August 17, 1912 



HOETICULTUEE 



225 



NEW ENGLAND 



FLOWER DELIVERIES 



Send flower orders for delivery in Boston 

 and all New England points to 



THOS. F. GALVIN 



124 Tremont St., Boston 



BOSTON'S BEST 



In Quality and Design 



Can be relied upon when you transfer your 

 retail orders to 



EDWARD MACMULKIN 



194 Boylston Street. BOSTON. 



CARBONE 



Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery 



342 Boylston St., Boston 



Vases, Garden Furniture, Art Goods and 

 New Desif-'ns in Tusi-any Hasliets for 

 Florists' Use, in Wholesale Department. 



H. F. A. Lange 



WORCESTER, 



MASS. 



Deliveries to all Points in New Engrland. 

 125,000 square feet of glass. 



FOR NEWPORT 



Narracantett Pier and All Other Rhode 



Island Points 



Transferl Your Orders to 



GIBSON BROTHERS 



3S WASHINGTON SQUARE. - • - NEWPORT, I. L 



Rochester, N. Y. 



J. B. KELLER SONS, 



FLORISTS 

 25 Clinton Avenue, N. 



KKbeUer Phone jo6. Long Dist. Bell Phone aiSg 



Members Florists Telegraph Delivery 



Flower Deliveries In 



ROCHESTER, N.Y. 



18 MAIN STREET. WEST. 

 THE J. M. GASSER COMPANY, 



CLEYELANft 



Euclid Avenue 



The Far-Famed Flowers of 



TORONTO 



Delivered on mail or teleKnipii order for 

 any octa«^ion, in any part of the Dominion. 



JOHN H. DUNLOP 



96 Tonge St., 



TORONTO, OXT. 



WELLESLEY COLLEGE 



Dana Hall, Walnut Hill and Rockridge Ha 



Schools. TAILBY, Wellesley, Mass. 



Tcl. Wellesley 44-1 and 2. NIcht 44-S. 



Of Interest to Retail 

 Florists 



"FLOWERS BY TELEGRAPH." 



Leading Retail Florists Listed by 

 Towns for Ready Reference. 



Albany, N. V. — H. G. Eyres, U N. Pearl St. 



Albany, N. Y.— The Rosary, 76 Maiden 

 Lane. 



Amsterdam, N. Y. — John C. Hatcher. 



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



Boston — Edw. MacMulkln, 194 Boylston 

 St. 



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

 field St. 



Boston— Julius A. Zlnn, 1 Park St. 



Boston— Philip L. Carbone, 342 Boylston 

 St. 



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

 tou St. and Greene Ave. 



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, O.— J. M. Gasser Co., Euclid 

 Ave. 



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

 Detroit, Mlcb. — J. Breltmeyer's Sons, 

 Miami and Gratiot Aves. 



Kansas City, Mo. — Samuel Murray, 912 

 Grand Ave. 



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

 Co., 1116 Walnut St. 



Indianapolis, Ind. — Florists' Telegraph 

 Deliveries, 241 Massachusetts Ave. 



LouIsTllle, Ky.— Jacob Schnlz, 550 South 

 Fourth Ave. 



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

 ington Sq. 



New York— George M. Stumpp, 761 Fifth 

 Ave., cor. E. 68th St. 



New York— David Clarke's Sons, 2139- 

 2141 Broadway. 



New York— Alex. McConnell, 611 Bth 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 4 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, 96 Yonge 

 St. 



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

 St. 

 Wellesley, Mass.— Tallby. 



Worcester, Mass. — H. F. A. Lange. 



FRENCH RESTRICTIONS ON CUT 



FLOWER SHIPMENTS. 



(From Consul General James A. Smith, 

 Genoa, Italy.) 



The French decree of April 19, 1912, 

 prohibits the importation of Italian 

 cut flowers into France from May 1 

 to November 1 each year. This affects 

 chiefly the Italian Riviera region 

 (Leguria), which exports to the neigh- 

 boring Republic large quantities of cut 

 flowers, chiefly roses, although carna- 

 tions and violets have also been ship- 

 ped in the past. 



The reason for this prohibition is 

 the prevalence of Diaspis pentagona, 

 a pest which destroys the mulberry 

 tree, thereby injuring silkworm cul- 

 ture and menacing the silk industry. 

 It seems that the larvae of the Diaspis 

 pentagona are not mature from No- 

 vember to May, and for that reason 

 cut flowers are not so apt to spread 

 the parasite in that season as through- 

 out the summer. The height of the 

 Italian exportation of roses to France 

 is said to be during December, Janu- 

 ary and February. 



The exports of fresh flowers from 

 Italy to all countries in 1911 were, 

 valued at $1,631,390. 



BOSTON. MASS. 



"Penn, The Telegraph Florist" 

 .Member, of Flnrists' Telej,'r:tph Dt'livery 

 37.43 BROMFIELD STREET 



OUOE BROS. CO 

 FLORISTS 



.21.4 F ST,N.W. 



WASHINGTON, 

 D.C. 



GUDE'S 



Member Florists* 

 Telegraph Delivery. 



Chicago. 



A. LANGE, 



25 £. MADISON ST. 



Florists' Refrigerators 



Write us for catalogue and Prices, stating size you 

 require, and for what kind of cut flowers you wish 

 to use the refrigerator: also state whether you 

 want it for display or only for storage. 



McCray Refrigerator Co., 



353 Lake Stieet, Kendallville, Ind. 



Mentiati Horticulture 'when yon write. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I. 



' Ndall T. J. JOHNSTON & CO. 

 Niw E^bnt PoJiiU 171 W^bosMt SInet. PrwidiBM 



PERSONAL. 



Walter S. McKinley has been ap- 

 pointed head gardener for Mr. J. H. 

 Dick, Islip, L. I. 



John Doig, formerly gardener for J. 

 L. Thorndike, West Manchester, Mass., 

 has accepted a similar position in De- 

 troit, Mich. 



Thomas Manwell has completed his 

 duties as foreman of the greenhouses 

 at Coldbrooke, Lenox, Mass., and will 

 probably locate in New York. 



Geo. McKenna, lately gardener for 

 Mr. R. V. Lindaberry, Bernardsville, N. 

 J., is now greenhouse foreman for Mr. 

 E. L. Meyer, Huntington, L. I. 



H. E. Philpott of Winnipeg, on an- 

 nual round of visits, says some of the 

 Montreal boys talk of coming down to 

 join the N. Y. party for Chicago. 



Raymond V. Kester has been ap- 

 pointed manager of the Indianapolis 

 branch of the Hill-Heller combination 

 of retail flower stores. Mr. Kester 

 has been with Pennock Bros., Phila., 

 for the past ten years; previous to 

 which he had experience in New York 

 and Pittsburg. He and his family 

 leave for the West on the 14th inst. 

 His hosts of friends wish him abun- 

 dant success in his new venture. 



Boston visitors — In addition to the 

 list of park superintendents given 

 elsewhere: J. A. Hammond, with 

 James McManus, New York; Leonard 

 Barron, with Doubleday-Page Com- 

 pany, New York. 



