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70 



The Florists' Review 



July 24, 1018. 



JOSEPH I^EA^bcK COMPANY'S 



PALMS AND TERNS 



HOME GROWN WELL ESTABLISHED STRONG AND HEALTHY 



K«ntl» B«linor( 



Pot Leftves 



2>f-inch 4 



5-inoh 6 to 7 



6-lnch ft to 7 



6-lncb ( to 7 



6-lncIi 6 to 7 



In.hlch 

 8 to 10... 



18... 



34... 



26... 



28 to 80 1.60 



Oedar 



tub Leaves In.hltb Bach Dos. 



7-lnoh 6to7 84to8e $2.60 $80.00 



9-inch 6to7 40to46 4.00 48iW 



Cedar tab Leaves lu.hlcb Each 



»-lncb 6to7 42to48 $5.00 



0-lnch 6to7 48to64 6.00 



O^lneh 6to7 5ft 8.00 



9-liich 6to7 6ft 10.00 



KantUt Vorst«t|taui»— Made np 



Cedar tab Plants In. biffh Each Doi. 



7-inch 4 86 $2.50 $30.00 



9-inch 4 40 to 42 4.00 



12-lnch 4 60 to 66 12.60 



12-in(di 4 66 to 72. 15.00 



We are (rowlnc all onr Kentias above 6-inch siie in neat C«<lmr TnbSt made especially for as, with electric wire hoops, painted craan. 



These tabs cost several times the price of pots, bat we sell the plants at the same price as thoogh grown in pots. The barer has the 

 advantage of receiving his plants without breakage of pots and in handsome tubs in which they have become well established and in which 

 they will oontinoe to do better than in pots. 



When In Philadelphia be sure to look us up. 



We are easily reached— only 25 minutes from Beading Terminal, 12th and Market Streets, Philadelphia. We have flue train service— fifty 

 trains each way every week day— so you can suit yoar own convenience, both going and coming. When you will see our palms of all 

 ■tsas* from 2^inch pots to 12-inch tubs. We are strong on DaooratlTa Palms, in 7-inch, 9-inch and 12-inch tubs (made-up or single 

 plants), which we can supply in any quahtlty. All our Palms are homa-cro^m (not an imported plant on the place) and well established 

 in the tubs. They are strong and healthy. 



With increased glass devoted to Palms, our stock is maob larsar than m-rmt batora and never in battar oondltloii. 



JOSEPH HEACOCK CO.. Wyneote, Pa., 



Railway Station, 

 Jenkintown. 



ZANESVILLE, O. 



Outside crops in this vicinity were 

 seriously damaged by a cloudburst or 

 deluge of rain on Sunday vight, July 

 13. In the greater calamity by the 

 floods of last March, of course, it was 

 the property in the city itself and on 

 the bottom lands of the Licking and 

 Muskingum rivers that bore the greater 

 part of the loss, but in this latest dis- 

 aster it was the farmers and other grow- 

 ers on the hillsides and along the small- 

 er streams that suffered most seriously, 

 for the falling and rushing water bat- 

 tered down or even washed out some 

 of the crops, carried away wheat that 

 was standing in shock and destroyed 

 bridges and roads. 



The rain was accompanied by one of 

 the worst electrical storms of recent 

 years. C. L. Humphrey reports that a 

 bolt of lightning struck one of the 

 42-foot smokestacks at his greenhouses 

 and tore off ten feet of it. The bricks 

 fell on one of the houses, breaking 

 about three boxes of glass and smashing 

 two benches, with the stock of 3-inch 

 and 4-inch cyclamens. Mr. Humphrey 

 states that the force of the rain was 

 so great that it washed out gladioli 

 and carnations by the roots in the field. 

 His place is on sufliciently high ground 

 so that it wa^ ^ot affected by the river, 

 which rose fourteen*' feet in eight 

 hours and covered 1l small part of the 

 town that was inundated in March. 

 He states that there were no train* 

 running all day on Monday, the day 

 after the storm, and only a few on 

 Tuesday. 



Troy, N. Y.— L. H. Wustefeld, for- 

 merly in the trade at 10 Fales court, 

 is said to have left the city. 



GERANIIMS 



We have a splendid lot ready, in a fine 

 assortment of good plants in 3-in. pots, for 

 Fall and Winter blooming, $3.00 per 100; 

 $25.00 per 1000. Good 2.in. stock, at $2.00 

 per 100; $18.50 per 1000. We are booking 

 orders for next season. Get our catalogue 

 and prices. We cover the field of useful 

 varieties. 



SiWILAX, j?:ood, strong, 2-in. pot plants, 

 $2.00 per 100; $17.50 per 1000. 



ASPARAGUS SPRENQERI, 3-in., 

 $5.00 per lOOj $40.00 per 1000. 



ASPARAGUS PLUMOSUS NANUS, 3=in., 

 $5.00 per 100; $40.00 per 1000. 



HARDY ENGLISH IVY, 2=in., - 

 -i -$2^00 per 100; 3=in., $3.00 per 100. 



R. VINCENT, JR., & SONS CO., 



White Marsh, Maryland 



