July 20, 1000. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



589 



The Sabin Adjustable Plant Stand 



Cut Flowers and Desips 



can be delivered by us to any point in 

 Northern Ohio at Wholesale Prices to 

 the trade, saving you the express 

 charges and insuring the delivery of 

 fresh flowers on time. 



AM&RICAN BEAUTY 



86 to 40-lncta stem perdoz.. 13.00 



24 to 80-lQCh stem " 2.50 



20-inch8tem " 200 



IWnchBtem " 1.60 



12-lncbBtein " I.OO 



Shortstem " .76 



Brides, Bridesmaids per 100, $3.00 to 6.00 



Obatenay " S.OOto 6.00 



Meteor " S.OOto 6.00 



Carnations " 1.60to 3.00 



Pansies " .50 



SweetPeas " .80to .60 



Valley " S.OOto 4.00 



Asparagxis per string, .26 to .60 



Sprengeri per 100, 2.00 to 4.00 



Galax, trreen per 1000, fl.50; per 100. .25 



Adiantum " 1.00 



Smilax per doz., $2.60 " 20.00 



Dagger Ferns .*. per 1000, 1.60 " .20 



Subject to change without notice. 



The Cleveland Cut Flower Co 



Long Distance Phones CLEVELAND, OHIO 



Mention The Rerlew when yog write 



Grehids go neither up nor do^n. The 

 Newport season is slow to open and the 

 expected call from society has not been 

 heard. In fact, there is some specula- 

 tion ii« to an unusually dull season in 

 the city by the sea. Sweet peas were 

 unquotable Saturday, they were so 

 abundant and so poor. (Jladioli are ris- 

 ing, not in price, but like the tides, 

 higher and higher, until soon the local 

 flood will overwhelm us. Soon the rivers 

 Childs and Cowee will overflow their 

 banks and many a smaller stream, too, 

 will empty into this big harbor. 



Various Notes. 



The interest in the convention grows 

 steadily. It has been pretty thoroughly 

 stirred up during the last two weeks and 

 everybody is talking about it. .T. B. 

 Heiss has been here arranging with ex- 

 liibitors. Boddington already has a fine 

 display of cannas there and will make 

 a big showing in Convention hall. Harry 

 Bunyard, of this house, is also oflScial 

 traveling representative of the S. A. F. 

 and has the credentials of President 

 Kasting in his inside pocket. The rib- 

 bon men will have handsome exhibits 

 and the boiler men and the supply men, 

 and in fact in exhibits and attendance 

 New York purposes to maintain its repu- 

 tation. John liirnie to the contrary not- 

 withstanding, it may attach first honors 

 in the bowling contest. New York al- 

 ways has enough reserve material to 

 make a good showing without giving les- 

 sons to Flatbush and Hoboken, John 

 can thank the courtesy of the New York 

 Club for Jersey's showing at the outing. 

 Such rewards and variety are promised 

 the sport lovers at Dayton by Chairman 



Altick that everybody is devoting time 

 to physical perfection for the occasion, 

 and so many unusual features of enter- 

 tainment are listed that the ambitious 

 and generous little city deserves a record 

 crowd in acknowledgment of its enter- 

 prise and devotion to the national so- 

 ciety. 



James McManus reports the excursion 

 of his life to Denver and the mountains. 

 He saw no orchids on Pike's Peak, but 

 he did see the Spanish peaks of Arizona 

 135 miles away, and lie finds the far west 

 awake to the fact that the orchid is the 

 king of flowers and that every city of 

 the land must have them. 



Another suburbanite has found the 

 laud boom profitable. G. F. Neipp, of 

 Aqueduct, L. I., has vacated in behalf 

 of the Brooklyn water supply, whidi is 

 short. 



J. T. Lovett and family, of little Sil- 

 ver, are enjoying a vacation amid the 

 mountain resorts of PennsyJtania. The 

 firm has just completed the largest 

 nursery business in its long career. 



V. L. Outerbiidge li« just returned 

 from a six weeks' btMlness trip to Ber- 

 muda. 



F. H. Henry, of Henry & Lee, is now 

 on the lily island. Everybody this year 

 will have a shaft supply of large Har- 

 risii. There will be a big call, therefore, 

 for Japs ani everything now indicates 

 a banner ci'<)p. Owing to excessive rain 

 in April Md frosts in March, only half 

 the qua«<lty of the French stock of can- 

 didum» may be expected. The first ship- 

 ment </t the year of Chinese lilies reached 

 the coast last Saturday. 



The youngest wholesaler was a year 



old last Friday, and now it's Traendly, 

 Schenck & Traendly. 



John J. Perkins had the misfortune to 

 lose one of his best horses from the ex- 

 cessive heat last Thursday. Mr. Per- 

 kins says the move of the wholesale busi- 

 ness to Twenty-eighth street was a prof- 

 itable one. 



John Nash, of Moore, Hentz & Nash, 

 leaves August 1 for a holiday at Lake 

 Ueorge, with his family. 



John Seligman leaves on Saturday of 

 this week for the Adirondacks. Jos. 

 Levy, of this company, will unite his hol- 

 iday in September with a very interest- 

 ing event that includes honeymoon fes- 

 tivities. 



M. A. Bowe and family are at Asbury 

 Park, N. J. Mr. Bowe had some elabo- 

 rate funeral designs last week at the ob- 

 sequies of two of New York's most 

 prominent attorneys, Walter 8. Logan 

 and J. Cardoza, orchid wreaths and a 

 6-foot broken column among them. The 

 church was decorated profusely with 

 large palms. 



Michael Ford is away for his usual 

 summer outing. 



Mr. HoflFmeier is still recuperating 

 from his arduous devotion to the outing, 

 much of its success showing evidence 

 of his persistent eflfort. 



Arthur Wient, of Froment's, the man 

 of all trades, is off for a two weeks' 

 fishing trip. 



F. L. Moore, of Cliatham, has been up 

 at Mt, Utsayantha, Stamford, N. Y., for 

 a holiday, a fine health resort on the 

 Delaware river. 



Bonnot Bros, are receiving and ship- 

 ping 6,000 to 10,000 Testout, Killamey, 

 Gate and Liberty roses from Dorrance 

 daily. 



