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114 



The Florists^ Review 



Jamcabt 8, 1020. 



Carnation Ruth Baur 



We are shipping on advance orders right along now. As we are ship- 

 ping in strict rotation, the sooner you send in your order, the earlier 

 you will get them. Orders booked now are for early March delivery. 



^ $12.00 per 100; $100.00 per 1000 



See our display ad in The Review of December 18 for some new Pink 



Mums you will need next season. 



Baur & Steinkamp 



3800 Rockwood Ave. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 



"The Effect of the Shortage of Fruit Tree 

 Stocks on Future Business, from the Wholesal- 

 er's Viewpoint," by B. S. Welch, Shenandoah. 

 Iowa. 



"Work that Has Been Done by Agricultural 

 Colleges In Recognition of the Demands for In- 

 spectton Coming from Planters," by Dr. W. H. 

 Jardine, president of the SUte Agricultural Col- 

 lege, Manhattan, Kan. 



"How Can Agricultural Colleges and Nursery- 

 men Promote Greater Interest In Horticulture?" 

 by Prof. Albert Dickens, SUte Agricultural Col- 

 lege, Manhattan, Kan. 



"Experience and Opinion on Conditions in 

 France at the Present Time," by Herbert Chase, 

 Chase, Ala. 



THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 



"Putting Our House in Order Preparatory to 

 the Market Development Compaign," by George 

 Parker, Oakland, 111. 



"Market Development," by John Watson, ex- 

 ecutive secretary of the American Association 

 of Nurserymen, Princeton, N. J. 



"Federal Quarantine," by Charles A. Scott, 

 Winamac, Ind. 



"The Nursery Fraud Act of Arkansas," by 

 C. M. Wild, Sarcoxie, Mo. 



"The Principal Reason for the Enacting of 

 Drasac Federal and State Nursery Laws," by 

 Iiloyd 0. Stark, Iiouislana, Mo. 



"Scarcity of Popular Varieties This Year and 

 Danger Arising Therefrom," by C. C. Mayhew, 

 Sherman. Tex. 



"Trade Relations with Landscape Architects," 

 by H. L. Merkel, Des Moines, la. 



"The Retailer Who Sells Through Agents; His 

 Duty to the Buying Public; also His Relation- 

 ship to the Wholesaler," by B. H. Smith, York, 

 Neb. 



"The Retailer Who Sells Through Catalogues; 

 His Duty to the Buying Public, to the Retailer 

 Who Sells Through Agents and to the Wholesale 

 Nurseryman," by Carl Sonderegger, Beatrice, 

 Neb. 



"The Wholesaler; His Duty to the Buying 

 Public Through the Retailer Who Sells Through 

 Agents, and the Retailer Who Sells Through 

 Catalogues," by Henry Chase, Chase, Ala. 



"Trade Relations with Tree Dealers or Job- 

 bers Who Have no Established Headquarters 

 or Business of Their Own," by A. J. Bruce, Des 

 Moines, la. 



"Trade Organizations Necessary for Protec- 

 tion and Promotion of Business," by E. M. Sher- 

 man, Charles City, la. 



VINCENNES, IND. 



W. A. Eeiman, who for the last thirty- 

 one years has operated the Beiman 

 Greenhouses, has retired from the retail 

 trade so as to give his entire time and 

 attention to the growing of peonies, 

 gladioli and nursery stock. Joseph A. 

 Meurer, who has been with Mr. Beiman 

 for a number of years, succeeds to the 

 greenhouse business. Mr. Beiman will 

 devote his entire time to the nursery, 

 which he established in 1907, on which 

 he will grow peonies, gladioli and fruit 

 trees for wholesale trade. He has a 

 total of fifty acres, of which twenty-one 

 are in peonies and will be increased to 

 thirty next fall. 



Seasonable Stock-Ready Now 



Asparagus Pluinosus— 2H-in., $5.00 per 100; $45.00 per 1000. 

 Asparagus Sprengeri— 2^-in., $4.50 per 100; $40.00 per 1000. 



Fern Dish Ferns — 2J4-in., Pteris magniiica, Wimsettii, cretica albo-lineata 

 and Mayii; Adiantum cuneatum and Aspidium tsussimense, $6.00 

 per 100; $50.00 per 1000. 



Achyranthes Herbstii — 2>4-in., brightest red, $4.50 per 100. 



Altemanthera Brilliantissinia — 2^ -in., bright red, $4:00 per 100. 



Coleus Trailing Queen— 2-in., $4.00 per 100. 



Fuchsia Mrs. E. G. Hill— 254-n., best white, $5.00 per 100. 



Euonymus Japonica — Silver edge, for hampers, baskets or vases, 2j4-in., 

 $15.00 per 100; 3-in., $25.00 per 100; 4-in., $35.00 per 100. 



Lantanas— Dwarf, 2J4-in., splendid stock, distinct sorts, $5.00 per 100; 

 $45.00 per 1000. 



Snapdragon — Keystone, 2J4-in., once pinched, stock in splendid shape, 

 $5.00 per 100; $45.00 per 1000. 



Palms — Clean young stock, Kentia Belmoreana, 2j4-in., $15.00 per 100; 



heavy 3-in., $25.00 per 100; heavy 4-in., $50.00 per 100. 

 Cannas — Dry roots, two and three eyes; King Humbert, $5.00 per 100; 



$45.00 per 1000; Meteor, best red, green leaf, $4.50 per 100; $40.00 



per 1000; Richard Wallace, standard yellow, $4.50 per 100; $40.00 



per 1000. 



The Storrs & Harrison Co. 



PAINESVILLE, OHIO 



FERNS 



NBPHBOLXPIS TIOTOBIA (The Victory Fern). A beautifully crested form of 

 "Teddy Jr.," with fronds frequently ■ubdlvlded at the ends, making a meat 

 unique, distinct, and desirable variety. 



Strong plants, 2^ -inch pots, $8.00 per dosen; |20.00 per 100. 

 Strong plants, 8%-lneh i>oti, $7.00 per doien; $60.00 p«r 100. 

 Extra fine specimen plants, 8-ln.. $8.00 each; 10-ln., $0.00 each; 12-ln., $7.60 eacb. 



Each 

 MEPHKOIiKPIS BUEOANTISSmA and KUEOANTISSniA COMPAOTA, SH-ln^ 10.86 

 NBPHBOLEPIS KLEOANTISSIMA and ELEOANTISSIMA OOMPAOTA, 6 -In., .76 

 NBPHBOLEPIS ELEOANTISSIMA and ELEOANTISSIMA OOUPACTA. 8 -In.. 3.00 

 NEPHROLEPIS ELEOAlfTISSIMA and KLEOANTI8SIMA COMPACTA, 10-in.. 4.00 



NEPHBOLEPIS BIUSOOSA« 6-inch 76 



NEPHBOLEPIS HARKISn, 8-inch 8.00 



NEPHBOLEPIS DWAKF BOSTON. 8-ineh 2.00 



If plants are abipped in pota, 10 per cent addltioaaL 



F. R. PIERSON, Tarrytown, New York 



