142 



The Florists^ Review 



JuNB 24, 1920 



CARNATION STAPLES 



Superior Carnation Staples, best Staples on 

 the market, 35c per 1000, 3000 for $1.00, postase 

 paid. 



MICHIGAN CUT FliOWBR EXCHANGE 

 284 Randolph St.. Detroit. Mich. 



Plllsbnry'8 carnation staples, 35c per 1000, 

 8000 for $1.00. I. L. Piilsbury, Galesburg, 111. 



chXrcoal 



Prepared Charcoal, $4.00 per 100 lbs.; ton, 

 $60.00; bags, 15c extra. Charcoal dust, excel- 

 lent for mixing in soil, same price. 

 Peter Pearson, 6732 Gunnison St., Chicago, 111. 



FLORISTS' SUPPLIES 



MAGNOLIA LEAVES 



PREPARED BY 



REEVES. 



COLORS: BROWN, GRBBN OR PURPLE. 



Per carton $1.26 



26 lb«. of Leaves $4.60 per case 



60 lbs. of Leaves 8.00 per case 



100 lbs. of Leaves 15.00 per case 



SEE LARGE AD FOR PREPARED BEECH 



AND OAK. 



MOUNTAIN LAUREL FOLIAGE 2.60 per ca»e 



DECORATIVE EVERGREENS 



HUCKLEBERRY FOLIAGE $2.60 per case 



REEVES FOLIAGE CO., INC.. BRBWTON, ALA. 



FRESH STOCK— MAGNOLIA LEAVES. 



Dux Superiora Brand 



Brown and green 



Per carton $ 1-60 



Per 10 cartons 14.00 



AMERICAN BULB CO., 

 172 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, lU. 



OOLDFISM ~~ 



Goldfish, aquarium plants, castles, globes and 

 all supplies. Send for wholesale catalogue. 



Aubumdale Goldfish Co., 

 1449 Madison St., Tel. Haymarket 152, Chicago. 



QREENS 



Our cut HEMLOCK and BALSAM SPRAYS 

 will make a pleasing variety in your floral work, 

 useful also in cemetery decoration, fresh from 

 the woods, $6.76 per 1000. ^^^„ 

 JOHN B. ROY, CONWAY. MICH. 



Birch bark, Lycopodium or Ground-Pine, also 

 wild Ferns when in season. 



Carl Dahm, R. 1, Box 34, Wausau, Wis. 



Asparagus Plumosus sprays all sold for the 

 coming season. _ ,^ _. 

 The Pennock Plantation. Juplter^^FML^ 



n RRIQATION ^QUI PM ENT ^ 



IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT. 



MAKE MORE MONEY out of the crops you (row. 



BETTER CARNATION PLANTS 



to set in your benches; 



more and earlier cut flowers, 



Gladioli, etc.. 



Send today for our big 



new catalogue. 



Describes watering systems for inside and out. 



SKINNER IRRIGATION CO.. 



223 Water St.. Troy. O. 



LEAF MOLD 



Our acreened LEAF MOLD ia Kood atair. Big 

 growers say so. 2Vi bu.. $1.36; 6 sacks and up, 

 $1.16 per sack. _ 



JOHN B. ROY. CONWAY, MICH. 



~ POTS 



PAPER POTS. 

 Neponset — the best made. 



2U-inch $ 4.20 per 1000 



2ii-lnch 4.80 per 1000 



4 -Inch 10.50 per 1000 



5 -Inch 16-55 per 1000 



6 -inch 22.30 per 1000 



These prices are f. o. b. Chicago. We can 



quote lower prices for shipment from the factory 

 in the east. * 



AMERICAN BULB CO., 

 172 N. Wabash Ave.. Chicago. 111. 



SHEEP MANURE 



SHEEP MANURE, PULVERIZED SHEEP'S 



HEAD BRAND ONLY 



100 lbs., $2.00; 1000 lbs., $17.50; 



500 lbs., $9.25; 2000 lbs., $34.00; 



3 to 6 ton lots, $33.00 ton; 



6 to 15 ton lots, $31.00 ton. 



