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The Weekly Florists' Review. 



Decguber 10, 1908. 



Market Broke 



ON BOUQUET GREEN 



Open weather and late picking flooded the 

 market. Orders for immediate shipment 

 now at $3.50 per crate of 100 pounds 



For Fancy Holly, Mistletoe and all Xmas goods write us 



C. C. Pollworth Co.,^"^i;!'*'' 



Mention The Review when you write. 



HOLLY and HOLLY WREATHS 



Wall-benrled Holly, $4.00 per emm: Holly Wroatlia, lOo and 13o. 



especially choice stock will do well to write ub. 



1806 FH^ERT STREET, PIlllQOdplllil^ PQ* 



Those desiring especially choice stock will do well to write us 



BERGER BROS., """""""' 



Thanksgiving session Eiley won the prize 

 turkey, with a total of 186, while Paul 

 Dailledouze corralled the big rooster, 

 with 165. This is a bowling club that 

 has existed for over twenty years. 



Will Rickards has been discharged 

 from jury duty. Frank Duggan has re- 

 covered from a week's severe illness and 

 Al is daaking his usual fall trips. 



The poinsettias are asserting their 

 decorative ability in brilliant window 

 decorations this week, and beautiful they 

 are in plant and flower. In their setting 

 of the new decorative ferns, they pro- 

 duce a charming and enticing effect. 



The Cut Flower Exchange has ruled 

 it wise not to open the market in the 

 Coogan building before 7 a. m., until 

 March 1. 



December 8 saw the end of a long 

 and successful auction season. William 

 Elliott and Ambrose Cleary deserve the 

 rest their bronchial endurance demands. 

 A fire in the building at 42 West 

 Twenty-eighth street, Sunday, December 

 6, did much damage above J. B. Nugent, 

 Jr., and James McManus. Mr. Nugent, 

 who leases the whole building, escaped 

 completely, and a water baptism and the 

 drop in the office ceiling covers Mr. 

 McManus' casualties. Business was not 

 interfered with and Christmas prepara- 

 tions go on apace. 



Samuel A. Woodrow has a branch plant 

 store at 110 West Twenty-eighth street 

 for the holidays. Mr. Woodrow has built 

 up a wide trade and his ambition points 

 to further growth in the future. 



J. K. Allen will dispense a big stock 

 of poinsettias in pans and cut for Christ- 

 mas. Mr. Allen celebrates his twenty- 

 first birthday this month as a wholesale 

 cut flower man. 



Arthur T. Boddington has just com- 

 pleted a handsome suite of offices and 

 now everything is thoroughly up to date. 

 Mr. Bunyard has been busy for weeks on 

 the new catalogue, but will soon start on 

 his annual visit to his customers. 

 David Clarke's Sons are celebrating 



Mention The Review when you write. 



The Noore-LiTingBton Adlnstable Plant Stand (Patented) 

 Blanufactured 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. 



Funeral Design Photographs 



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

 so, write me and I will mail you a list of the 50 subjects. Set of 10 or more, size 8x10 inches, Velox; 

 either matt or jflossy 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, fLf^L, Broad below Wtlnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



the fifty-ninth year of the firm's ex- 

 istence. The big store is already in 

 holiday attire. 



Arthur Herrington, of Madison, N. J., 

 was in the city December 7. 



A. L. Young & Co. are sending out 



some unique Christmas advertising, as 

 usual. 



H. E. Froment says he will have a tre- 

 mendous supply of roses for the holi- 

 days, especially Beauties. 



Eeed & Keller have acquired the stock 



