76 



The Florists^ Review 



ApniL 6, 1916. 



WHOLESALE PRICES 



SUBJECT TO CHANGE 



Beauties per doz., 7Bc. $1.B0, $3.00. $6.00 



Short Med. Long 



Shawyer per 100, $6.00 $8 00 $10.00 



Helen Taft *' 5.00 8.00 lO.OO 



Rlchmonds " 4.00 7.00 9.00 



Klltarney " 4.00 7.00 9.00 



White Killarney *' 4.00 7.00 9.00 



Rtllarney Brilliant " 4.00 7.00 9.00 



OARNATIONS " 1.80 2.00 3.00 



SweetP^as " .75 1.80 



Stnllax per doz. strlntrs, 2.80 



Hardy Ferns perdox. bunches, 2.00 



Mixed Short Roses, In 1000 lots $28.00 



Best Oarnatlons, In 1000 lots 20.00 



Miller floral Co. l]T in 



FARMINGTON, U 1 nil 



Steele's Pansy Gardens 



p«RTLAN». •maeN, 



offer an immense stock of Mastodon 

 Mixed Private Stock seedlings: 



larse 1000, $5.00; 5000, $20.00 



Stocky Transplanted... 100, 1.00; 1000, 8.00 



Both in bud. New catalogue. 



8KKD PRICKS 



Mastodon Mixed . . . . >i oz., $0.75; oz., $5.00 

 Mixed Private Stock . . >i oz., 1.00; oz., 7.00 



Mention The ReTlew when yon writ*. 



Til* better varieties in single and pompon 

 Chrysanthemums will bring you more money 

 than the standards. I have them. A fine line 

 of Mensa ready in a few days. Also the best 

 in standards. Write for list and prices, and 

 your inquiries for anything you may need will 

 be appreciated. 



P. 8.— I send out quality— that's why Cycla- 

 men seedlings are all sold. 



H. L. OLSSON 

 Wholesale Grower. 11 Post St.. Spokane. Wash. 



PERENNIAL STOCK 



▲spwraeus Spreneeri, for benching 



4-inch 6c 



Cbatelalne Beeonlas 



8-inch. 6c; 4-inch 10c 



ACME FLORAL CO. 



Tel. Ma«tu MS TACBM*. WASH. Sltli m< E. F Its. 

 Mention The Rerlew when you write. 



ANT. C. ZVOLANEK 



SWEET PEA RANCH 



OriflTinator of Over Seventy-five Varieties o 

 Winter-Flowering Sweet Peas. 



See my Qassified Ad. under Seeds. 



Mention TTip Rpvl«»w whpn yon write. 



Roses, Hardy Perennials, 



Ornamentals, Bedding^ Plants 



Ask for Price List. 



NountainViewFIoralCo. 



PORTLAND. OREGON 



Mention Th«> RptIpw when yon write. 



PALMS PALMS § 



Palms are our s pecialty. Eentift, Cocoa |2 



plumosa. Phoenix. Washingtonia, Sea* ^ 



lorthia, Corypha. etc., by the carloads. " 



Aak for oar wholesale Olnstrated pataa UA 9 



EXOTIC NURSERIES, 3 



Santa Barbara, Cal. 



himself and finds results more satisfac- 

 tory than when he grew miscellaneous 

 stock, which required hired help. 



At the request of the Chamber of 

 Commerce committee, the Oregon Agri- 

 cultural College will make a report on 

 the work being done by Father Schoo- 

 ner. 



Daphnes, camellias, forsythias, 

 pansies, wild currants, Japanese quinces 

 and many bulbous varieties are in 

 bloom outdoors. S. W. W. 



Mention 1 h» H«rlew when yon wme. 



AMPELOPSI8 VEITCHII 



Heavy three-year plants, 8 feet high, 8c each, 

 delivered free for cash. 



T. R. HOPKINS, 



Klrkland, Wash. 



ROSE SOCIETY'S WORK. 



LConcluded from page 27.] 



preferably by the Department of Agri- 

 culture, Washington, D. C, and car- 

 ried on in a businesslike manner. This 

 would be much the better plan to pur- 

 sue, as it would then be national in its 

 scope and not confined to any one 

 state. 



The Secretary's Gtood Work. 



At the annual meeting last year a 

 committee was appointed to look into 

 the grading of roses, and the naming 

 of those grades. Its findings, I trust, 

 will be adopted by the society. 



In conclusion I want to add a word 

 of praise for our secretary, who'*has 

 labored all these years unselfishly and 

 untiringly with the thought always of 

 what was best for the society. He has 

 spent time and money for the society 

 wherever and whenever needed, and has 

 been one of its mainstays, taking hold 

 of the secretaryship when no one want- 

 ed the job and when the society was 

 almost down and out. To him we owe, 

 I believe, more than to any other one 

 person, the bringing of the society to 

 where it is today. 'Let us hope that 

 our society can be put on a financial 

 basis that will allow us to pay our sec- 

 retary a salary in the future and that 

 every member will work for a larger 

 and better society. This is the wish of 

 your president. 



