'■W'"'"^''^-'^''- 



62 



The Rorfsts^ Review 



JUNB l.'i. 1»2-. 



CURRENT PRICES 



RUSSELL, HADLEY, OPHELIA, WARD AND COLUMBIA, 

 25c to $1.00 per Dozen. 



DRY FLOWERS 



HeUdurysam $1 .50 per dozen bunches Statice, lavender, blue, white and yellow, $3.00 per dozen bunches 



Acroclinium 1.00 per dozen bunches Russian Rat Tail, lavender 3.00 per dozen bunihes 



OTHER SEASONABLE FLOWERS AT LOWEST MARKET PRICES. 



United Flower & Supply Co., Inc. 



Wholesale Growers and Shippers 



448 Bush Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. 



with Mrs. Darbee for some time and 

 underBtaads the business thoroughly. 



George H. Starr, nurseryman and 

 florist of Turloek, Cal., has been visiting 

 the city to dispose of his stock of im- 

 mortelles. "I am experimenting with 

 fifteen kinds of statice," he said. "1 

 have half an acre of double gypsophila, 

 which is especially satisfactory. It 

 seems to me that our climate and soil 

 are well suited to the growth 'of the 

 statice, judging from this year's crops." 

 Stanislaus county has bonded itself 

 and built the great Don Pedro dam, one 

 of the largest dams in the world. Some 

 of the power companies are now mak- 

 ing a great campaign to obtain control 

 of this bountiful source of irrigation, as 

 well as of other great California water 

 enterprises built by the people. Mr. 

 Starr is a firm believer in letting the 

 county, or the cities of Modesto and 

 Turloek, handle their own water prob- 

 lems. "We have built this great enter- 

 prise and we ought to control it," he 

 said. ' ' All-the-year-round irrigation 

 will be ours if we control our dam." 



Angelo Rossi, of Pelicano, Bossi & 

 Co., and James Eolph, Jr.^ mayor of 

 Ran Francisco, have been bracketed to- 

 gether in press dispatches as being 

 among the distinguished visitors to the 

 "'49" celebration in Sacramento. Mr. 

 Rossi is one of the supervisors. 



The E. W. McLellan Co. is having 

 some remarkably fine gladioli sent from 

 Del Monte. The firm's own crop of Pan- 

 amii gladioli is just beginning to arrive 

 and makes an excellent showing. 



F. W. Davis, of the C. Kooyman Co., 

 is busy with baskets of strawflowers 

 ornamented with the Sliriner colors for 

 souvenir purposes. 



Sjicaking of last week's niiirket, J. A. 

 Ax ell declared it to be absolutely 

 broken, by oversupply, with little or no 

 shipping. 



The San Franfiseo Cooperative 

 Flower Market has jmt in a stock of 

 baskets from the Burlington Willow 

 Ware Shops. 



Joseph's is preparing to make every 

 story of the building on Grant avenue 



(ContlniiPil on page IIk.) 



PORTLAND, ORE. 



Memorial Day Market. 



During the last two weeks it has been 

 extremely warm here for this season. 

 Memorial day business was fully up to 

 expectations and there was ample stock 

 to take care of the demand. More car- 

 nations were sold than was anticipated. 

 There was a scarcity of peonies, but an 



American Grown Longiflorums 



Are giving every satisfaction. We are getting 

 repeat orders every day. Write for prices. 



BANDON BULB GARDENS, "^ -^.H.j,h.,o, jv,h«.. 



BANDON, OREGON 