Guaranteed purest fertilizer ever sold, 



a. M. REBURN & CO., 



8807 Lake Park Ave., Chicago. 1 11. 



Dry ground pulverized Sheep Manure, in 125 

 burlap l)aK8 (analysis on request), f. o. b. Phila- 

 delpina. $46.00 per ton. 

 8. S. Skidelsky A Co.. 50 Park Place. New York. 



SPMAONUM MOSS 



SPHAGNUM MOSS. 



STANDARD BURLAPPED BALES 



1 to 6 bales $1.35 each 



6 to 15 bales 1.30 each 



16 to 25 bales 1.25 each 



26 to IftO bales 1.20 each 



F. O. B. Shipping Point. 



Write for prices on cm Ibts. 



AMERICAN BULB CO., 

 172 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. 



CLEAN MOSS— LOW PRICES. 

 Sphagnum Moss, burlapped, $1.76 per bale, 6 

 bales $8.00, 10 bales |16.00. 

 GULLETT & SONS, LINCOLN, ILL. 



Sphagnum Moss, 10 bbl. bales, $4.00; 6 bales, 

 $14.50: 8 bbl. bale, $3.00; 6 bales, $13.00; 6 bbl. 

 bale, $2.26; burlapped 40c per bale. Cash. 



Jos. H. Paul, Box 156, Manahawkln, N. J. 



SPHAGNUM MOSS, burlup bales, each $1.75, 

 10 bales for $16.50 



A. HENDERSON & CO., 

 _ 166 N. Wabas h Av e., Chicago. 



High grade Sphagnum Moss, standard bur^ 

 lapped bales, $1.76 each; 10 bales or more, $1.60 

 each. 8% for cash with order. 

 A. J. Amundson Co., City Point, Wis. 



SPHAGNUM MOSS. 

 10 bales at $1.76; 25 bales at $1.66 per bale. 

 Z. K. Jewett A Co., Sparta. Wis. 



SPHAGNUM MOSS, burUpped, $2.00 per bale; 

 25 bale loU, $1.80 per bale. 

 Kemble Floral Co. , Oskaloosa, la. 



TOBACCO 



KRESH TOBACCO STEMS 



l^c per lb. 



Bales weigh about 260 Iba. 



Prompt delivery. 



Write today. 



JOSEPH J. SCHAEFFER, 

 117 Joe St., Dayton, O. 



CIGAR TOBACCO STEMS. 



Write or wire us for quotations on finest 

 quality stems. We have an unlimited supply 

 at all times and can furnish from single bales 

 to car-load lot shipments at prices much lower 

 than usual quotations. Stems are clean, dry 

 and free from all foreign matter; also limited 

 quantities of tobacco dust available. 



GLOVER KOLTER TOBACCO CO., LIMA. O. 



TOBACCO STEMS. 

 Good, fresh Tobacco stems in bales of 200 

 lbs. each. Pribe per bale, $3.00; per ton, 

 $28.00. Check with order. 

 THE VIGOR CO.. FOSTORIA. OHIO. 



CIGAR TOBACCO STEMS, $1.60 PER 100 L.BS. 



SPECIAL PRICES IN TON LOTS. 



EDQERTON CIGAR CO., EDGERTON. WIS. 



Cl»ar Tobaoro stems, $1.50 per 100 lbs. Spe- 

 cial prices in ton lots. Peter N. Jacobsen, Olgar 

 Mfr.. 832 Harrison St., Davenport. Ia. 



Tobacco stems for fumigating, large bales, 250 

 to 800 lbs. each, at $9.00 per bale. Cash with 

 order. Willis H. Baldwin. ConBhohocken. Pa. 



Strong Tobacco dust, $2.00 per 100 lbs.; 200 

 Iha.. $S.R0. O. H. Hnnkel Co.. Mllwankra. Wis 



WIRE WORK 



FLORISTS' WIRE DESIGNS. 

 100 wreaths, 10-in., 12-in., 14-in., $8.00. 

 Special discount on all wire orders. Writ* 

 us for a catalogue. 



