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2032 



The Weekly Florists^ Review^ 



Mav 16, 1907. 



Our stock of STANDARD FLOWBR POTS la 

 always large and complete. 



WhiUdin Pottery Co., 713 Wharton St., Phila- 

 delphia, or Kearney and West Side Ares., Jer- 

 sey City. N. J. 



Standard Flower Pots. If your greenhouses 

 are within SOO miles of the Capital write us; 

 we can save you money. W. H. Ernest, 28th 

 and M Sts., N. E., Washington, D. C. 



We make Standard Flower Pots, etc. 



Write us when In need. 



WUmer Cope & Bro., 



Lincoln University, Chester Co.. Pa. 



Flower Pots. Before buying write us for 

 prices. Geo. Keller & Sons, 361-363 Hemdon 

 St. (near Wrlghtwood Aye.), Chicago. 



Our Standard Flower Pots 



Give Best Results. 



Cambridge Flower Pot Factory, Covington, Ky. 



FREE — To introduce, I will send a sample 

 box of band-made, rim pots. 

 GEO. E. FEUSTEL. Falrport, Iowa. 



Standard Pots. Catalogues and price lists 

 furnished on application. 



A. H. Hews & Co., No. Cambridge, Mass. 



Ionia pots are the strongest, smoothest, most 

 porous pots made. 



Ionia Pottery Co., Ionia, Mich. 



Red pots, azaleas and bulb pans; get our 

 prices. Keller Pottery Co., Norrlstown. Pa. 



Standard red flower pots. Write for prices. 

 Paducah Pottery Co., Inc., Paducah, Ky. 



RED POTS. STANDARD SIZE. 



SYRACUSE POTTERY CO., Syracuse, N. Y. 



RED POTS. Standard pots at bottom figures. 

 Harrison Pottery. Harrison, Ohio. 



Red flower pots, 2-lnch. 



C. Howard, 2121 Park Ave., Riverside. Cal. 



RAFFIA. 



Samples free. Large assortment of colors. 

 R. H. Comey Co., Camden, N. J., 

 or 810-824 Washburne Ave., Chicago. 



SPHAGNUM MOSS. 



Fresh, clean, 5-bbl. bale, $1.25; 2 bales, $2.25; 

 5 bales, $5.00; 10 bales, $9.50. Cash. 

 H. R. Akers, Ch'atsworth, N. J. 



Fresh selected sphagnum moss. Write. 

 American Moss & Peat Co.. Waretown, N. J. 



Sphagnum moss and peat. 

 Ocean County Moss & Peat Co.. Waretown, N. J. 



TOBACCO. 



Fresh tobacco stems. 



D. Cutler Ryerson, 108 3rd Ave., Newark, N. J. 



Fresh tobacco stems, $12.00 per ton. 



Scharff Bros., Van Wert, Ohio. 



TOOTHPICKS. 



Wired toothpicks, 10,000, $1.50; 60,000, $6.25. 

 Sample free. For sale by dealers. 



W. J. COWEE, Berlin, N. Y. 



WIRE WORK. 



Wm. H. Woerner, Wire Worker of the West. 

 Manufacturer of florists' designs only. Second 

 to none. Illustrated catalogues. 



620 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb. 



We are the largest manufacturers of wire 

 work In the west. E. F. Wlnterson Co., 



45, 47. 49 Wabash Ave., Chicago. 



William B. Hlelscher's Wire Works. 

 38 and 40 Broadway, Detroit. Mich. 



Full line of wire work. Write for list. 



Holton & Hunkel Co.. Milwaukee. Wis. 



Reed & Keller, 122 W. 25th St.. New York. 

 Manufacturers of Wire Designs. 



Sp^ial price for this month. 

 Scranton Florist Supply Co., Scranton, Pa. 



E. H. Hunt, 76-78 Wabash Ave., Chicago. 



I LIKE the Keview best of all; it ia 

 very interesting and instructive. — ^LUD- 

 WIG ZiMMEB, St. Louis, Mo. 



Do without the Review! No I Not on 

 your lifel It is one of my best friends. 

 — Jesse P. Kino, Mt. Airy, Md. 



We like the Review very much, and 

 oeed it in our business. — Hebbeet & 

 fLEiSHAUER, McMinnviUe, Ore. 



I WISH to say that the Review is by 

 far th© best paper for the trade. — K. 

