August 6. 1915. 



The Florists^ Review 



41 



Th» florists wbo*« cards avpMur on the pas«* oarrylnc this hMMl, aro vropared to lUl ordors 

 "" — — — from othor florists for local dollTorr on tlia usual bcMls. — 



Alexander NcConnell 



(611 FiHh Avenue, corner off 49th St. NEW YORK CITY 



T«leffraph orders forwarded to any part of the. United States. Canada and all the principal cities of Europe. 

 Hafor— CO or casli must sccompany all orders froia unknown coffrospoadonts. Cable Address ALPCCOMWOA 



David Clarke's Sons 



8239-8241 Broadway 



Tel. 1662. 1663 Columbas 



NEW YORK CITY 



Out-of-town orders for delivery In New York 

 carefully and promptly filled at reasonable rates 



G. E. M. STUMPP 



761 FIFTH AVmUC 



NEW YORK CITY 



F. T. D. MEMBER 



Wire or Phone to 



MAX SCHLING 



22 West SSth Street, adlolnlns Plaza Hotel 



Florists In the States as References EUROPEAN ORDERS EXECUTED 



I Member Florists' Teleffreph DeUrery Association 



tSi^l NEW YORK 



IN HEART OF NEW YORK CITY 



6 E. 33d Street, New York 



Opposite the Waldorf-Astoria. Phone Mad. Sq. 6404 

 Oar Motto— The Golden Bole 



Floweis to All the World 



by TELEGRAPH 



SIEBRECHT & SON 



619 Fifth Ato.. new YORK CITY 



yrm wxbx ors of ths pioincKBS 



YOUNG ft NUGENT 



NEW YORK: 42 W. 28tli St. 



In the theater district. Exceptional facilitiei 

 for deliTering flowers on outgoing steamers. 

 Your orders will receive prompt and careful 

 attention. Wire, telephone or write us. 



arriving daily for free spaces at the 

 exposition and flower show, to be held 

 at Exposition park August 30 to 

 September 12. So far conditions look 

 promising, and a successful show is 

 assured. 



Charles H. Viek made a short busi- 

 ness trip to Albion, N. Y., July 30. 



Edwin C. Armbrust, on his return 

 from Ocean Grove, called on his Roch- 

 ester friends, looking remarkably well 

 after his two weeks' vacation. 



Visitors last week were: C. M. 

 Archer, of Roseville Pottery Co., Zanes- 

 ville, O.; P. M. Phillips, manager of 

 S. A. Weller Co., jardinieres and pot- 

 tery, Boston, Mass., and J. Eamsfelder, 

 of the Knickerbocker Eibbon Co., New 

 York. H. J. H. 



THOS. F. GALVm, Inc. 



NEW YORK ^"'^*'- 



1 Park Str««t 



VandMblltHotol 



BOSTON 



MVFD L. D. rhene 

 In I bll 5297 Plaza 



60911NadisonAve.,NewYork 



JOSEPH TREPEL, 



884 iM-wlm Ave. , 



BROOKLYN, N.Y. 



Telephone No. 1310 Bedford 



— Six Up-to-date stores in the Gty of Brooklyn — 



We give personal attention to your orders and 

 guarantee satisfaction. 



WARENDORFF 



SI0IRBAUOVB.TOWN l^^'SW oM.r. u, 



The An gonla. 74th Street and Broadway. 



rHATHAN M Y ^''* ^''"^''"" f'^^*' ^"• 



VlUtllUU'l) i1* 1 • PROMPTNESS, WITH CARE 



Eastern NEW YORK and Western MASS. 



BOSTON. 



The Market. 



The supply of flowers is comparative- 

 -ly small. Many growers are sending in 

 nothing and stalls in the markets have 

 a half deserted appearance. The de- 

 mand is feeble, but a shade better than 

 a week ago. American Beauty roses 

 move slowly at $8 to $12 per hundred. 

 Hybrid teas in variety sell at from 50 

 cents to $8, a small number only reach- 

 ing the top figure. Ophelia, Miller, 

 Taft, Kaiserin and Russell are leaders. 

 Carnations get fewer each week and 

 are of poor quality, but sell at higher 

 prices. Asters will soon dominate the 

 market. Continued rains and fogs have 

 damaged many, but Queen of the Mar- 

 ket is now of ^ood quality. Gladioli 

 are arriving freely from outdoors and 

 low prices rule, many going as low as 

 $1 per hundred. 



Valley is druggy and low in price; 

 so are all varieties of lilies. Sweet 

 peas haye been adversely affected by 

 the continuous rains, but good flowers 

 sell well. Among other flowers noted 

 are cosmos, dahlias, perennial phlox, 

 gypsophila and montbretia, but the call 

 for these is light. There is little call 

 for cattleyas and gardenias. 

 Various Notes. 



The Boston delegation to the San 

 Francisco convention, which left Au- 

 gust 4, proved to be the smallest that 

 ever left this city, consisting only of 

 President P. Welch and wife and T. J. 

 Grey and wife. Others who had talked 

 of going changed their minds. Not a 

 solitary grower will be present from 

 this section, something which has never 

 occurred before. Dull business, the 

 long trip "and long necessary absence 

 from hoiiie, added to the August heat, 



799 Boylston Str««t 



Deliveries to Steamers and all Eastern Points. 



Remember Pbillipa 



272 Fulton Str««t 



BROOKLYN 



Brooklyn's only member of the Floriste' 

 Telegraph Delivery. Floral deliveries in New 

 York, Brooklyn. Long Island, New Jersey, Etc. 



Established 1874 



HUGO H.*JAHN 



Tel. No. 

 1952 Bedford 



710 Nostrand Avenue 



BROOKLYN, N. Y. 



WIU deliver to Steamships, Tlieaters, anywliere 

 witiiln 20 miles of Now York. 



ARTISTIC WORK PERSONAL ATTENTION 



Special Care of Your Telegraph Orders. 



lAIII I^Qiy 8 and 5 Greene Ave. 



839 to 34 7 Greene Are. 



BROOKLY 



39M 



Phone, SSJPrsMeet NEW YORK 



Telephone, Murray Hill 783 



KOTTMILLER 



FLORIST 



426 Madison Avenue, corner 49th St. NEW YORK 



Highest Award at the International Flower Show, 

 April 11, Grand Central Palace. 



Out-of-town orders solicitetl. 

 Locatio n Central. Personal Attention. 



IN THE 

 HEART OF 



Close to Theaters and Steamships 



Personal Selection Satisfaction Guaranteed 



THE BOSTON FLORIST 



Established 1902 

 136 E. 34th St., NEW YORK 



NEW YORK CITY 



A Card This Size 



Costs Only 70c per Week 

 on Yearly Order 



It would keep your name and your facilities 

 before the whole trade. 



A half-inch card costs only 36c per week on 

 yearly order. 



C. C. TREPEL, 



-TEN 8TORES- 



Main Office, Bloomtnsdale's 

 Third Ave. and 59th St.. NEW YORK 



O^Larffest Indivldnal retail dealer in Crr Flowkb» 

 and Plants In the world. 



