain 

 J. R. De Lamar, Glen Cove, N. Y. 



Thomas B. Meehan, J. H. Dayton and 

 Jas. McHutchison, supreme magnates 

 of the Nurserymen's organization 

 sailed for Europe on the George Wasli- 

 ington, July 13. 



Francis S. Lord of Neponset, Mass., 

 foreman in one of the departments of 



Florists' Refrigerators 



Write us for catalogue and Prices, stating size you 

 require, and for what kind of cut fiowers you wish 

 to use the refrigerator; also state whether you 

 want it for display or only for storage. 



McCray Refrigerator Co., 



353 Lake Street, Kendallville, Ind. 



Mention Hi^rticuUnt-e ~':h^n yen ivritr. 



the A. T. Stearns Lumber Co., died on 

 July 17 following an automobile ac- 

 cident in which several were hurt. 



C. A. Ouillette is now in charge of 

 the planting lor the nursery depart- 

 ment of Holm & Olson, 20-24 West 5th 

 street, St. Paul, Minn. He was for- 

 merly with the Lakewood Cemetery, 

 Minneapolis. 



William Duckham was in Boston 

 with the sweet pea enthusiasts on his 

 birthday, Saturday, July 13. This, 

 however, did not in the least interfere 

 with a due celebration of the day. 

 Many happy returns. 



Prof. B. S. Pickett, head of the de- 

 partment of horticulture at the New 

 Hampshire College, Durham, N. H., 

 has handed in his resignation. He has 

 accepted the office of an unusually 

 promising position in the University 

 of Illinois. 



Visitors in Boston last week in- 

 cluded the live, progressive commercial 

 and gardening craft from all the prin- 

 cipal centers in New England, from 

 New York, Philadelphia, up the Hud- 

 son and down the New Jersey coast. 

 They were promised a good and profit- 

 able' time, and we think they had it. 



