104 



The Florists' Review 



Sbptdmbeb 22. 1921 



CHRYSANTHEMUMS °' ™%oTr''^y*?§r sh.pp™g 



GIVE us AN INITIAL ORDER FOR TRIAL. 



Order DRIED FLOWERS for your Winter's Supply. 



STATICE— Lavender, white, yellow. STATICE Latifolia (fine variety). 

 STRAWFLOWERS-Acroclinium.Helichrysum. 



GREENS— Woodwardia, Plumosus, Adiantum, Brakes, etc. 



DOMOTO BROTHERS., 



San Francisco, Cal. 



440 Bush Street 



WHOLESALERS 

 AND SHIPPERS 



CALIFORNIA ZINNIAS 



NEW, EARLY DAHLIA-FLOWERED ZINNIA SEED— NOW READY 



Write for our catalogue and prices 



R. G. FRASER & SON, Wholesale Seed Growers, l^x'sS PASADENA, CALIF. 



including cyclamens, poinsettias and be- 

 gonias. The latter look especially fine at 

 the present time. 



E. F. Winterson, of Chicago, and Fritz 

 Bahr, of Highland Park, 111., visited our 

 city one day last week. They made the 

 trip over our scenic Columbia river 

 highway and were enthusiastic about its 

 grandeur. 



J. A. Axell, of San Francisco, passed 

 through the city on the last leg of a 

 transcontinental journey he has been 

 taking this summer. 



Earl Aldrich, representing the M. Kico 

 Co., Philadeljihia, has returned from a 

 successful business trip, which covered 

 all the states west of the Rocky moun- 

 tains. 



Fred Young and Ben Van Kirk are on 

 a hunting trip to southern Oregon. The 

 boys here are all anticipating the hunt- 

 ers' return with plenty of jerked veni- 

 son. 



Visitors last week were Fred Gust, of 

 the McCallum Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Rob- 

 ert Newcomb, of the Burlington Willow 

 Ware Shops, Burlington, la.; William 

 Goldsbary, of the A. L. Randall Co., 

 Chicago; William Snyder, of Poehlniann 

 Bros. Co., Chicago; Mrs. A. Day, Baker, 

 Oregon, and William Wibra, Chohalis, 

 Wash. C. B. S. 



SEATTLE, WASH. 



The Market. 



There has been some improvement in 

 general business, traceable to the re- 

 opening of schools. This improvement 

 has been ])arti('ularly evident in the 

 greater interest manifested in corsages, 

 since there Iiave been many more social 

 functions of late. The cut of early 

 mums is increasing, but there has been 

 no trouble in disposing of the offerings. 

 From present indications there will be a 

 bumper crop of mums harvested this 

 year and some of the growers are be- 

 ginning to look for a shipping outlet on 

 their expected surplus. The retail shops 



ROSES 



I NEW CROP I 



■ Shorts, 6 to 9 and 9 to 12 inches 1 

 1 Medium, 13 to 18 inches 1 



i Gladioli I 



I MISCELLANEOUS 



I Garden Flowers 



I Sprengeri Ferns 



g No Charge for Packing. Write for Prices. = 



liller noral Co. 



PARMINGTON. 



UTAH 



"try Clarke" 



The best and quickest way to get 

 what you want in 



Bulbs, Florists' or Nursery Stock 



is to write 



W.B. Clarke, n?oke7"""" San Jose, Calif. 



have been handling fewer dahlias, since 

 the home growers have such large cuts 

 at present that they are hard to sell, 

 (ioldi'n Glow is offered in a small way. 

 Snapdragons are about at an end. Zin- 

 nias have been popular, although rather 

 in oversupply, but they are being used 

 freely in current decorations. African 

 marigolds and gaillardias are also plenti- 

 ful. 



The cut of roses is showing some in- 



CYCLAMEN 



5-inch 40c each 



6-inch 50c each 



Table Ferns 



Fancy Assortment 



$2.00 per flat, 100 in a flat. 



2X-inch pots $5.00 per 100 



10,000 Po^S-wo FERNS 



All sizes from 5-inch up. 



Primula Obconica 



Best strain. 

 2X-inch $5.00 per 100 



Rahn & Herbert Co. 



Clackamas, Oregon 





California Dahlias and Cannas 



DAHLIA SEED 



THE LATEST AND BEST 



G. S. ARCHER, 



*^ ^'l^aHHISS' *"•• Lw Angeici, Cil. 



crease, especially on Ophelia and But- 

 terfly. Ward has been in active demaml. 

 This latter flower is being generally 

 combined with violets in the making of 

 corsages. There has been some improve- 

 ment in the deliveries of carnations of 

 late, with a heavy yield assured for the 



