NOVBMBEU 10, 1921 



The Florists^ Review 



163 



SPHAGNUM MOSS. 

 Burlap bales, each $1.00; 



10 bales for $9.00. 



A. HENDERSON & CO., 



ice N. Wabash Ave.. Chlpago. 111. 



Spbagnum Mobs, 10 bbl. bale, $8.60, 9 bales. 



$18.00; 5 bbl. bale, $1.75, 6 bales, $8.00; » 



bbl. bale, $2.00. Burlap, 40c per bale. Cask. 



Jog. H. Paul. Bo x 1B6. Manahawkln. N. J. 



STATICE 



GERMAN 8TATICB. 

 New crop, very fine quality, stock very scarce. 



Select stock $1.25 per pound 



10-pound lots 1.10 per pound 



26-pound lots 1.00 per pound 



Original case (110 pounds) 90 per pound 



AMERICAN BULB CO., 

 172 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. 



STRAWFLOWERS 



ORDER STRAWFLOWERS NOW 



For the holidays. 

 Hellchrysum, dark, rich colors; Statice, yel- 

 low and blue. Stripped and dried. Try a $1.00 

 •ample bunch. 



T. R. MICHAELIS, 

 Wholesale and Retail, Marinette, Wis. 



STRAWFLOWERS, MIXED COLORS. 

 Extra good stock, 12 inclies, wired 



ready for use. 



PLEASANT VIEW GREENHOUSES. 



Geo. H. Trlscuit, Prop.. Union City, Pa. 



Strawflowers, Hellchrysum, all colors mixed, 

 on natural stems. 10 inches, $1.25 per 100, $10.00 

 per 1000; on wire stems 12 inches, $1.50 per 

 100, $12.50 per 1000, prepaid. 



F. Danley, Macomb, 111. 



Strawflowers, most beautiful colors, wired 

 with 6, and 12-inch wire, $1.60 per lOO, $12.00 

 per 1000. Cash with order. 

 House of David Greenhouse, Benton Harbor, Mich. 



EVERLASTING STRAWFLOWERS ON WIRE, 

 $1.60 per 100, $12.50 per 1000. Cash, please. 



RIVERSIDE GREENHOUSE, 

 Herman Schallhom, Kalamazoo, Mich. 



TO B ACCO^ 



FRIEDMAN'S BEST. 

 Tobacco Powder, for fumigatinK and sprink- 

 ling, $4.00 per 100-lb. sack. 

 Tobacco Duit, $2.50 per 100-lb. sack. 

 Fumigating Kind Tobacco Dust, $3.00 per 

 100-lb. sack. 

 Tobacco Stems, $2.00 per 100-lb. sack. 

 Special prices on ton and carload lots. 

 J. J. FRIEDMAN, 

 288-289 Metropolitan Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. 



~~ TOBACCO PRODUCTS. 



Baled stems, 200 lbs.. $3.00; 400 lbs., $5.00; 

 ton, $15.00; short cut stems in bags, same price 

 as baled. 



Tobacco powder for sprinkling, 100 lbs., $3.00. 



Tobacco dust for fHrnigating, 150 lbs.. $4.00; 

 400 lbs.. $8.00; ton, $30.00. 



Special prices on stems and dust In carlots. 

 VIGOR CO., BOX 4, FOSTORIA. 0. 



Cigar Tobacco stems, $1.50 per 100 lbs. Spe- 

 cial price In ton lots. Peter N. Jacobsen, Cigar 

 Mfr., 832 Harrison St., Davenport, la. 



~ WEEPERS 



SEEDSMEN! NURSERYMEN! FLORISTS! 



Write t<><1;iy for our wholesale price list for 

 the 1922 sp:iscm, for our Ideal Hand Wecders. 



.lOHNSON-SIIAIU' & CO.. 

 Desk F. R. 1, Ba yfield, Wis. 



\A/IRE \A/ORK 



WB MANUFACTURE 



AND CARRY 



THE LARGEST STOCK 



OF WIRE DESIGNS IN CHICAGO 



SPECIAL DESIGNS ON SHORT NOTICES. 



PRICES ALWAYS RIGHT. 



JOSEPH ZISKA & SON. 

 176 N. WABASH AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 



FLORISTS' WIRE DESIGNS. 



GET OUR PRICES ON HANGING BASKETS. 



FALI-S CITY WIRE WORKS, 



451 S. THIRD ST., LOUISVILLE . KY. 



WOOD LABELS ~ 



Good grade wood labels. $1.00 per lOOO. 

 C hute & Butler Co.. Per u, Ind. 



Wood labels, for nurserymen and florists. 

 Benja min Chase Co.. P erry Village. N. H. 



NEW YORK. 



Tbe Market. 