 Clarke, Colorado Springs, Col. 



The Review is the most compact and 

 business-like journal in the horticultural 

 field.— C. Adams, Memphis, Tenn. 



HORTICULTURAL BOOKS 



We can supply any of the followins: books at the prices 

 noted, postpaid, and any other book at publishers' price. 



Pronounolnar Dictionary. 



A list of plant names and the botanical terms most 

 frequently met with in articles on trade topics, with the 

 correct pronunciation for each. 8ft oentl 



Handy Manual. 



By J. W. Johnson. Illustrated with plans for 

 greenhouse heating and_ ventilating, by a practical 

 steam and hot water engineer of long experienc e. 125 

 pages. $1.00 



The Florists* Manual. 



By William Scott. Covers the whole field of 

 commercial floriculture. Articles are arranged alpha- 

 betically so that reference is quick and easy. It tells 

 you just what you want to know in just the way you 

 want to be told. $ft.00 



The Rose— Its Cultivation, Varieties, etc. 



•By H. B. Ellwangkr. Directions for cultivation 

 — for planting, pruning:, propagation, the treatment of 

 diseases and insect enemies — particularly valuable for 

 its classiAcation. Alphabetical and descriptive list of 

 nine hundred and fifty-six varieties. Cloth. * $1.85 



The Fropaeratlon of Plants. 



By Anduew S. Puller. Illustrated with numei- 

 ous engravings. Describing the process of hybridizing 

 and crossing and also the many different modes by 

 which cultivated plants may be propagated and multi- 

 plied. Cloth. 359 pages. $1.50 



Practical Floriculture. 



By Peter Henderson. An illustrated guide to 

 the successtulpropagation of florists' plants. A detailed 

 account of the requisites to success and a clear expla- 

 nation of imoroved methods. For the amateur and 

 professional florist. 325 pages. Cloth. Postpaid. 



$1.S0 



Smith's Chrysanthemum Manual. 



By Elmer D. Smith. Revised edition. A com- 

 plete practical treatise, concise directions for every 

 stage of the work of propagator and grower. The 

 result of 22 years' experience. Fully illustrated. 



40 cents 



Commercial Violet Culture. 



By B. T. Galloway. An illustrated, comprehen- 

 sive and complete treatise on the commercial culture, 

 growing and marketing of violets for profit. Of interest 

 to the amateur as well as tlie commercial grower. 

 Cloth. 221 pages. $1.50 



How to Make Money Growing Violets. 



By George Saltford. For men and women in 

 towns, villages or on farms. Tells what is the best soil 

 for violets, how to prejjare it, planting, watering, culti- 

 vation, varieties, heating, fertilizers, msects, diseases, 

 marketing, shipping, etc. Illustrated. 85 cents 



Gardening; tor Pleasure. 



By Pktkk Hkndekson. An illustrated guide to 

 the amateur in the fruit, vegetable and flower garden, 

 with full directions for the greenhouse, conservatory 

 and window garden. Technical terms and phrases 

 professional gardeners use in writing or speaking on 

 matters relating to horticulture have been avoided as 

 far as possible. Mlpiges. Cloth. $1.50 



Mushrooms— How^ to Grew Them. 



By Wm. Falconer. This is the most practical 

 work on the subject ever written, and the only book on 

 growing mushrooms published in America. The author 

 describes how he grows mushrooms and how they are 

 grown for profit by the leading market gardeners, and 

 for home use by the most successful private growers. 

 Engravings drawn from nature expressly for this work. 

 Cloth. $1.00 



Henderson's Picturesque Gardens and 

 Ornamental GardenlnB. 



By Charles Henderson. A volume containing 

 half-tone illustrations of the prettiest and most famous 

 gardens and parks of the world, vividly portraying 

 lawn, garden and landscape effects, plant and tree 

 groupings, decorative bedding, herbaceous gardens 

 and borders, formal gardens, lawn gardens, Italian, 

 Japanese and English gardens, rock gardens, wild gar- 

 dens, t>og gardens, subtropical gardens, sunken and 

 terrace gardens, rosariums, hardy ferneries, arches, 

 C9lumns, festoons, etc., picturesquely draped with 

 vines, as well as numerous other garden embellish- 

 ments. Each illustration is described and explained. 

