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The Weekly Florists' Review. 



OCTOBEB 20, 1804. 



WKT GROVE, PA. 



Had Mr. Conner and Phil, when they 

 came out from Philadelphia recently, 

 had a little more time they would have 

 found three establishments each of 

 about 7,000 feet of glass, where cut 

 flowers and plants are grown well enough 

 to be interesting. 



Benjamin Connell grows ferns in 

 quantity and with great success; also 

 violets and carnations for cut flowers. 



Boney Bros, grow bedding plants and 

 carnations, their red seedling carnation, 

 an improved Portia, being especially in- 

 teresting. They also have a house of 

 tomatoes, an improved Lorillard. 



J. Morris Cooper is an extensive 

 grower of mushrooms, but has consid- 

 erable glass in carnations, three-fourths 

 of his glass being devoted to his new 

 scarlet seedling not yet disseminated but 

 very promising. G. r. 



CADILLAC, MICH. 



An illustrated edition of the Cadillac 

 News and Express gives a sketch and 

 portrait of A. W. Tweedie and a 

 sketch of the brief career of Kleinhans 

 & Mason, with a picture of their new 

 place. The members of this firm came to 

 Cadillac from Ithaca only last May. 

 They have put up 4,500 feet of glass, a 

 residence and an office. They have heat- 

 ing facilities for more glass, which they 

 expect to put up next spring. At pres- 

 ent they have to send out of town for 

 roses and a large part of their other 

 stock. 



A. W. Tweedie has been in business 

 five years and has a well-kept place. 

 Besides a large business in cut flowers 

 and plants he does a nice trade in shrubs 

 and other hardy stock, a profitable fea- 

 ture that many florists overlook. 



Springfield, Mass. — Osterman & 

 Steele have opened a new flower store at 

 137 State street. 



Colorado Springs, Colo.— William 

 Henry Evans proposes to add largely to 

 his glass area early next spring. 



YouNGSTOWN, O.— Joseph Shaefer died 

 bf heart failure October 13. He was 77 

 years of age. His greenhouses were a 

 well known source of supply for bedding 

 stock, etc. 



^ Please discontinue my smilax adver- 

 -tisement; plants all sold. Cost of ad- 

 •«rertising, 2 cents for each $1.50 of sales. 

 "Who said the classified advs. in the Re- 

 view don't pay? It could only be the 

 one who never tried them. — Harvey B. 

 Snow. 



n«M-6rowi VINCA VARIEGATA. 



First size per 100, $S.0O 



Second else " 2.00 



Third Bize " 1.00 



a-lnoh BMZLAX 75c per 100. 



Small size Carnation Clnmps.... 12.00 

 Cash with order. 



J. J. ARNOJLD, HOMER, N. Y. 



Mention Tb« Bevlew when yoa write. 



Geo. Wittbold Co. 



1657 Buckingham Place, CHICAGO, ILL 



Send for Price list on all 



Palms and Ferns 



Meatkm n* B«t1cw wbMi yoa wilt*. 



SPECIAL STYLE No. 686 



48 in. wide. 84 in. deep. 66 in. high. 



SPECIAL DESIGNS BUILT TO ORDER. 



AIM m han stack ilzii of nri mat dailgn rtadr 

 for prompt ahlpmoot. 



Mention tbts Jonrnal and we will send you 

 the followinK catalccuea: No. 39, for residence; No. 

 46, for Hotels, Public Institutions and Cold Storage 

 Houses: No. 63, for Groceries; No. 56, for Meat 

 Markets; No. 70 for Florists. 



McCray Florist 



REFRIGERATORS 



Known Everywhere for Suoeriority. 



Noted for absolutely dry interior, thus avoiding 

 entirely the aweatlDK of glass. The positive cir- 

 culation of pure cold air within keeps the flowers 

 in perfect oouditlon. 



ECONOMICAL IN THE USE OF ICE. 

 SCIENTIFICALLY CONSTRUCTED. 



Write at once for riorists' Catalogue No. 70. 



For the Residence, Grocer, Meat Market, Restau- 

 rant, in fact any puipose, the McCAAT is 

 Guaranteed Absolutely Satisfactory. 



THOUSANDS TESTIFY TO ITS MERITS. 



mggray refrigerator CO. 



373 Mill St., KENDALLVILLE, IND. 



Branch Offices and Salesrooms: Chicago 

 56 Wabash Ave.: St. Louis, 40( N. Third St.; San 

 Francisco, 122 Market St.; Pittsburg, 63G Smith- 

 field St.: New York, 341 Broadway; Detroit. 306 Woodward Ave.; Columbia, S. C, Jerome Bldg.; 

 Boston, 62 Commercial St.; Columbus, O., 866 N. High St.; Washington, D. C, 62w F St., N. W. 



