20 



The Weekly Florists^ Review^ 



July 22, 1900. 



Asters 

 Gladioli Daisies 



Peonies 

 Roses Carnations 



Order of Us and Be Satisfied 



E. H. HUNT 



Established 1878. Oldest House in the West Incorporated 1906 



76-78 Wabash Ave., Chicago, III. 



BBAUTIBB Per dni. 



SOtoSe-incta $8.00 



24to80-incb 92.00to 2.50 



IStoaO-lQCb 1.26to 1.75 



8tol2-incta 76to 1.00 



Sborta S4.00perl00 



BOSKS (T.M) Per 100 



Bride and Maid $4.00 to $ 6.00 



Richmond S.OOto 6.00 



Klllamey S.OOto 6.00 



Perle S.OOto 5.00 



Rosea, oar aelectlon 3.00 



OABNATIOMS. medium 1.00 



" fancy 1.50 to 2.00 



MISCBUiAlTEOUS 



HarrisUUUea 10.00 



Asters 1.00to 2.00 



VaUey S.OOto 4.00 



SweetPeas 25to .40 



Peonies 2.00to 4 00 



Oladloli 4.00to 8.0O 



Daisies .50 



Daisies, Shasta l.OOto 1.50 



OBICEN8 



Smllax StrincB perdos., 1.50 



Asparagus StrinKs each, JW 



Asparagus Bunches .85 to .50 



Sprengeri Bunches " .25 to .86 



Adiantum per 100, .75 



Ferns, Common per 1000, 1.50 



Galax " 1.00 



SUBJECT TO MARKET CHANGE. 



Mention The Review when you write 



In addition to his attention to the in- 

 numerable details of building, planting, 

 and his wholesale bulb department, Mr. 

 Pierson finds time for official work in 

 local church and literary societies that 

 involves much time and tliought. "How 

 do you manage all this and retain your 

 untiring energy?" Mas a question asked 

 him. His reply was, "Practically I am 

 a vegetarian, and I never fail to get eight 

 hours of refreshing sleep every night." 

 From this we know the secret of his suc- 

 cess — ability to concentrate and to put 

 aside care and worry in recuperative sleep 

 — a sound mind in a sound body, and it 

 is easy to understand the wonderful re- 

 sults that have crowned Mr. Pierson 's 

 enterprises during the last ten busy years. 



Various Notes. 



The third annual outing of the Grow- 

 ers' Cut Flower Exchange will take place 

 at Wetzel's Grove, College Point, Satur- 

 day, July 31. Messrs. Golsncr, Dorval 

 and Halm are the committee. There will 

 be a large attendance of Long Island 

 growers, as usual, and many from Jersey 

 also. 



At Wetzel's, Thursday, July 29, the 

 Greek florists' outing occurs, and this, as 

 already announced, will have a record 

 crowd going by steamer Isabel from the 

 East Thirty-first street dock. 



There is a scheme in window decora- 

 tion at R. G. Wilson 's handsome store in 

 Brooklyn worthy of any artistic florist's 

 consideration. With rock and moss, gold- 

 fish, ducklings, waterfalls and miniature 

 mountains a charming effect has been 

 produced. 



William F. Harding, the paper box 

 manufacturer, was killed Sunday, July 

 18, by the overturning of his auto at 

 Haledon, near Patcrson, X. J. His wife 

 and four children were all badly injured. 



July 19 the new Hudson tunnel was 

 opened with great noise and ceremony, 

 large quantities of flowers decorating the 

 terminals and the banquet in the evening. 

 Jersey City has gone demented with joy 

 in the completion of this great work, 

 which brings it within three minutes of 

 New York. Tiic Manhattan end of the 

 tunnel is close to Peter Henderson & Co., 

 Burnett Bros., Stumpp & Walter Co., 

 Kalpli M. AVard & Co., Hagemann & Co., 

 William Elliott & Sons, Yokohama 

 Nursery Co., Hinode Co., H. Frank Dar- 



Western Florists 



Save time and freight 

 by buying 



SUPPLIES 



from the largest supply 

 house in the west 



THE URTELDES SEED GO. 



DENVER, COLO. 



Descriptive wholesale price list now ready 



Meuuon The Keview when you write. 



row, Thorburn & Co., Berger & Co., and 

 in fact all of the downtown seed and 

 bulb houses, adding to their conveniences 

 and facilities incalculably. 



William Ford is at his own country 

 home in the Alleghanies; Charles 

 Schenck in the Catskills on the third 

 week of his holiday with his family; 

 George Allen, son of J. K. Allen, at 

 Roekaway ; Arthur Hunt in the hills of 

 Sullivan county; .John Egenbrod gone 

 for three weeks in the Catskills. Mr. 

 McConnell, of the Cut Flower Co., goes 

 July .31 with his family to the Pocono 

 mountain district. Messrs. Sampson and 

 Miller, of Koc's, are away on long trout 

 fishing trips in Jersey. Mr. Kebric, of 

 the Cut Flower Co., is at Liberty. Mr. 

 ^laloney, bookkeeper for H. ?]. Froment, 

 is at Barnegat, and John Krai and E. 

 Hanft, of Moore, Hentz & Nash, are va- 

 cationing on the sound in a motor boat. 

 George W. Crawbuck is at his summer 

 home at Quogue, L. I. Clarence Salt- 

 ford and family are on a fishing trip be- 

 yond Bay Shore. Miss Marion Stein, of 

 William Elliott & Sons, is away for two 

 weeks in the Catskills. Henry A. Baker, 

 the oldest man on the wholesale street, 

 is back from the mountains. 



Mention The Keview when yuu write. 



Mrs. Seaton, former vice-president of 

 the Greater New York Florists' Associa- 

 tion, of Brooklyn, was presented last 

 week by the company with a cut glass 

 punch bowl and glasses valued at $100. 

 The directors will auto to Quogue this 

 week and Long Island. After a call on 

 their manager they will go to Gr6at Neck 

 and enjoy a banipiet together, going to 

 the east end of the island on their trip 

 and coming back on the north shore. 



Moore, Hentz & Nash have doubled 

 the size of their office, taking in the 

 space formerly occupied by Engren & 

 Reimels, who have moved to the other 

 side of the building. 



Sigmund Geller arrived from Europe 

 .July 13 and says he secured many novel- 

 ties for the coming season. He has large- 

 ly increased his importations. 



Ex-President Traendly was celebrating 

 the fourth birthday of the youngest mem- 

 ber of the S. A. F., Charles Albert 

 Traendly, Saturday, July 17. 



A. Hanig, of Brooklyn, has taken a 



.^^j 



