Ai'Hil' ^o, 



1907. 



The Weekly Florists' Review^ 



J 775 



FANCY FERNS 



$1.75 per 1000. 



DAGGER FERNS.. 



$1.50 per 1000. 



GALAX, GREEN OR BRONZE 



75o per 1000. 



BOXWOOD, No. 1 stock, 50-lb. cases, $8.50. 



LAURKL. FS8TOONING, 4c, 5c and 6c per yard. 



Finest quality LAUREL WREATHS, 93.00 per doz. Cheaper grades if wanted. 



SOUTHERN SUILAX, fancy stock in 50-lb. cases, $6.50. 



LAUREL BRANCHES, 35c per bundle. 



TeleBTapli Office, NEW 8ALEM. MASS. 

 Long; Distance Telepbone Connection. 



CROWL FERN CO., MILUNGTON, MASS. 



Mention The Reylew when you write. 



HEADQUARTERS rOR 



Hardy Cut Greens and Florists' Supplies 



FANCY AND DAGGER FERNS, fine quaUty, $2.00 



per 1000. 

 NEW CROP BRILLIANT BRONS^E AND GREEN 



GALAX, $1.00 per 1000; $7.60 per case of 10,000. 



SOUTHERN WILD SMILAX, $3.60 and $7.00 per case. 



LAUREL FESTOONING 



Good and full, 5c and 6c per yard. 

 BRANCH LAUREL, 60c per bunch. 

 LEUCOTHOE SFRATS. $1.00 per 100. 

 SPHAGNUM MOSS, 60c per bar; five basa. $2.00. GREEN MOSS, $1.00 per bbl. 



FLORISTS' SUPPLIES— A full line of Florists' Supplies, Wire Frames, GorruEated Bozea, 

 Out Flower Boxes, Immortelles, Oycas Leaves, Sheaves of Wheat, Tin Foil, Out Wire, etc. 



HENRY N. ROBINSON & CO. 



TbI. 2817-2811 Maia. 16 ProTiaee St., 9 Chapman PI., Boaton, Maaa. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Extra fine FANCY FFDNQ $2.50 per lOOO 

 and DAOCrSR ■ L>l%l^>^ Discount on large orders. 



BOXWOOD, 20c per lb.; 60 lbs., $8.60. GALAX, Bronze and Green. $1.25 

 per 1000: $7.50 per case. LEDCOTHOB 8PBAT8, $1.00 per 100; $7.50 per 1000. 

 Let us have your standing order for Ferns. 



Send for our weekly price list of Cut Flowers. 



MICHIGAN CUT FLOWER EXCHANGE, Incorporated 



88-40 BROADWAY, DETROIT, MICH. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Feros-Galax-Leacothoe 



Hardy Fancy Fern* 



Per 100 26c Per 1000 $2.00 



Green and Bronze Galax Leaves 



Per 1000 $1.00 Per 6000 $3.75 



Green and Bronze Leucothoe Sprays 



Per 100 60c Per 1000 $5.00 



Green Sbeet Moss 



Per bale 25c Bundle, 6 bales. . .$1.00 



Spbasnum Moss 



1 bale, $1.25. 5 bales, $5.50 10 bales, $10.00 



CC PDITOUCI I Wholesale Com- 

 ■ Li UnllunLLL mission Florist 

 34-36 East Third St., CINCINNATI, OHIO 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Fresh Green Sheet Moss 



for hanging baskets, just from the wood, $1.50 

 per barrel. 



Leuootlioe Sinrays, 75c per 100; $6.00 per 1000. 



Bronze and Green Galax Leaves, $1.25 

 per 1000. Write for prices in large lots. Have 

 largest stock select Qalax at all times the year. 



Fancy Stock Hardy Cut Ferns, $2.50 per 

 1000. 



B. H. HITCHCOCK. GLENWOOD, MICH. 



Memorial Day FERNS 



all go from the South. Express receipts prove 

 this. We are now ready to supply everybody 

 with choice dagger ferns at $1.25 per 1000 

 Hoekleberry Sprays, choice, $3.00 per 55-lb. case. 



Crescent Decorative Exchange 



RED LKVKL, ALA. 