Statement of the Ownership, Manasrement. 

 Circalation, £tc., Reqalred by the >^ct of 

 Congress of Angast iS4, 1018, 



Of The Florists' Review, published weekly, at Chi- 

 caRO, III., for April 1, 1916. 



t^AMB OF— PO8T-OFFI0B ADDRK88. 



Publisher, The Florists' PubllshlnR Co., 608 So. 

 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. 



Editor, H. B. Howard, 508 So. Dearborn St., Chl- 

 caKo, 111. 



ManaRlnsr Editor, H. B. Howard, 608 So. Dearborn 

 St., Chlcaffo, III. 



Business Manager. Chas. L. West, 608 So. Dear- 

 born St., ChlcaKo. 111. 



Owners: (Cilve names and addresses of Individ- 

 ual owners, or, if a corporation. Rive Its name and 

 the names and addresses of stockholders ownlnf; or 

 holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of 

 stock.) 

 Northern Trust Co., Trustee, ChlcBRO, III., and 

 Chas. L. West, Trustee, 310 No. Ada St.. Chicago, 

 III., for the heirs of the O. L. Grant Estate, as follows: 

 Mrs. May L. Grant, Sequel, Calif. 

 Miss Helene Grant, Soquel, Calif. 

 Edward Grant, Soquel, Calif. 

 Mrs. AUIa L. Graham, Soquel, Calif. 

 Mrs. EUzaboth Olive. Santa Cruz. Calif. 

 Mrs. Maud E. Miller, 5859 Calumet Ave., Chicago. 

 III. 

 Estate of Christina F. Scott, Kobt. A. Scott and 

 David J. Scott, Executors, Main and Balcom St»., 

 BufTalo. N. Y. 

 A. H. Post, Chula Vista, Cal. 

 E. Wienhoeber, 22 Elm St., Chicago, 111. 

 W. J. Smyth, 101 31st St., Chicago. 111. 

 C. A. fiamuelson, 2l:<2 Michigan Ave.. Chicago, III. 

 W. Atlee Burpee. 475 No. 5th Ave., Philadelphia. Pa. 

 W. C. Egan, Highland Park, III. 

 H. B. Howard, 5(» So. Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. 

 Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other se- 

 curity holders, owning or holding 1 i>er cent or 

 more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other 

 securities: (If there are none, so state.) 



There are no bonds, mortgages or other securities 

 outstanding against The Florists' Publishing Com- 

 pany. 



Waltkr S. M11.LBB. Sec'y and Treas. 

 Sworn to and subscribed before me this 23d day 

 of March, 1916. 



William A. Barnxs, Notary Public. 



[SKAL.] 



(My commission expires November 29, 1917.) 



It 



Pays 



To 



Pacific Coast 



Florists : 



What stock have you 



for sale to the trade? 

 It it moving as it should? 



No? 



Then tell the trade abont 

 it by nsing the Pacific CoaBt 

 Pages of The Review. 



Pacific Coast advertisers al- 

 most invariably report good 

 resnlts. Like this: 



Say I That ad's a hnrndlnser for gettinc tht 

 btuinesB.— Everett Floral Co., Everett, Wash. 



I sold all the Mnm cnttlncs advertised, and yon 

 will not hear from me again until I can get some 

 more stock ready. Shall root 100,000 Carnation 

 cuttings for next season, as I know The Kevlew 

 win sell them for me.— Frank Wilhelm, Los An- 

 geles. Cal. 



Please cat ont of onr advertisement in The Re- 

 view the cyclamen seedlings. We sold all our 

 snrploB cyclamen seedlings as a direct result of 

 our advertisement in yoor paper.— Spokane 

 Greenhouses (Inc.), Spokane, Wash. 



We want to say that our last advertisement In 

 The Review brought us orders from both the At- 

 lantic and Pacific coasts. We had, strangely 

 enough, on following days, orders from Salem, 

 Ore., and from Salem, Mass.— State Floral Co.. 

 North Yakima, Wash. 



We are well pleased with the results obtained 

 by advertising in the Pacific Coast Department of 

 The Review. We sold out clean and refused 

 many orders. The Review surely gives retolti. 

 —Van Slyke & Seamons, Tacoma, Wash. 



The transient rate for space 

 is $1 per inch per insertion. 

 Those who have stock to offer 

 all or a considerable part of 

 the year around should write 

 for contract rates. 



Florists' Poblishing Co. 



SO8 Si. Detibwi Stmt (MAGO 



