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58 



The Florists^ Review 



SapTMCBint'^r ISltt. 



SPECIAL CUT PRICES 



AS LONG AS THEY LAST 



.$4.50 per 100 



Lilium Gigfanteam— 



Cold Storage, 7 to 9 in 



$12.50 per case of 300 



Lilium Formosum— 



6 10 8 iQches $3.00 per 100 



7 to 9 inches 4.fi0 per 100 



9 to 10 inches 7.50 per 100 



Lilium Harrisii— 



6 to 7 inches $3.50 per 100 



7 to 9 inches 6.60 per 100 



Lilium Candidum— 



$4.25 per lOO; per case of 400, $16.00 



Calla Lilies- 



11^ to 2 inches f6.00 per 100 



2 to 2^ inches 9.60 per 100 



Roman Hyacinths, White— 



11 to 12 ctm $21.00 per 1000 



12 to J5 ctm 26.t0 per 1000 



Freesia Refracta Alba $-5.00 per 1000 



Freesia Jumbo, French 8.60 per 10 



Freesia Purity (true) 9.00 per 1000 



Narcissus Paper White, Grandiflora— 



15(»0 to case $ 8 00 per IfV^O 



1250 to case 8.50 per 10 



1000 to case 10.00 per 1000 



THE J. M. McCULLOUGH'S SONS CO. 



SEEDSMEN 



Kstabllstaed 1838 



316 Walnut St., Cincinnati, 0. 



V»nTlon Th» Ri»t1«>w whpn von *»Tlt» 



era turned over their calla and freesia 

 bulbs to the Mittings to be sold, but 

 are said to have received practically 

 nothing in payment. 



The Santa Cruz News of September 

 13 said: 



"E. Deroo Mitting, late proprietor of 

 the much-embarrassed Santa Cruz Bulb 

 & Plant Co., is in jail, charged with the 

 embezzlement of $128 entrusted to his 

 care by W. T, Huff. 



"Mitting was caught in San Fran- 

 cisco by Constable Frank Dille yester- 

 day afternoon and brought to Santa 

 Cruz at noon today. The charge against 

 young Mitting is a felony and a ver- 

 dict of guilty in such a case means a 

 term in state's prison, 



"Mr. Huff, who raises bulbs near 

 Del Mar, alleges that Mitting, as agent 

 in the pale of his (Huff's) bulbs, re- 

 fused to pay up after he had sold the 

 bulbs." 



FBENCH SEEDSMEN IMPRISONED. 



An account of the arrest of certain 

 French seed growers is given in the Lon- 

 don Daily Chronicle, as follows: 



"A certain section of the business 

 community of Saint Eemy, in Provence, 

 has distinguished itself in unenviable 

 fashion by trading with the enemy. 

 Nine citizens are under arrest, includ- 

 ing the vice-president of the Aries 

 Chamber of Commerce, and another 

 prominent tradesman who was born a 

 German and only became naturalized 

 shortly before the war. In ordinary 

 times the Provencal Saint Remy is Ger- 

 many's chief center in France for the 

 purchase of market garden seeds. The 

 town exported annually forty-one tons 

 to Germany and four to Switzerland. 

 The Ideal trade was in the hands of 

 fifteen wholesale merchants who, in 

 spite of the war, appear to have bought 

 up the whole of this year's production 

 as usual. Police investigations now 

 show that . forty-five tons went to 

 Switzerland. Papers seized prove that 

 the vendors were actually in communi- 

 cation with their regular German 

 customers, who had arranged to have 

 agents in Switzerland to take delivery 

 of the merchandise. The Saint Remy 

 merchants say they believed they were 

 within the law in sending goods to a 



DUTCH BULBS 



HYACINTHS, TULIPS, NARCISSUS, CALLAS 



AND FREESIA PURITY AND ALBA 



Ofll n CTflDMfiC Ifil I CV The very highest quality obtainable. 04 7 fin 

 UULU OlUnAUC lALLCl Packedincasesof lOOO. atpercase....)! f lUU 



Write tor our Fall Trade Catalosue 



St. Louis Seed Co. 



411-413 Washlnsten Ave. The Home of "Pure and Sure Seeds" ST. LOUIS. MO. 



Meution Tbe KeTH'w wiwn yog wnr. 



DARWIN TULIPS 



On Hand— Immediate Delivery 



Clara Butt (apple blossom). Baronne 

 de laTonnaye (rose-pink). Gesneriana 

 Lutea (fine yellow). Gretcben (pale 

 rose), Piide of Haarlem (deep scarlet, 

 extra large). 



$1.00 per 100, $8.00 per 1000 



Hyacinths (En route) 



Grand Maitre (deep blue), Grandesse 

 (white). King of Blues (blue). Gertrude 

 (red), Mo'eno(red),L'Innocence( white). 



$2.00 per 100, $18.00 per 1000 



Raymond W. Swell 



Saxonville, Massachusetts 



Wm. Elliott & Sons 



SEEDSMEN 



42 Veser Street, NEW YORK 



neutral country, and that it was not 

 their business to worry as to the even- 

 tual destination." 



The Horticultural Advertiser (Brit- 

 ish) states that "the following seeds- 

 men have been incarcerated: Blain fils 

 aine, Servan Koustan, Roumanille 



XXX SEEDS 



PMMROSES. Impreved Chinese Frlnsed. 



finest grown, many varieties mixed, 660 seeds, 

 11.00; ifl pkt.. 50c; per 1000, $1,25. 



Primula Kewensle, sweetyellow, newdwf. ,26c. 



Primula Obeonica, new giants, pkt., 60c, 



Calceolaria, finest dwarf. Giant flow,, 60c. 



Cyclamen Olsanteum, finest Giants mixed, 

 250 seeds, tl.OO; >s pkt., 60c. 



Cineraria, large flowering dwarf niixed, fine. 



1000 seeds, 50c; ^ pkt,, 26c. 

 Daley (BeMIe) Menstresa, new monstrous 



double, white, rose or mixed, pkt., 25c. 



GIANT PANSY L^'eSviSf 



tiea.critically selected, 6D00seed8,ll.00; half ,60c. 

 CASH. Liberal packets. We can please you, 



JOHN F. RUPP. Shiremanstown, Pi. 



Mention Th« R*t1»w whf« Tftn wr1tf> 



HELLER SrCO.1 



HONTPEUER. 

 OMICL 



''^"' MI( F 

 I SKKl) 



I Sent 

 for 

 ICaialoi 

 Na34 



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