^"Address Main Office, unless yon reside In one of the above named cities 



Mention The Rsrlew when you wrltsi 



Big Bargain in Bostons. 



4 in., 112 per 100. Sin., $20. 6-in., $30. 7-in., $60 

 These prices are from $5 to $15 per 100 under 

 the regular price on these sizes. We mako 

 tbese special figures to reduce a large stock. 

 Field-grown Sprengeri. strong plants, ready 

 for 4-in. pots. $5 per 100, for 8-ln.. $4. Very 

 valuable to cut from. \ 



Choice fresh plants ready for retailing. 



We have 6,0i0 strong Joost carnation plants, extra fine, field-grown, at the very low price of 

 $4 per 100. $36 per 1000. Big, branchy plants, not culls. 



Brides, Maids, Ivory, Golden Gates, S inch, good utock, grown for forcing, St per 100, $35 



periooo. ^ H. GULLETT du SONS, Lincoln. III. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Asparagus 



■ v^ Per 100 



Plumosus Nanus, 2^-ln. pots, $16 per 1000:. .$2.00 



Sprengeri, 2}^-in. pots 2.00 



Boston Perns 5.00 



Pansy Plants $2.60 per IQOO.. .00 



ASPASAOV8 PXiVMOBVa XAMVU 

 ■BBD. new crop, $400 per ICOO; 

 2000 seeds for $7.00. 



- CASH - 



Jos. H. Cunningham, Delaware, Ohio. 



Cryptomeria Japonica 



Japanese Pine. 



Takes the place of the high price Araucaria 

 Bxcelsa at a low price. 



30 for SI: 85 per 100; 945 per 1000, 



E. I. RAWLIHeS. - Quakertown, Pa. 



A8PASAOU8 8PSBVOBBZ, Per 100 



Good healthy stock, 2>^-in pots $2.00 



ASPABAOUB PKVICOSUS. good 



healthy stock, 2^-in 2.60 



Uf ILAX VIbAMTB, strong busby stock, 



iD2}i-in. pots per 1000. 16.00 



Boston Pams.both 5 and 6-in. . 25c and 86c each . 



Above prices cash with order. 

 JOHN BROD, Nile* Center, IlUnois 



Matlon The Review wben yon write. 



You Will Find... 



ALL the BEST offers 



ALL the time in the 

 REVIEWS 

 CXASSIFIED ADVS. 



BOSTON FERNS! 



2>i-io., $4.00: 8-in.. $d.00: 4-in., $1600: 6-ln., $26.00; 



6-in.. $40.00: 7-in., $60.00; 8-in., $75.00 per 100. 

 Piersoni, 8-in.. $6.00; 6-in., $86.00: 7-in.. $60.00 



per 100. 

 Plnmosns, 2>i in.. $8.00 per 100. 

 Vlolsts, Marie Louise, strong field-grown plants, 



$4.10 per lOO. 



DAVIS BROS., 



Morrison, lU., and Geneva, 111. 



ORCHIDS 



We hsve on hand the foUowingimported Orchids 

 in superb condition : Caitleys Trianx, C. Gsskel- 

 liana, C. Gigaa, OdontogloMum arande. Odonto- 

 gloMnm Crispum (Alezandrx), Ooddiom Oiap- 

 um and O- Barbatum. Also quantities of estab- 

 lished Orchida now in sheath and spike. 



Lager & Hurrell, Kr."" Summit, N. J. 



CARNATION TEST. 



Hughsonville, N. Y. 



We have given the Fumigating Kind a 



good test on caraations, and it worked 



better than anything we ever tried. Ship 



us 100-pound bag at once, tiee page 1099. 



ADAM LAUB & SON. 



BOSTON FERNS, 



Bench grown, good for 6 and 6-in. pots, $8.00 

 per dozen. $20.00 per 100. 



PxUnnla •lnensls-2»^-ln., $2.00 per 100. 



Cinerarias— 2^-in , $2.00 per 100. 



■milftx— Csl tiriigt, 6 ft. long, 12c net. per string. 



BtSTla, 4 in. pots. $5.00 per 100. 



■mllaz, 2^ in. pots, $1 75 per 100. Violsts, 

 Lady Campbell, field grown. $4.00 per 100. 



Converse Greenhouses, WEBSTER, MASS. 



Mention The B«Tiew wben you write. 



