

JOLT 9, 1814. 



The Florists' Review 



29 



•%!.'> 

 ^ 



Per 100, $5.00 and $6.00 



As a summer decorative flower— inejf pen- 

 sive, attractive, lasting, beautifuL and 

 showy. Splendid quality— all colors. 



HKADQIIAirmiS FOR •RKKNS; 



Natural Gycas, 36-40 inch, £2.00 per pair. 

 Leucothoe, green, 11.00 per 100; $7.50 per 1000. 

 Dagger Ferns, best Quality, long, perfect fronds, 



$1.50 per 1000. 

 ^paragus Plumosus, bunches and strings, 50c 



<each. 

 Asparagus Sprengeri, 60c per bunch. 

 Boxwood Sprays, 50-lb. cases, S7.50 each. 



I;. 



Oalax, bronze, $1.60 per ICOO; $8.50 ifeip case of 



10.000. 

 Green Sheet Moss, S3.£0 per bag. 

 Oreen Lump MOss, $1.50 per bag. 

 Fadeless Qreen Sheet Mobs, $3.50 per bag. i 

 Sphagnum Moss, lO-bbl. bales (burlapped), $4.00 



per bale; 5 bale lots, $3.75 per bale; 10 bale lots, 



$8.50 per bale. 



FvAvvtliinil in VikliAiic We carry one of the largest and most varied stocks in 



LVeryUUUg m RIBWIU— Ribbons pertaining to the Horist business of any house 

 in the country. If you have not received one of our new catalogues, advise us and we 

 will mail you one at once. 



DURING JULY AND AUGUST WE CLOSE AT FIVE P. M. 



S. S. PENNOCK-MEEHAN CO. 



THE WHOLESALE FLORISTS OF PHILADELPHIA 



Philadelphia. 1608-1620 Ludlow Street ~ Washington. 1216 H Street. N. W. 



New York, 117 West 28th Street Baltimore, Franklin and St. Paul Streets 



Mention Thp Review when yog write. 



Easter Lilies, Sweet Peas, White and 

 Pink Enchantress Carnations, Gladioli 



EVERYTHING IN SEASONABLE FLOWERS 



WE CLOSI AT S P. M. 



THE nnLADELPlDA CUT FLOWER CO., 



1817 

 Sansom St., 



rHiLADELrinA,riL 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



lowing day devoted to the annual out- 

 ing. Boston ia famous for its hospital- 

 ity, its horticultural interests, and is 

 easily reached from this city. It is 

 noped that every Philadelphia florist 

 who can will arrange to accompany our 

 florists' Club to Boston the third week 

 in August, where a cordial welcome and 

 *n interesting visit are assured. 



Various Notes. 



i'- Bayersdorfer arrived from Europe 

 4, on the Vaterland. He spent the 

 wing day at Atlantic City, visited 

 tore July 6, going over to New 

 that afternoon with his son, Syd- 

 H. Bayersdorfer, who sailed on the 

 a trip of the Vaterland July 7. 

 ■in P. Habermehl is at Ocean City, 



Jul\ 

 foil", 

 his 



Yor 

 ney 



reti, 

 .1. 



N. . 



1.CM 



( 



ex I 

 fei. 

 in 

 it 



• Gammage, of J. Gammage & Son, 

 ;on, Ont., was here a few days ago. 

 ^eph G. Neidinger returned from 

 pe July 4. He was amazed at the 

 ■^t of his new building, he said, but 

 sure that the stock he had secured 

 -iirope would make all the space in 

 necessity before long. Mr. Neidin- 



ger thinks that the floral artists of 

 America lead the world; for them he 

 has secured the best European ideas. 



Joseph Towill, brother of the cele- 

 brated Teddy, who is in charge of B. C. 

 Whitmer's Ellenwood Greenhouses, at 

 Hatboro, is adding a Lord & Burnham 

 house this season. 



H. W. Jones, of the Bellevue-Strat- 

 ford, aptly describes drooping ferns as 

 "hangovers." 



Samuel S. Pennock moved his family 

 to Ocean City July 3. One son is at a 

 farm in Maine, another at a camp in 

 Pennsylvania, both learning to rough it. 



The monthly meeting of the Florists' 

 Club, held July 7, was largely devoted 

 to convention matters. 



Henry F. Michell reports the arrival 

 of the first California freesias in good 

 condition. 



Stuart H. Miller is away on his va- 

 cation. 



Alvah R. Jones and C. U. Liggitt vis- 

 ited Hartford and Cromwell, Conn., re- 

 cently to see the rose gardens at Eliza- 

 beth park, in the former city, and, of 

 course, the Pierson place at Cromwell, 



where they spent a most interesting 

 afternoon. Mr. Jones says the stock 

 was in fine shape. 



D. Fuerstenberg is away on a vaca- 

 tion. The mammoth house at North 

 Wales is producing roses once more. 



Arthur Zirkman returned from his va- 

 cation at Cresswell, Pa., July 6, after 

 a fine motoring and trout fishing trip. 



J. Berger spent the Fourth, and the 

 day following, at sea. 



Edward Reid considers Mock the 

 greatest pink rose ffer summer. 



William C. Harvey is away on his 

 vacation. Phil. 



NEW YORK. 



The Market. 



The Glorious Fourth was a good 

 Saturday from the patriotic stand- 

 point, but it closed a week of lament- 

 able dullness in the wholesale cut 

 flower market. Of last week's market 

 and its prices there is nothing new to 

 add to the quotations of a week ago. 

 A big surplus of the unsalable accu- 



