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Januabv 13, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



25 



fj\ijt 



Three Weeks 



and the Social Season of 1910 will end 



It is with satisfaction we find our growers in 

 splendid shape to care for the extra demand at 

 this time. 



Beauties, Maryland, Richmond 



and the two 



Killarneys 



in all lengths, by the dozen, hundred or thousandB; quality 

 never better; particularly strong on Beauties. Special 

 prices in quantity. 



Dihhnnc Some of tbe cbolceit novelties, exclusive patterns— an endless 

 iViLTLruiis variety to choose from. Supplies of all kinds. 



Catalogrue on request. 



Open 7 I. m., dose 6 p. in. Not open for business on Sundays 



Not responsible for flowers after delivery to express company 



S. S. Pennock=Meeiiao Co. 



The Wholesale Florists of 



r608-20 Ludlow St, PHILADELPHIA 



1212 New York Ave., WASHINGTON, D. C. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Krick's Florist Novelties 



Manufacturer and patentee of the Perfect Adjustable Pot 

 Hanarer and Handle, Perfect Adjustable Plant Stands, 

 and the Orlarlnal Genuine Immortelle Letters, Etc. (every 

 letter marked). Send for price lists. Sample pair of Pot Handles.lOo 

 postpaid. Jist the tbiai fsr plsst irswsrs: will sustain a weiEht of 100 lbs. 



1164-1166 Qreene Ave., BROOKLYN, N. Y. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Both forcers have in round numbers dou- 

 bled their production and both are pre- 

 pared for further increase should the 

 need exist. 



Variom Notes. 



Leo Niessen says that the burning ques- 

 tion of the day is coal. 



Stephen Ager spoke on ' ' The Cultivation 

 of Bulbs in Pots" before the German- 

 town Horticultural Society in the lecture 



room of Association hall, Monday even- 

 ing, January 10. 



Tomatoes grown in our greatest green- 

 house made their appearance in the 

 Philadelphia market January 6. They 

 came from the Florex Gardens, at North 

 Wales, and were distributed by Eugene 

 Bernheimer, who is adding the rosy red 

 of the tomato to the rose red of the 

 Beauty for the time being at least. 



The Floracroft Greenhouses of Walter 



P. Stokes were first in the market, so far 

 as known, with La Reine tulips, January 

 7. They had stems, as well as flowers, 

 and were welcome. 



W. E. McKissick & Bros, have just 

 cause to be proud of their freesia, large, 

 pure white flowers with foliage, some- 

 thing like twenty-four inches of it. You 

 know the flowers that bloom in the spring 

 generally look as though they wish they 

 hadn't in midwinter, to judge by the 

 stem at least. Not so here. 



Theodore Edwards, of Bridgeton, N. J., 

 was, if I mistake not, first in the market 

 with Trumpet Major at Christmas, a fact 

 that should have been credited to William 

 J. Baker. 



Israel Rosnosky has just returned from 

 a busy trip down east. He promises to 

 be at the Fort Pitt hotel, Pitsburg, Jan- 



