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26 



The Weekly Florists^ Review; 



"S"^^ 



Decsmbeb 3, 1908. 



Cut Flower Boxes 



WATKBPROOF. CornMr Lock ttyto 



The best and neatest Oat Flower box 

 on tbe market today. 



No. 8x4x20 92.25 per 100 



No. 1 8x4>ixl6 2.00 per 100 



No. 2 8x6x18 2.60perl00 



No. 8 4x8x18 2.90perl00 



4 8x6x24 8.00 per 100 



6 4x8x22 8.60 per 100 



« 4x8x28 4.60 per 100 



7 6x16x20 ,6.76 per 100 



8 8x7x21 8.00 per 100 



9 6x10x86 6.75 per 100 



10 7x20x20 7.60 per 100 



No. 11 8><x5x80 8.76 per 100 



Tbe above Is a complete list of all sizea of 

 boxes we manufacture. We cannot furnlsb 

 otber Blzee. 



Add 60c for printing on an order for 100 

 boxes, and 75c for 200 boxes. No cbarge for 

 printing on an order of 300 boxes or over of 

 assorted sites. Sample cardboard free on 

 application. Terms, casb with order. Order 

 by nomber only. 



LIVINGSTON SEED CO. 



COI.UMBU8, OHIO. 



No 

 No. 

 No. 

 No. 

 No 

 No 

 No 



Mention The Review when you write. 



teemed superintendent on the Brandegee 

 estate, Brookline, in the death of his 

 wife. Mrs. Weir was a native of Scot- 

 land and 63 years of age. 



John Barr, of South Natick, is han- 

 dling an unusually fine lot of carnations 

 at his stall in the Music Hall market. 

 Mr. Barr, as usual, has also a grand 

 lot of cyclamens. 



William Nicholson and S. J. Goddard 

 were among those who had a fine lot 

 of crimson mums for the Harvard sup- 

 porters in the great ball game of Novem- 

 ber 21. 



William Sim 's sweet peas are already a 

 feature at the better class stores, being 

 up to their usual high quality. 



The New England Nurseries are build- 

 ing five houses, 100 feet long each, for 

 propagating purposes and are anticipat- 

 ing a heavy trade in spring. Fall busi- 

 ness has been good, bnt dry weather af- 

 fected it somewhat. 



William S. Grassie, one of the leading 

 track winners at the late picnic of the 

 Gardeners' and Florists' Club, won the 

 New England Athletic Association's ten- 

 mile championship November 25, beating 

 all the fleetest New England long dis- 

 tance runners. Mr. Grassie is employed 

 at the Harvard Botanic Gardens. 



W. N. Craig. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I. 



Trade Conditions. 



The warm, unseasonable weather has 

 caused havoc among the stock and made 

 a bad slump in prices of roses, carna- 

 tions and mums. Owing to the unusually 

 low prices that have ranged on the latter, 

 bunches of the queen of autumn were to 

 be found in many houses at Thanksgiv- 

 ing that never before counted these 

 blooms among their decorations. There 

 also has been a general demand for 

 palms, ferns, rubbers and other deco- 

 rative house plants, the mild weather 

 making it easy for delivery. 



Various Notes. 



O'Connor had the decorations for the 

 Scott fortieth wedding anniversary last 

 week. 



Fred A. Geisler, of Bristol, has the 

 sympathy of the trade in the death of 

 his wife November 22 in the sixty-eighth 

 year of her age. 



W. G. Postings, gardener for Winthrop 



Tke Moore-LiTlngston Adjnstable Plant Stand (Patented) 

 Manufactured by 



The Best 

 Plant 

 Stand 



On the market today. 

 Comes in three sizes; is 

 adjustable, and is made of 

 Galvanized Iron or Oxi- 

 dized Copper. With its aid 

 you can place a plant from 6 

 to 48 inches from the floor. 

 See illustration. Wire, 

 write or phone us, and we 

 will tell you our nearest 

 agent 



The Moore-Livingston Co., Lansdowne, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Invest 

 One Cent 



For a Bigger Business. 



Send us a post card for our full line 

 of ribbons, including holiday designs. 



THE CORRECT COLORS—RICH TONED— INSIDE 

 PRICES— BUY DIRECT FROM THE MAKER— 



I 



I 

 I 





I 



SALESRCX)MSt 



806-808-810 Arch Street 



Mention The Review when you write. 



I 



Funeral Design Photographs 



Do you wish to own the finest set of funeral design photographs ever published in America ? If 

 so. write me and I will mail you a list of the 60 subjects. Set of 10 or more, size 8x10 inches, Velox; 

 either matt or glossy surface, mounted on cards 11x13 inches, ready for loose leaf binder, 50c each. 

 Black seal grain leather binder, loose leaf, your name stamped in gold, $3.00. These artistic photo- 

 graphs must not be confounded with ordinary pictures; they will give your customers a true idea 

 of what you can do and will help you make many a sale. 



CHARLES HENRY FOX, t'^fB^o'... Bioad below Walnut St., Philadeiplila, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Chanler, who has been at Geneseo, N. Y., 

 supervising work at Mr. Chanler 's estate 

 there, has returned to his home in New- 

 port. 



James B. Canning has received the con- 

 tract for the decorationa for the annual 

 ball of the Providence Police Association 

 at Infantry hall December 15. 



It is understood that the store of the 

 late Thomas J. Johnston is to be disposed 

 of in order to settle the estate. An op- 



tion is said to have been given to Edward 

 Brook, who has been manager of the 

 business since Mr. Johnston's death. 



John F. Wood, who went west in July, 

 has returned and is looking at a number 

 of florists' stores with a view of buying 

 out some established business. 



The greenhouse, 35x60 feet, with good 

 heating plant attached, on the estate of 

 John Jencks, in Barrington, is to be soli 

 at auction sale. W, H. M. 



:J 