PITTSBURGH CUT FLOWER CO.. 



116-118 SEVENTH ST., 



PITT SBURG H. PA. 



WOOD LABELS 



LABELS, for nurserymen and florists. 

 Benjamin Cham» Co.. Pe rry VlllagB. N. H. 



MOTT-LY MUSINGS. 



"Best business ever," is the verdict 

 of Mrs. H. J. Krueger, Meadville, Pa., 

 who added that Will Krueger had not 

 been heard from since he left on what 

 was to be a brief fishing tour. It was 

 suggested that a big fish might have 

 swallowed him, but his mother dis- 

 agrees with that suggestion, saying 

 that no fish is large enough to hold him; 

 besides, he is needed in the business. 



• • • • 



June weddings, following a record- 

 breaking Memorial day, are keeping all 

 hands busy, reports George H. Heelas, 

 Jamestown, N. Y. 



• • • • 



R. P. Mauser is the latest addition 

 to the trade in Jamestown, N. Y., with 

 a fine piece of land and the nucleus of 

 a modern range of glass. Mr. Mauser 

 was a coworker with Charles N. Cot- 

 ter at the Lake View Rose Gardens. 



• • • • 



"Wc are getting our share of the 

 good things," replied Elliott Worden, 

 Jamestown, N. Y., to the inquiry, 

 "How's business?" 



• • • a 



The Growers' Exchange, under the 

 guidance of Charles N. Cotter, feids fair 

 to be a leading business in Jamestown, 



GULF CYPRESS 



Greenhouse Haterials 



PMky Cypen Brack Luker 

 GLASS 



HOTBED SASH 



AU Kinds and Sizes 



Lower than the 

 market prices. 



HOST PRACTICAL 



SHELF BRACKET 



Made for two 6-inch boards 

 or two lines of 1-inch or 

 Ik-inch pipe, and can be 



clamped on 1 to 2-in. upright pipe 



columns. 



Well made, iron-bound. 20c 

 each. Send SOc foTsomple. 



FLATS 



NON-KINK 



WOVEN HOSE 



Remnants, 12 ft. and up, coupled, 

 13 %c per ft. This hose is cheap at 

 twice the price. 



® 



1299-1323 Flushing Ave., 



Brooklyn, N.Y, 



Men tion The ReTiew when you write. 



J W l_ 



Economical palntinf; is buying 

 paint with a record of durability. 



DIXON'S SiLICA-6R«PHITE PAINT 



Is the most economical and 

 lontrest service paint. 

 Write for booklet 64-B and 



|i^!'o»*;<!«*J1SkI long service records. 



t.** m JosepI Dixtn Otucible Ctmpany 



Jersey City, N. J. 



Est. 1827 



N. Y. Recently Jeffrey Cotter was in- 

 advertently referred to as a son of our 

 distinguished confrere, who, though a 

 most successful propagator, hias not yet 

 succeeded in raising the genus homo. 



• • • • 



"Fine sales, with some stock left 

 over, which will be welcome for the 

 purpose of providing next season's sup- 

 ply," reports George E. Button, Fre- 



donia, N. Y. 



• • • • 



Lewis Roesch, of the West Hill 

 Nurseries, Fredonia, N. Y., expresses 

 the opinion that this has been a great 

 season for planting. Irises are a spe- 

 cialty at this establishment. W. M. 



BATAVIA, ILL. 



G. Schott, manager of the Batavia 

 Greenhouse Co., comprising over 100,- 

 000 square feet of glass, is quite elated 

 over his peony harvest, just completed. 

 Over 150,000 blooms have been cut this 

 season, by far the largest yield and 

 best crop thus far. The company plans 

 to plant ten more acres of peonies in the 

 autumn. American Beauties have been 

 discarded and over 35,000 young graft- 

 ed plants of the leading rose varieties 

 have been planted, principally Premier 

 and Butterfly. The greenhouses are 

 being painted inside and outside, 

 and in general everything is right up ta 

 the minute. Mr. Schott was formerly 

 with Poehlmann Bros. Co., A. F. Amling 

 Co., Fred Weber and other good growers. 



