u 



The Weekly Florists' Reviewi' 



Januabt 6, 1010. 



-? 

 ^ 



PRICE LIST 



▲1IKBICA9 9XAUTT P«rdoi. 



86to«>-iacbBtem .M.Wto a&M 



24 to SO-ioch Item 2JS0lo t.«> 



IStoao-iachstem........... 1.50to «Je 



12 to Ift-incb stem LODto 1.25 



Sbortstein .76 



Per 100 



Bride tS.OOtotlO.OO 



Brideimald 6.00 to 10.00 



KillArney 6.00to 1000 



White KUlarney BOOto 10.00 



My Maryland 5.00to 1000 



Mrs. Field &.00to 1000 



Richmond 5.00to 1000 



ROSES, our selection 4.00 



OarnationB, gaod 2.00 



fancy 3.00 to 4.00 



Violets 76to 1.00 



Valley S.OOto 6.00 



Harilsii Lilles....per doz., $2.00 



Oallas " 2.00 



Tulips S.COto 4.00 



Asparagrus perstriDK. .60 



" Sprengeri, per bunch, .35 to .60 

 PlumosuB " .50 to .76 



Galax per 1000, 11.25: .16 



Adiantum 75to 1.60 



Leunothoe Sprays .75 



Smilax per doz, $2 00 



Fancy Ferns per 1000 2.00 .25 



Boxwood 501b case, 7 50 



Wild Smilax 501b., 6.00 



Prices Bubject to market changes. 



Beauties 



Beauties of fine quality are in good supply 

 with us, and we shall have a large cut for 

 the next several weeks. The stock is sure 

 to give satisfaction. 



Carnations, Roses, Violets 



SEND ALONG THE ORDERS 



VAUGHAN & SPERRY 



52-54 Wabash Avenue. ^U"!?;; CHICAGO 



Mention The Review when you write. 



tioM necessary because of the zero 

 weather. At the greenhouses of the 

 Norwood Floral Co., Norwood, Nathan 

 D. Pierce, manager, the gale ripped one 

 of the large ventUators from its fasten- 

 ings and hurled it against the glass roof. 

 Lawrence Hay brought in the first 

 sweet peas of the season New Year's 

 (lay. He has a large house just coming 

 on. It is unusually fine. 



In the recent assessment in the town 

 of Cranston the following are of interest 

 to florists: William Hay et ux, $14,580; 

 Eunice Budlong, $10,025; Frank L. Bud- 

 long, $24,265; F. L. and J. A. Budlong 

 2nd, $71,895; J. A. Budlong & Sons Co., 

 $143,140; James A. Budlong 2nd, $14,- 

 040; Melissa P. Budlong, $14,125. 



Johnston Bros, furnished a Christmas 

 wreath of laurel six feet in diameter for 

 the Providence Journal Co. 



A final dividend of fifteen per cent, 

 making a total of eighteen, has been de- 

 clared by the referee in bankruptcy in 

 the case of M. J. Butler & Son, Newport. 



George F. Fenner, Cranston, had the 

 misfortune to have his fires burn out on 

 the night of December 29, when the tem- 

 perature unexpectedly went below zero. 

 He lost a fine house of violets. 



The sale of the Homogansett Green- 

 house estate of about nine acres on Ham- 

 ilton avenue, North Kingstown, under 

 foreclosure of mortgage, was announced 

 for January 5. 



Louis Patry, with John F. Wood, fell 

 down a flight of cellar stairs at the store 

 DecenSber 29 and sprained his ankle. 



Joseph F. SchelUnger, who with his 

 son conducts a range of greenhouses at 

 Riverside, has been appointed by the city 

 council of Providence as one of the 

 weighers of cotton. 



Carl Jurgens, Jr., began harvesting ice 

 on the pond near his greenhouses at New- 

 port last week for use in his cold storage 

 plant, which has become such a factor 

 in his method of treating lily of the 

 valley pips. 



Harry A. Bartlett, a fruit and violet 

 grower of Scituate, and his wife were 

 victims of a lone highwayman in the 

 town of Johnston December 27. The 

 robber pointed a revolver at the head of 

 Mr. Bartlett and kept it there while he 

 removed a diamond ring valued at $150 

 from the finger of Mrs. Bartletf Then 



Invest Your Money, Don't Spend It 



Bay your wagon as an in- 



veBtment from the Tiewpoint of 



eervice.' Buy a wagon that is 



attractive, ao that it will be an 



adyertising investment. Thou- 



eandfl the world over have 



proven that the Armlcder 



Wacfon iB the beet kind of an 

 investment that can be made, becaase it is attractive, and it will wear 

 better than any other wagon made. To be safe, always buy an Armleder. 

 Oar Catalogue I is free, but you must ask for it. Easy Terms. 



£rir... ARMLEDER, Cincinnati, Ohio 



Mention The Review w hen you write. 



We can supply everTthini^ the Florist Uses 



WiDtersoD's Seed Sloie 



45-47-49 Wabash Ave, ^-^^aSJ^e-oo?""* CHICAGO 



Plantsmen, Nurserymen, Seedsmen 

 and riorists' Supplies 



Cataloirue Free 



Mention The Review Tyhen you write. 



he relieved Mr. Bartlett of nearly $50 

 and made his escape. 



John F. Wood has filed a claim with 

 the local express company for the loss of 

 a crate of fifty Lorraine begonias or- 

 dered for the Clu-istmas trade from Stam- 

 ford, Conn., but which were frozen. 



Charles Hunt and two assistants 

 worked all night December 25 on fifteen 

 large pieces for funeral orders. 



Lawrence Hay reports excellent sales 

 on potted plants in hampers for the holi- 

 days. 



William B. Hazard has given up his 



retail store at 112 Westminster street. 

 He will handle his retail trade from his 

 greenhouses for the present. The expira- 

 tion of his lease, and the desire of a 

 cigar store for the location, gave the 

 landlord the opportunity of giving the 

 rental a boost of $600 per year. 



John F. Wood has been on the sick 

 list, suffering from an attack of the grip. 



W. H. M. 



Albany, N. Y. — Amos F. Balfoort is 

 sending out an attractive calendar, bear- 

 ing an artistic colored picture entitled 

 "Magnolia Blossoms." 