Fresh Selected Sphagnum 



We have our Fresh Stock Spnagnum ready for 

 prompt shipments, which is of best selected stock, 

 suitable for florists' fine desigrn work. For 12.25 we 

 will ship one 10-bbl. bale selected moss or for $2.75 we 

 will ship one 10-bbl. bale moss and 1 bbl. sack of peat, 

 this offer to show the quality and quantity of our stock. 

 Our moss and peat is well packed, of good clean stock. 

 Before ordering elsewhere write for prices. Give our 

 stock a trial. AMKKICAN MOSS A P£AT CO., 

 Corlls Bros. Propa., Waretovrn, N. J. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



SOUTHERN 



WILD SMILAX 



BKAVKN'S FADELESS MOSS 

 NATURAL SHEET MOSSES 



E. A. BEAVEN, EVERGREEN, ALA. 



WWW 



Always mention the FlofistS RcvicW when writing advertisers. W W 



manner and the whole was a great credit 

 to the firm that did the work. 



C. J. Ohmee. 



NURSERY NEWS. 



AHEBICAN ASSOCIATION OF NUBSEBTMEN. 



Pres., Orlando Harrison, Berlin, Md.; Vlce- 

 Pres., J. W. Hill, Des Moines, la.; Sec'y, Geo. C. 

 Seager, Rochester; Treas.. C. L. Yates, Rochester. 

 The 32d annual convention will be held at De- 

 troit, Mich., June, 1907. 



The price of trees of Mcintosh Red 

 apple has gone up far above the record. 



A NOTICE of the death of John B. 

 Buckmeister, Fort Scott, Kan., appears 

 in the obituary column this week. 



It is reported that the recent cold 

 weather did much damage to the peach 

 crop in Georgia, the Elbertas suffering 

 more than any other variety. 



The U. S. Department of Agriculture 

 has issued a bulletin. Circular No. 83 of 

 the bureau of entomology, entitled "The 

 Locust Borer and Methods for Its Con- 

 trol. ' ' 



J. W. Adams & Co., Springfield, Maas., 

 say that the Amoor Eiver privet was the 

 only ligustrum growing on their grounds 

 that did not suffer in the winter just 

 closed. 



The railroads have been busy gathering 

 information as to the damage done to 

 fruit crops by the cold weather follow- 

 ing the three weeks of spring in March. 

 They find no great losses. 



The German reichstag is wrestling 

 with the problem of overcoming the 

 phylloxera and is considering the reno- 

 vating of vineyards with American stocks 

 as the only means promising ultimate 

 success. 



The mayor of Bartlesville, I. T., has 

 appointed a * ' beautifying commitee, ' ' to 

 have chaj-ge of civic improvement. The 

 committee has bought a quantity of orna- 

 mental nursery stock, which is being sold 

 to citizens in small lots at cost price. 



A, E. Reynolds, Boonville, N. Y., says 

 that he has charge of about 2,000 feet 

 of hedge of the common thornapple and 

 that he knows of nothing better for 

 northern New York. It is perfectly 

 hardy and if kept trimmed makes a beau- 

 tiful hedge. 



A southern nursery is advertising in 

 farm papers to supply "fine, thrifty, 

 June budded Elberta peach trees, two 

 to three feet high" at 2 cents each. 

 Here's hoping they may make something 

 at it besides trouble for those who ask 

 a decent price for well-grown stock. 



Martin Dolan and Daniel Norris, who 

 recently bought the Lapham farm, at 

 Bridgewater, Mass., which included twen- 

 ty-five acres of nursery stock, part of 

 tlie defunct Shady Hills Nurserv Co. 

 land, have decided to sell off all the 

 stock and not operate it as a nursery. 

 They have already recently received sev- 

 eral offers for the entire stock. 



One of the unique features of the 

 Chanute Nurseries, of James Truit «fc 

 Sons, Chanute, Kan., is the advertising 

 wagon, a six-horse affair, which traverses 

 the country roads of se\-eral states, with 

 men who put up signs and distribute ad- 

 vertising matter. The business is grow- 

 ing steadily and fast. A storage and 

 packing shed 100x225 is the latest addi- 

 tion to the facilities. 



