60 



1 



The Florists' Review 



Jolt 16, 1014. 



First Quality Flower Seeds 



DA I^C Y~^"P*'^ Giant Mixed— We have for years sent out a specia 



mixture of Pansy seed, under above -— '"*^ — 



name, and have had some flattering reports from it. 

 You cannot buy a better mixture at any price. 



Trade packet, 50c; •'4 ounce, $1.25; ounce, $4.00. 



If you want named varieties and separate colors, we can supply 

 you from best strain of Gassier, Odier, Bugnot and Oiant Trimardeau 



Cineraria Hybrida Grandiflora, 



An unbeatable strain of this, in mixed colors, trade packet, $1.00. 

 Writs for Catalogu* No. 5 for all seasonable seed. 



The Storre & Harrison Co./^'S"^'^^ 



Mention Th» RaTlew when Ton wrif . 



Pkt. 



Begonia Semperflorent Vernon $0.10 



Begonia Semperflorens, choicest hybrids 



mixed 15 



Begonia Semperflorens, hybrids, dbl. red 16 



Calceolaria, Covent Garden strain 30 



'Cineraria Orandiflora, large-fl., prize mxc. .40 



Cineraria Folyantha (Stellata), mixed 20 



Cowslip, large-flowered, mixed 10 



Gloxinia, ex. superb mxd., from prize yars. . 60 

 Pyrethrum Hyb. Grand. FI, Fl., ex. special 



strain 26 



Cyclamen Fersicum Giganteum, very special 



strain — Per 100 seeds 



White, with red eye $0.60 



Pure white R5 



Bright carmine 76 



Cyclamen Excelsior, deep red, very large 



flower 1.00 



Cyclamen Frincess May, purest white, tipped 



crimson, very special 1.00 



Cyclamen Fapilio (Butterfly Cyclamen), 



mixed, extra 1.25 



Cyclamen, choicest mixed, extra 50 



J. J. WILSON SEED CO., Inc 



NEWARK, N. J. 



Mention Tbe Review when you write. 



eluded that it did not look like the 

 Mammoth corn and he returned it by a 

 neighbor to have it exchanged. The 

 neighbor took the matter up directly 

 with the defendant and the defendant 

 told him that it was the Mammoth 

 corn; that they bought it for Mammoth 

 corn and sold it for Mammoth corn. 

 The corn was returned to the plaintiflf, 

 with the above explanation, and the 

 plaintiff, relying upon the statement of 

 the defendant, planted the corn and 

 cultivated it thoroughly, but it turned 

 out not to be the Mammoth corn, but 

 an early variety of another kind. It 

 only grew from two to three feet high 

 and did not mature and the plaintiff 

 lost the entire crop. 



"There is a case, Shaw vs. Smith, 45 

 Kas., 334; also 50 Mo., App. 121, and 

 several New York cases almost directly 

 in point, especially the case of White 

 vs. Miller, 71 N. Y,, 118. There is an 

 implied warranty on the part of the 

 seller that he will sell the purchaser 

 the thing he calls for. Not that it will 

 germinate, but that it is the kind the 

 purchaser calls for and that it is fit 

 for the purpose the purchaser desires 

 to use it for. 



"There also is a case, Landreth vs. 

 Wycoff, 67 N. Y. App. Div., 145, and 

 also 73 N. Y., Suppl., 388. The gist of 

 the matter is that no matter what the 

 seller advertises in the sale of the seed, 

 that he will not be responsible for cer- 

 tain defects, there is an implied war- 

 ranty that he will sell the purchaser 

 the kind of seed purchaser calls for and 

 that the seed will be fit for the purpose 

 the purchaser intends to use it for. 

 There is, however, no implied warranty, 

 it seems, that the seed will germinate." 



Statement by Defendant. 



The following is a statement of the 

 facts by R. H. McAnulty, of McAnulty, 

 Allen & Humphrey, counsel for the de- 

 fendant: 



"This was a suit brought to recover 

 damages claimed by reason of defend- 

 ant having delivered an early variety 

 of sweet corn to plaintiff, whereas he 

 claimed to have bought a late variety. 

 Plaintiff claimed that he asked for 

 Mammoth sweet corn, but claimed there 

 was delivered to him some unknown va- 

 riety of early sweet corn; that the rea- 

 son why he knew it was not the Mam- 

 moth was that it did not grow tall 

 enough to be Mammoth and that it did 



PANSY SEED 



Brown's Triumph Qiant Prize 

 Pansy Seed, mixed colors, my own 



growing, 1914 crop. }4 oz., $1.00; ^ 

 oz., $2.60; 1 oz., $5.00. Write for price 

 on large quantity. 



Cash with order. 



PETER BROWN 



124 RUBY STKEET, LANCASTER, PA. 



Mention The Reylew when yon write. 



not produce ears, whereas other truck 

 farmers, neighbors of his, had planted 

 the Mammoth variety and had secured 

 reasonably good yields. The court, how- 

 ever, refused to allow any of them to 

 testify as to what their corn had yielded 

 unless they first were able to show that 

 they planted Mammoth corn at about 

 the same^ time of the year and in soil 

 of the same general character, the 

 ground broken up about the same time 

 of the year, and that the ground must 

 have had similar crops to the crops pre- 

 ceding the corn crop on plaintiff's land. 

 None of plaintiff's witnesses could 

 come within the rule laid down by the 

 court; therefore they could not testify 

 as to what their corn had vielded. 



All Seeds and Bulbs sold 

 by Thorbum are always of 

 the very highest quality 

 and true to name. 



ASPARAGUS 



Plumosu* Nanus 



PerlOOO 



TUBEROSES 



Dwarf Double PearL 

 Extra large size. 



$7.S0 per 1000 



"The moat reliable lemla" 

 85 Barclay St. New York. N. T. 



MoBtiWt The HoTlew when yoo write. 



XXX SEEDS 



PRINmOSES, Imprevod Chinas* Frlnce|<. 



finest srown, many varieties mixed, 600 seeds, 



$1.00; la-Dkt., 60c; per 1000, $1.60; colors seia- 



rate also. 

 Primula Obcoaica, New Giants, pkt., 50c. 

 Primula Kawansia, sweet yellow, 25c. 

 Primula MalaeaMaa, Qiant Baby. 25e. 

 CInararlaa, best large fl. dwf., 1000 seeds. 50c. 

 Calaaalarlaa. finest giant flowering dwarf, oOC 

 Daisy (BalMa) IMsnstrosa. new monstrous 



double giant- flowering, mixed, plct., 25c. 

 Parcat-ma-nat Triumph, ex. fine, 25c. 



GIANT PANSY .^/^.K^n"" 



cally selected. 6000 seeds, $1 00; oz., 13.00: half pk'; 

 60c. A liberal extra packet of Olsnt M me. P«"J' 

 Pansr Seed added to erery order for Pansr 9**" 



CASH. Ubaral axtra eannt. 



JOHN r. RUPP, Shiremanstown, Pa 



Mention The Rerlew when 7 ~" »'^^*- — 



GLADIOLI 



I can supply cut Gladioli nov . 



E. E. STEWART . 

 BROOKLYN. - - MiCn 



Mention The Borlew when yen ^r\tt. ^^ 



"The case was tried first in the J"'^' 

 tice court before a jury and won ^^ riu 

 defendant. The plaintiff appealed. ^ 

 theory was that when a P6""°.i'gye 

 chased of a dealer in seeds *" ^ 

 was an implied warranty that the s 