 Cloth with gold. $8.50 



The Dahlia. 



By Lawrence K. Peacock. A practical treatise 

 on the habits, characteristics, cultivation and history 

 of the dahlia with a descriptive list of all the best vari- 

 eties. Copiously and elegantly illustrated. 30 cents 



Ornamental Gardening: for Americans. 



•By Elias a. Long, landscape architect. A treatise 

 on beautifying homes, rural districts and cemeteries. 

 A plain and practical work with numerous illustrations 

 and instructions so plain that they may be readily fol- 

 lowed. Illustrated. Cloth. 39U pages. $1.50 



Handbook of Practical Landscape (Sar* 

 denlns. 



By P. R. Elliott. Designed for city and suburban 

 residences and country schoolhouses, containing 

 designs for lots and grounds, from a lot 30x100 feet to a 

 40-acre plant. Cloth. $1.50 



rhe Chrysanthemum. 



By Arthur Herrington, formerly president of 

 Chrysanthemum Society of America. The most com- 

 plete and comprehensive work on the cultivation of the 

 chrysanthemum that has yet been published in Amer- 

 ica. The book will be welcomed for the lucid, com- 

 prehensive, as well a.s the practical character of its con- 

 tents. Handsomely illustrated. 168 pages, 5x7 inches. 



50 cents 



Greenhouse Construction. 



By Prof. L. R. Taft. A complete manual on the 

 building, heating, ventilating and arrangement of 

 greenhouses, and the construction of hotbeds, frames 

 and plant pits. Lucid descriptions and 118 diagrams 

 and illustrations make every detail clear to the amateur 

 and professional gardener and florbt. Cloth. 218 

 pages. $1.50 



Gardening for Profit. 



By Peter Henderson. The standard work on 

 market and family gardening. The successful exper- 

 ience of the author for more than thirty years, and his 

 willingness to tell, as he does in this work, the secret 

 of his success for the benefit of others, enables him to 

 give most valuable information. The book is profusely 

 illustrated. 876 pages. Cloth. $1.50 



The History and Culture of Grafted 

 Roses for Forcing;. 



By Alex. Montgomery, Jr. The most impor- 

 tant contribution to the modem literature of the rose. 

 Of much interest to every rose grower and of utmost 

 value to growers of grafted roses. Containing practi- 

 cal description of the process of grafting witn full 

 ''etails of planting and culture; also directions for 

 treatment to carry the plants a second year. 85 cents 



Cabbasre, Cauliflower and Allied 

 Vegetables. 



By C. L. Allen. An explanation of the require- 

 ments, conditions, cultivation and general management 

 pertaining to the entire cabbage group. The chapter 

 on seed raising is probably the most authorative treat- 

 ise on this subject ever published. Insects and fungi 

 are given due attention. Illustrated. 128 pages. 

 Cloth. 60 cents 



Insects and Insecticides. 



By Clarence M. Weed, D. SC. A practical man- 

 ual concerning noxious insects and the methods of 

 preventing their injuries. Profusely illustrated. A 

 generally useful handbook on noxious insects. It cov- 

 ers the whole field of insect pests very thoroughly and 

 is especially valuable for its complete and up-to-date 

 methods of fighting insects. The work is mtensely 

 practical.* All the important insect pests are described 

 and remedies for them, and methods of preventing their 

 injuries described in detail. Cloth. $1.50 



Greenhouse Management. 



By Prof. L. R. Taft, of Michigan Agricultural 

 College. A manual for florists and flower lovers on the 

 forcing of flowers, vegetables and fruits in greenhouses, 

 and the propagation and care of house plants. It treats 

 of all the plants commonly cultivated by florists and 

 amateurs, and explains in a thorough manner the 

 methods that have been found most successfu 1 in grow- 

 ing them. Particular attention is paid to the growing 

 of cut flowers, the growing of fruits under glass, etc. 

 Of special value will be the directions for treating 

 pkmts when attacked by insects and fungi. The pre- 

 paration of the soil, the use of various manures, com- 

 posts and fertilizers, watering, ventilating and heating 

 receive careful and minute attention. Cloth. 400 

 pages. $1.50 



FLORISTS' PUBLISHING COMPANY 



520°545 Caxton Building, 334 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO 



PLEASE MENTION THE REVIEW WHEN WRITING ANY OF THESE ADVERTISERS. 



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