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NOVEUBBR 14, 1907. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



»^'J!|.^i,w;|T»wbmW5*,v ' ^^3i)n 



85 



Xf 



rrffSfC 



CAN BE SEEN IN USE IN EVERY STATE IN THE UNION BECAUSE 

 THEY ARE THE ONLY PERFECT HOT WATER BOILERS 



Not 



Cast 



Iron 



Any Kind of Fuel 

 Hard Coal, Soft Coal, etc. 



MADE IN 16 SIZES 



No. 1 6000 gq. ft. of KlMB 



No. 2 7.M0 sq.ft. of KlasB 



No. 3 9.000 sq. ft. of (claas 



< No. 4 lOWO sq. ft. of glasB 



No. 6 12.000 sq. ft. of glass 



No. 6 13.500 sq. ft. of glass 



No. 7 15.000 sq. ft. of glass 



No. 8-16.600; No. 9—18,000; No. 10-19.600, No. 11-22.600 No. 12-24.000; 



No. 13-27,000; No. 14—36,000; No. 15-50,000 sq* tt. of Blaas. 

 All the above wUl carry 60 degTMS at 16 below aero 



ASK THE MEN WHO KNOW 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



Dkokubkb 20 1906. 



Greeohoose Heating. 



A HEATING RECORD. 



I have two houses, each 23x100, In 

 which I grow lettuce and general stock. 

 I keep a night temperature 50 to 52 de- 

 grees. They are heated with hot water. 

 There are two flows in each house, along 

 the purlins. One 3 Mi -Inch pipe supplies 



• • • • • ^1 KLa f\ \J • ■ ■ ■ • 



six 2-inch pipes under the outside 

 benches and one 3-inch flow supplying 

 four 2-inch pipes under the inside 

 benches. The outlet from each house is 

 separate into the boiler in 6-inch pipe. 

 I had a special boiler made to order 

 that has proved itself beyond my expec- 

 tations. In the winter of 1905-6 I used 

 thirty-one tons of coal at |1.90 and ten 

 cords of 3-foot wood worth about $2.50 

 per cord. This I thought very reason- 

 able. The circulation Is perfect. Last 

 winter in moderate weather, that is, not 

 windy and outside temperature 20 de- 

 grees or so above zero, I would leave 

 the boiler nine hours with a variation 

 of but 3 degrees. 



Ten days ago I was called to Cleve- 

 land overnight The outside tempera- 

 ture was 46 degrees at 2 :40 p. m., when 

 I left the boiler, with a gradually sink- 

 ing mercury. There being no men at>out, 

 I left instructions that the boiler should 

 not be touched until next morning. My 

 wife, on my return next evening, report- 

 ed that at 7 p. m. it became quite windy 

 and by 9 :30 was freezing, with stormy 

 outlook. When she awoke at 6 a. m. 

 the outside temperature was 26 degrees 

 and the greenhouses were 47 degrees. I 

 think this is a record for fifteen hours 

 and twenty minutes without attention. 

 I would liKe to hear from anyone who 

 can beat it. 8. C. Tbmplin. 



Mr. John G. Frisz, of Vincennes, Ind., writes as follows: "Your No. 13 boiler is carrying 25,000 sq. ft. of 

 glass and I do not have any trouble to keep it at 60 degrees in the coldest weather. Your boiler, has given entire 

 satisfaction. I have THREE OTHER TYPES of boilers alsQ heating 25,000 sq. ft. of glass, but YOUR BOILER 

 ONLY.TAKES HALF THE COAL AND HALF THE WORK TO GI\T: THE SAME RESULTS." . _:iij 



Tele^aph your^ordera NOW, any sUe.XCatalog^ue upon request 



KROESCDELL BROS. CO., ehIV Chicago, 111. 



