''^•v':-' 



August 24, 1916. 







! .■ 



The Florists' Review 



59 



Field Grown Carnation Plants 



LARGE STOCK 



Enchantress, Rose-pink Enchantress, 

 Beacon and Gorgeous, $5.00 per 100 



WOODUND PARK rLORAL CO. 



Tal. 8r4. SUMNKR, WASH. 



Mention Th« R«Tlew when yoa writ*. 



Carnation Plants, Fleld-);rown — Enchantress, 

 White Wonder, While Enchantress, Beacon, Cham- 

 pion, Herald. $6.00 per 100. 



Primula Obconica MaKnlflca $6.00 per 100 



Pterls Ferns, 4 best varieties, 2-ln $20.00 per lOOJ 



Asparagus Sprengerl, 3tn $ 4.60 per 100 



Adlantum, for bepchlng or growing on 10.00 per 100 

 H.vdnmBeas, pot-grrown, ready lor 6-ln. 10.00 per 100 



ACME FLORAL CO. 



Tal. Ma«tn BIB T«COM«. WAIN. SOtb aid E. F Its. 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



FRENCH HYDRANGEAS 



Best commercial varieties, strong, from 3-in. 

 pots, $6.00 per 100. Otaksa. 3-in., $5.00 per 100. 



PKLARGONIUM8. Easter Greeting and 

 Lucy Becker, 2>s-in. pots, fine stocky plants, 

 $6.00 per 100. 



A. L ANDERSEN 



«<>0 South Awanna, POR1XAin>. ORK. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



O. E. RKNZER 



l.1,BM815.PMttaMl,0ra. 



BEDDING PLANTS— PERENNIAI,8 



Primula Obc. Grfl. separate colors. Primula Maia- 

 •coides and M. Alba, strong: transplanted seedlings 

 from flat8,$2.00 per 100; from 2-in. pots, $3 00 per 100- 



Also the following new or rare Primroses:— Cock- 

 brai^iana, Bulleyana, DenUculata, Rusbyl, Acaulis. 

 t)lue and red, and Oapltata, 4-ln. Cyclamen; prices 

 ■on apiUlcatlon. 2Hi-ln. Cyclamen all sold. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



ASTERS 



Send your order at once for a shipment of fin- 

 est asters for florists' use. $3.00 per 100 for the 



best. 



"THE HOMK OF ASTERS" 



HERBERT & FLEISHAUER 



McMINNVILLE, OREGON 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



street, according to the proprietor, 

 Frank T. Schlotzhauer, has had a satis- 

 factory summer's business. Mr. Schlotz- 

 hauer now is busy on a lot of new bas- 

 ket creations for fall business, which, 

 he says, will give him the largest line 

 ■of exclusive novelties in baskets on the 

 Pacific coast. 



The Misses Hannon soon will start 

 to fix up their store on Sutter street for 

 fall. They are satisfied with the new 

 location and plan to have it nicely 

 fitted up. 



Fred Bertrand, manager for Joseph 's, 

 has returned from a vacation trip, which 

 was in the nature of an automobile tour 

 to Eureka through Trinity and Lake 

 counties and back via the Sacramento 

 valley. He went through some large 

 redwood forests en route and found ex- 

 cellent fishing. While in Eureka he vis- 

 ited Chas. Willis Ward's place, known 

 as the Cottage Gardens Nurseries, and 

 is enthusiastic in his praise of it. He 

 says everything is in fine condition 

 there. 



T. A. Burns, president of the Cali- 

 fornia Dahlia Growers' Association, ex- 

 pects to have the premium list for the 

 <lahlia show to be given at the Palace 

 hotel next month ready for distribution 

 next week. He says final arrangements 

 liave been made for the show and that 

 most of the space is already spoken for. 

 The Pacific Glass Works has offered to 

 donate all the bottles needed. The asso- 

 ciation has launched an active campaign 

 to stimulate interest in and promote the 

 culture of the dahlia. OflScials of the 



We have harvested part of the following 



Winter Orchid Flowering Sweet Pea Seed 



which we are ready to ship as long as they last: 



Mrs. A. A. Skaob, Whit* Orohld, Red Orchid. Lavender Orchid, all at $1.00 oz. Pink 

 and White Orchid, Orchid Beauty, at 76c oz. BIrs. Jo*. Manda, Mrs. M. Spanolln, 

 Dolasky Orchid, at $1.25 oz. Mlsa Fl. Roland, Aprioot Orohld, at $2.00 oz. Mom- 

 loK Star, Tha Czar, Sarvlan Prince (magenta). CHRISTMAS PINfc ORCHID, all 



at $4.00 oz. Lavender Nora, Lavender Queen (same as Anita Wehrman). at 60c oz. VKMUS, 

 $1.60 oz. Bohemian Oirl, $2.00 oz. Less in pound lots. 