Business in the cut flower market 

 throughout last week was dull, and 

 clearances at times quite difficult. It 

 could hardly be said that the supply 

 was, for the season, excessive, but there 

 was no doubting the fact that the de- 

 mand was away off. Retailers all com- 



Say It With Sticken; 



Put a dainty address sticker on every package. Also such in- 

 structions as "Funeral Flowers— Rush," "Fragile," "C. O. D.," 

 "Prepaid," etc. Your firm name or monogram on a handsome 

 embossed seal also gives a touch of distinction. 



'We are specialists on this class of work. We do nothing else. 

 Send for our catalogue of stock designs in stickers. Or, if you 

 want something different, let us submit color sketches and price 

 ^_^_^.^_^__^^ estimates. 



ST. LOUIS STICKER CO. 



1633 Washington Ave. ST. LOUIS, U. S. A. 



ISTICKER 





We Carry a Complete Line of 



Baskets^ Wire Designs and Florists' Supplies 



-WRITE US FOR PRICES- 



GEO. B. HART, 4955 Stone St., Rochester, N. Y. 



Chas. N. cotter Company, /nc. 



WHOLESALE DEALERS 



Floricultural and Agricultural Products and Supplies 



JAMESTOWN, NEW YORK. 



plain that business with them is poor, 

 and on some days their iceboxes need 

 little or no replenisliiiig. Everybody is 

 hopinjj for u change, wliicli it is felt 

 must come soon. 



The society season practically begins 

 with the horse show, which opens No- 

 vember 14, and it is understood that be- 

 sides the number of parties forthcoming 

 from this event, there are numbers of 

 other parties planned for debutantes, 

 the crop of which is said to be larger 

 this year than ever before, due to the 

 increase of the old society, 400 to 4,000. 

 Be this as it may, anything tliat will 

 take the existing stagnation out of busi- 

 ness will be welcomed by all branches 

 of the trade. 



Eoses are fairlj' plentiful in all 

 grades. American Beauty meets a fair 

 demand, especially for the special 

 grades, which show a long price varia- 

 tion, 2~> cents to 7.j cents each, the latter 

 for selecte<l flowers. With the produc- 

 tion of flowers on long stems, the top 

 grades of hybrid teas are reaching up to 

 winter figures, the Premier variety be- 

 ing in especially good form. The qual- 

 ity of all varieties is better, now that 

 weather conditions are more favorable. 



The supply of carnations is now 

 large, and clearances occasionally diflfl- 

 cult in consequence. The variety Mrs. 

 Ward, when of good quality, brings $4 

 per hundred, with other sorts moving 

 within a range of $2 to $3. 



The supply of cattleyas continues 

 large, but there is no improvement in 

 the demand for them, prices being any- 

 thing but strong at $')0 to $100 per 

 hundred. Cypripediums are in larger 

 supply, and move slowly at the asking 

 prices of $2..50 to .$;■>. 00 per dozen. On- 

 cidiums, which are in demand only for 

 table decorations, clear at 3 cents to 5 

 cents per floret. 



White lilies are not nearly so plenti- 

 ful, but there is no great demand for 

 them. Lily of the valley is plentiful, 

 more than sufficient for the small de- 

 mand. 



Chrysanthemum arrivals are heavy 



YELLOW FLOWER DYE 



PRICE, '""ote-^u'STt"!'""' $1.00, prepaid. 



Six for $5.00 

 McClenahan Greenhouses, 



Oklahoma City, Okla. 



and include several of the late varieties. 

 The dem;ind seems to favor pompons 

 and singles. 



Violets are coming in, but the quality 

 yet is poor; a few s;iles of the best are 

 made at 75 cents per hundred, but the 

 rest go at any price obtainable for them. 

 A few Paper Wliite narcissi are arriv- 

 ing, but tlH>se hang fire at 73 cents to 

 $1 per bunch. Sweet peas are beginning 

 to arrive in something like quantity, 

 and meet a fair deniaml. Other flowers 

 available ar(> pansies, snapdragons, bou- 

 vardia, delphiniums, mignonette, corn- 

 flowers, calendulas and daisies, for all 

 of which tliere is a fair demand. 



Various Notes. 



C. H. Totty, of Madison, X. J., left 

 Monday night, November 7, for Scran- 

 ton, Pa., to attend the flower show of 

 the Scranton Florists' Club, to open the 

 next day. 



Anthony .1. ^Manila, of Hollis, was the 

 efficient manager of the Horticultural 

 Society of New York 's flower show at 

 the Museum of Natural History last 

 week. 



William C. Richards, Jr., treasurer of 

 the New York Florists ' Club, who was 

 manager of the flower show of the 

 American Institute, which opened in the 

 Engineering Societies' building Novem- 

 ber 9, was enthusiastic over the pros- 

 pects for the success of the show. 



A good attendance is expected at the 

 meeting of the New York Florists ' Club 

 Monday evening, November 14, in the 

 club's quarters in the Engineering So- 

 cieties' building. Nominations for of- 

 , fleers, other than those presented by the 

 I nominating committee, must be made at 

 that meeting. j. H, P. 



