■ ■* ■! V'V- ■■ '" .' '^ -;«T!r."-T^'^>T- ,-•->, I v:7.r!i{>»»5ira:;-i 



68 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



January 27, 1910. 



DORMANT CTANNAS 



Guaranteed True 

 To Name. 



With from 2 to 3 eyes each. Special Gash diBconnt of lOfo on all January and February ordere. 



Orehld-llowered 



Doz. 100 



AUemania $0.36 $2.25 



AuBtria 50 3.00 



Burbank 30 2.00 



Fred. Benary ... .90 6.00 



Italia 60 3.00 



Kate Gray 40 2.50 



Partenope 40 2.50 



Pennsylvania 40 2.50 



Pink Flowers 



Dot. 100 



L. Patey $0.35 $2.25 



M. Berat 40 2.60 



Holfl^artner Hoppe. 90c per dozen; 



1000 



$20.00 

 27.50 

 17.50 

 56.00 

 27.50 

 22.50 

 22.50 

 22.50 



1000 



$20.00 

 22.50 



Bronie-leaved 



Dos. 100 1000 



David Harum... $0.50 $3.00 $27.50 



Egandale 50 3.00 27.60 



King Humbert.. 1.25 8.00 76.00 



Red Flowers— Green Leaves 



Doe. 100 1000 



Chas. Henderson $0.40 $2.60 $22.50 

 Ezplorateur 



Crampbel 50 3.00 27.50 



Chicago 40 2.50 22.50 



Variei^ated Flowers 



Doz. 100 1000 



Elizabeth Hobs.. $0.60 $4.00 $35.00 

 Florence 



Vaughan 60 3.00 27.50 



Souv. D'Antoine 



Crozy 60 4.00 35.00 



Yellow and Cream Flowers 



Doi. 100 1000 



Alsace $0.60 $3.00 $27.50 



Coronet 60 4.00 37.50 



Buttercup 90 6.00 §6.00 



»r Hoppe, 90c per dozen; $6.00 per 100; $50.00 per 1000. Ctoor^^e Blrdell, $1.25 per dozen; $8.00 per 

 100; $75.00 per 1000. Ctoorge Washinirton, 50e per dozen; $3.00 per 100; $27.50 per 1000. 



ft^^^lr' t^ mmt^ rk mm B'> ri ■■ <~i f> fl^^v ^^■«^ns««^ III 



Nosbaek Greenhouse Co 



Onarga, III. 



A Carload of Cannas 



Quality: None better 



Buy now and get on 

 the inside 



Winterson's Seed store ^"^^^^^^^^^ """^" 



Just received. 



45 Standard varieties, 



including the famous 



King Humbert 



Price list 



on application 



Lons Distance Pbone, Central eoOf^ 



Chicago 



market from farmers and dealers who produced 

 tliem, and sold them wliere luis defendant 

 could not possibly, by any care that be could 

 exercise or any inspection that he could make, 

 determine whether this seed was mammoth 

 clover seed or common red clorer seed. 



Counsel for this plaintiff has contended that 

 in morals and right the plaintiff ought to be 

 permitted to hold this defendant to an implied 

 warranty. That question of what is right and 

 just and moral under these circumstances might 

 receive a hundred dlfterent answers from a hun- 

 dred different men. There is no rule, no guide. 

 We are left here without guide marks from 

 our own supreme court, and I am to choose be- 

 tween these two rules. Between these two rules, 

 when we come to choose, we must take into con- 

 sideration all the other facts and circumstances 

 disclosed by the record in this case. One Is that 

 the defendant in this case has continuously and 

 persistently refused to sell under a warranty 

 and has persistently and continuously adver- 

 tised to the world that it would not sell Its 

 goods under ft warranty. Would it be right, 

 moral or Just under those circumstances, against 

 the often and continuously published denial of 

 its willingness to warrant, would it be fair or 

 just or right by a construction of law to foist 

 upon this defendant a warranty that it never 

 would have made or never intended to make? 

 I do not I'now what the average mind might 

 think about it, but it does not seem to me that 

 the circumstances of this case would Justify the 

 court in saying that there is an implied war- 

 ranty in this case. I do not believe there Is. 

 and If the case depended solely upon that point 

 I would hold there is no Implied warranty in 

 this case. 



But it does not depend solely upon that ques 

 tion Even though the transaction of this sale 

 might have Justified the holding that there was 

 an Implied warranty there are still other facts 

 In this case that would control. 



One of these facts Is this, that there Is a 

 universally established custom among the seed 

 dealers to sell without warranties, and to refuse 

 to warrant, which custom has not only become 

 generally known by their habits and conduct in 

 specific cases, but by their publishing the fact 



25,000 CANNAS 



Dormant roots, of 2 and 8 eyes each. 



Orchid Flowering^ 



at 11.50 per 100: $14.00 per 1000. 

 2000 Austria 

 1500 Italia 



500 John White , 



S0« Mrs. Kate Gray 

 2000 Pennaylvania 



Red Shades 



at 91.25 per 100; $12.00 per 1000. 



500 Alice Roosevelt 



250 Beaute Poitevlne 



600 Chas. HendeiBOD 

 1500 CrimBOD Bedder 

 1500 Duke of Marlborough 



100 Flamingo 



700 Pillar of fire 



YeUow and Oran^^e 



at $1.25 per 100; $12.00 per 1000. 



2800 Florence Vaaghan 

 160 King Edward 

 460 N. Wendlaadt 

 600 Parthenope 

 400 Paul Marquant 

 160 Vfctoiy 



Dark Leaved 



at $1.76 per 100; $15.00 per 1000. 



150 America 



150 Black Beauty 

 2000 Egandale 



600 Grand Rogue 



200 Shenandoah 



160 Robusta 



Pink Shades 



at $1.50 per 100; 914.00 per lOCO. 

 800 Hme. Berat 

 100 Martha Washington 



Red Gold Kd^e 



at $1.50 per 100; $14.00 per 1000. 



650 Mme. Orozy 



160 Queen Charlotte 



450 SouT. de Antolne Crosy 



2600 Mixed 



at $1.00 per 100; $9.00 per 1000. 



25 at 100 rate; 250 at 1000 rate. Cash with order. 



ESTATE or DAVID FISHER, Montvale, Mass. 



Crego Aster Seed 



The Crero Pink Aster is the largest and finest 

 variety grown. We can furnish seed of our own 

 growing saved from the very best flowers only, 

 all inferior plants being discarded. This seed 

 was saved from the finest lot of asters we ever 

 saw. Price, ^4 oz., 60c; ounce $2.00. 



Ask for catalogue of our seeds. 



Jotiph Harris Co.,>~iB»«tt. Coldwatir, N.Y. 



LILIUM GIGANTEUM 



7/9, fine bulbs, $24.00 per case. Ready for 

 delivery from cold storage as desired. 



■ZKDS AMD IXORI8TS' SUPPLIBS 



MoDey-saving-price-Iists— Free. 



D. lUSCONI, "* *c^%&Vt., .. 