All other varieties will be harvested soon. Ask for complete list. You can get almost all 

 those varieties in my original packets from A. L. Randall Co., Chlcaaro; R. J. Irwin, 

 Naw York; B. S. Skldalaky, Philadelphia. Never accept any Winter Orchid Sweet 

 Pea Seed in open packet or without my trade mark on it. It surely will be fraud. 



NOVELTIES FOR 1916-17 ARE NOW READY 



Mrs. Chas. C. Zvolanek, lavender; Britannia, scarlet-crimson; Zrolanek's Blue; 

 Zvolanek's Red, largest bright red; Father Raley, lilac; Mrs. A. Le hm a nn , light 

 blue; Mlas Louiae Gude, light rose; Black Lady, maroon, each. H oz., $4.00; 1 oz., $12.00. 



Zvolanek* ■ Stock Succeeds the World Aronnd 



Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. 

 June 19, 1916. 

 We were certainly pleased with the results secured from your Seed last year and 

 florists who visited tha University greenhouses said they were the finest sweet peas 

 they had ever seen. They made an unusually strong growth and produced great Quanti- 

 ties of blooms. CHAS. B. SAYRE, instructor in Floriculture. 



Lower Hutt. New Zealand. 

 July 19, 1916. 

 Those Winter Orchid -flowering Sweet Peas ordered last season have been blooming 



outdoors since the first of winter, and are improving in quality every week 



ORR BROS., Horticulturists. 



New Westminster, B. Columbia. 

 August 6, 1916. 

 Last year we left tha selection to you and they ha\ a given us the greatest satis- 



faction. 



DWIES & SON. 



I have received over 1000 such testimonials inside of ten months. 



WARNING:— There are or will be advertised many so-called new Winter Spencers. I 

 have seen many new names on the Exhibition tables, but by careful examination all were 

 identical with my older Winter Orchid, years in commerce, excepting the Tarrawa. Should 

 you buy any such so-called novelty, test it side by side with my original varieties and 

 judge for yourself. 



AHT. C. ZVOLANEK, sweet Pea Rinch, Lompoc, California 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



THE HOLDEN FLORAL CO. 



1180 Milwankie Street, PORTLAND, ORE. 

 FIELD-GROWN CARNATIONS 



Champion 



Gorgeous 



Enchantress 



Enchantress Supreme 



Few Other Varieties 



$50 00 

 per 1000 



BEGONIAS-Cincinnatl, 2ia-in. pots. $15.00 



per 100; 4-in. pots, heavy. $30.00 per 100. 

 Mallor, 2ifl-in. pots. $18.00 per 100; 4-in. pots. 



$:(5 00 per 100. 

 CYCLAMEN- Flats, $3.00 per 100: 2i3-in. pots. 



$4.00 per 100: 3-in. pots, $8.00 per 100; 4-in. pots 



$25.00 per 100. 



Mention The lleTlew wli«n yoa write. 



WE ARE THE LARGEST GROWERS OF 



PORTLAND ROSES 



Superior Quality— Choice Varieties— Sell better, grow better. 

 Ask for catalogue— Place your order now. 



MOUNTAIN VIEW FLORAL CO., PORTLAND, OREGON 



Mention The Review when you write. 



organization have arranged to decorate 

 the tables for the Hughes banquet at 

 the Commercial Club. They plan to show 

 the presidential candidate what Califor- 

 nia can do in the way of flowers. The 

 success of the undertaking is awaited 

 with interest, as this will be the first at- 

 tempt to make the dahlia the San Fran- 

 cisco flower. 



Fred Grohe, of Santa Rosa, Cal., took 

 first prize for his flower exhibit at the 

 Sonoma county fair, held in Santa Rosa 

 last week. 



The city council of Berkeley has 

 voted to print an ordinance providing 

 for the purchase of land on the east 

 side of Henry street, north of Berry- 

 man, for a city nursery. 



A report from Eureka, Cal., says that 

 W. D. Fraser, formerly with the Chas. 

 H. Lilly Co., at Seattle, Wash., and with 

 C. C. Morse & Co., has been engaged by 

 the Cottage Gardens Nurseries to mar- 

 ket the bulbs produced by the nurseries. 

 He is to handle the sales in the Missis- 

 sippi valley. He is having printed a 



.^.i..\Si 



