40 



The Florists^ Review 



August 14, 1919. 



FANCY FERNS 



$2.00 per 1000 



Finest stock in the country 



$2.00 par 1000 



Subject to Change Without Notice. 



Wild Smilax, 50-pound cases, $5.50; 25-pouQd cases $ 3.25 



Magnolia Leaves, green and bronze, per carton 1.75 



Galax Leaves, green and bronze, per case of 10,000 10.00 



GREEN SHEET MOSS, very fine for basket work, trimming 



pots, etc., per bag, 15 lbs. to the bag 2.00 



Spiiatfnum Moss, per bale 2.50 



FULL SUPPLY CUT FLOWKRB AT ALL TIMES 



NICHIGAN CUT FLOWER EXCHANGE, 264-266 Randolph St., Detroit, Nich. 



Mention The R«Tlew when yon write. 



for what is now coming to the market 

 is short-stemmed, small and off color. 

 Gladioli are coming in fair supply and 

 of good quality. The glut seems to be 

 over, and while there is some of poor 

 quality still to be seen, most of them 

 are of the better grade. Asters are 

 becoming better each day and, like 

 gladioli, are improving in quality each 

 year. Some of them are almost equal 

 to chrysanthemums, but, as with gladioli, 

 the majority of tlie growers seem slow 

 to take up the improved varieties. 

 When they are taken up they will have 

 become plentiful and the growers will 

 have missed their opportunities to share 

 in the high prices they might have had 

 if they had acted sooner. 



Various Notes. 



Fred Bauer has been pushing his work 

 and has his carnations all housed, also 

 his rose houses replanted with young 

 stock, and is now ready, with Mrs. 

 Bauer, to go to Detroit. In fact, Fred, 

 who always takes time by the forelock, 

 told me that he was sorry the conven- 

 tion was not this week, as he was all in 

 shape to take a week off. Another who, 

 with his wife, will journey to Detroit, 

 is Isaac H. Moss. He, too, has been ar- 

 ranging his work with the convention 

 in view and is now ready for a week's 

 holiday. Robert L. Graham and wife, in 

 spite of the accident told of in last 

 week's issue of The Review, will be at 

 the convention, stopping at Atlantic 

 City on their way home. Mr. and Mrs. 

 Graham will bo gone three weeks. Mr. 

 and Mrs. William J. Johnston, who are 

 spending the summer in New York, will 

 go from there and return to New York. 

 They will be back in Baltimore the first 

 week in September. 



Richard Vincent, Jr., who never 

 misses a convention, will also be in the 

 Baltimore party, accompanied by his 

 wife. This old warrior, who did so much 

 to make the Baltimore convention a few 

 years ago such a success when he was 

 elected president of the S. A. F., is more 

 than enthusiastic over the convention 

 coming to Baltimore in 1921. Uncle 

 Richard is just as young as ever he was 

 and says that the members all over the 

 country are still talking of the way 

 the Baltimore boys put the convention 

 over at that time. When we take into 

 consideration the strides that Baltimore 

 has taken since that time, that conven- 



Mention The RcTlew when you write. 



Ik. The following are my wholesale prices: Per 1000 



,^^ ^_^m LEUCOTHOE-Short Sprays, from 10 to 14 Inches, at $1.60 



^■^B^V Medium loDK, 14 to 18 inches, at 3.00 



^^^^V Kxtra lon«r, 18 to 24 inches, at 4.00 



^^^V FERNS. Fancy and Uaecer 1.00 



^^^m OALAX, from 34 inches and op 1.00 



^W Per case of 10,000, $9.00. 



A All F. O. B. cars shlpplnr point 



T. HILL FARTHING 



Elk Park, N. C. 



Mention The Berlew when yon write. 



MOSSES 



Perpetuated Sheet Moss, . . .$3.50 per bag 

 Natural Sheet Moss 1.75 per bag 



Caldwell The Woodsman Co. 



EVERGREEN, ALA. 



Mention The Beyiew when yon write. 



NORTHERN NEW CROP 



FANCY CUT FERNS 



$2.00 per 1000 



MRS. CHARLES DELL 



OZARK, MICHIQAN 



Mention The Reyiew when you write. 



