JANDABY 11, 1917. 



The Florists' Review 



61 



Seasonable Bulbs, Fancy Caladiums, Tuberous Begonias, Gloxinias 



Tuberous Begonias and Gloxinias S.'po'un'? m^wS ToZ ^I'l! sSS 



quality. They have been grown for us by the same BeJgian expert and specialist who has been supplying us for more than a 

 quarter of a century and with the quality of which our customers are familiar. 



YOU MAY BUY CHEAPER BUT NO BETTER STOCK 



Begonia, Single Varieties to Color 



Scarlet, Crimson, White, Eose, Yellow, Orange, 40c per dozen; 

 $3.00 per 100; $25.00 per 1000. 



Begonia, Single Varieties in Choicest Mixture 



35c per dozen; $2.50 per 100; $22.50 per 1000. 



Begonia, Double Varieties to Color 



Scarlet, Eose, White and Yellow, 60c per dozen; $4.50 per 100; 

 $40.00 per lOOQ. 



Begonia, Double Varieties in Choicest Mixture 



50e per dozen; $4.00 per 100; $35.00 per 1000. 



Begonia, Double Fringed Varieties (new) 



White, Scarlet and Eose, $1.50 per dozen; $10.00 per 100. 



Begonia Zeppelin 



$1.25 per dozen; $8.00 per 100; $70.00 per 1000. 



Begonia Lafayette 



$1.50 per dozen; $12.00 per 100. 



Grloxinia 



Blue, Red, White, Blue with White Edge, Eed with White Edge, 

 Spotted or Finest Mixture, 60c per dozen; $4.00 per 100; $35.00 

 per 1000. 



Gloxinia ImperlaJis or New Emperor Varieties 



Choicest mixed, 85c per dozen; $6.00 per 100. 



FANCY LEAVED CALADIUMS. 



Largest stock and most extensive assortment of varieties. 



Dozen 100 1000 



Fine Standard Varieties $1.75 $12.00 $100.00 



Rare and New Varieties 2.25 15.00 140.00 



Bare New Varieties 3.50 25.00 



Choice Mixed Varieties 1.50 10.00 $90.00 



L ! New Double-Frlneed Tuberous Besonias 



For a complete list of seasonable Seeds, Bulbs and Plants, see our 

 Garden Book for 1917 and our Current Wholesale List just issued. If 

 you have not received copies write us. 



HENRY A. DREER, 714 7i6 Chestnut St., Phfladelphia, Pa. 



-THE ABOVE PRICES ARE FOR THE TRADE ONLY- 



Mentlon The BcTlew when yon writ*. 



217, 52 L. E. A. 362, 80 Am. St. Rep. 

 798; Vaughan's Seed Store v. String- 

 fellow, 56 Fla. 708, 721, 48 South. 410; 

 Sedg. Dam. (9th Ed.) §§191, 768. 



An Inferior Variety, 



"The other and more liberal rule is 

 applied in cases where the defective 

 seed germinates and produces a crop 

 that is inferior in quality and value to 

 the one that would have been produced 

 in the same circumstances bad the seed 

 been as warranted. In such case, by an 

 almost unbroken line of authorities in 

 England and America, there is held to 

 be a reasonable basis on which to esti- 

 mate the profit that would have been 

 made had the seed been of contract 

 quality. It is held that this basis is 

 found in the certainlv ascertainable 



value of the crop actually produced, 

 the court having only to estimate the 

 difference in value between that crop 

 and the value of the crop that would 

 ordinarily have been produced under 

 the same circumstances if seed true to 

 name had been supplied by the seller. 

 The loss is held not to be conjectural 

 and the damages not to be speculative 

 or beyond the contemplation of the con- 

 tracting parties. 



A New Jersey Precedent. 



"In Wolcott v. Mount, 36 N. J. Law, 

 262, 13 Am. Rep. 438, this basis for 

 the allowance of expected profits is thus 

 recognized: 



" 'The loss of the value of a crop 

 for which the seed had not been sown, 

 the yield from which, if planted, would 



depend upon the contingencies of 

 weather and season, would be excluded 

 as incapable of estimation, with that de- 

 gree of certainty which the law exacts 

 in the proof of damages. But • • • 

 if a crop has been sowed on the ground 

 prepared for cultivation, and the plain- 

 tiff's complaint is that, because of the 

 inferior quality of the seed, a crop of 

 less value is produced, by these circum- 

 stances the means would be furnished 

 to enable the jury to make a proper es- 

 timation of the injury resulting from 

 the loss of profits of this character. 

 * * * The uncertainty of the quan- 

 tity of the crop, dependent upon the 

 weather and season, was removed by the 

 yield of the ground under the precise 

 circumstances to which the seed ordered 

 would have been exposed.' 



