Febbuaby 24, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review^ 



27 



Headquarters For BULBS 



GLADIOLUS 



All Gladiolus offered by us are large blooming sized bulbs. 



Per doz. 100 1000 



America. A beautiful soft pink color $0.65 $3.75 $35.00 



Brenchleyensls. A pure scarlet 20 1.25 12.00 



Canary Bird. Exquisite light yellow 1.00 7.50 70.00 



Columbia. Deep scarlet, marked black 40 2.00 18.00 



Eusrene Scribe. Rose-shaded carmine 60 3.75 35.00 



Qlory of Brightwood. Beautiful scarlet 



with lemon-shaded throat 60 4.50 40.00 



Kiondyke. Yellow with crimson blotch. 



An exquisite new sort 65 4.50 42.50 



Little Blush. Beautiful blush white 50 3.50 30.00 



May. White penciled crimson 25 1.60 15.00 



Prlnceps. Dazzling scarlet, white markings 



onlowerpetal 1.40 10.00 90.00 



Shakespeare. White carmine, blotched pink .75 5.50 50.00 

 Senator Volland. Blue, blotched violet, 



stained yellow, with a blue stripe, very 



odd combination 1.00 



White and Light. (Special florists' mixture) .40 



PlnkandRose 25 



Scarletand Crimson 25 



Striped and Variegated 30 



White and Light Shades 25 



Yellow in Ail Shades 45 



Gladiolus in Mixture 



1st size bulbs only. 



Childsii. A distinct mammoth type , 



Extra Choice Mixed. All colors 



Fine Mixed. All colors 



Orof f 's New Hybrids. Extra fine , 



Lemoine's Butterfly. Brilliant varieties., 

 Michell's Giant Flowering Mixture 



2S at 100 rate; 250 at 1000 rate. 



GLOXINIAS 



6.75 

 2.50 

 1.50 

 1.25 

 2.00 

 1.75 

 8.25 



65.00 

 20.00 

 12.00 

 10.00 

 19.00 

 15.00 

 30.00 



.30 

 .20 

 .15 

 .25 

 .25 

 .30 



BEGONIAS (Tuberous Rooted) 



doubLe begonias 



Doz. 

 Crimson $0.65 



Red and Scarlet . > 



Blue 



Bordered Scarlet . 



Bordered Blue 



Spotted. 



60 



60 



60 



60 



60 



White 60 



Choicest Mixed 50 



1.75 

 1.25 

 1.00 

 1.50 

 1.50 

 2.00 



3.75 

 3.75 

 3.75 

 3.75 

 3.75 

 3.75 

 3..50 



SINGLE BEGONIAS 



Doz. 100 1000 



Orange $0.40 $2.75 $22.50 



Scarlet 40 2.75 22.60 



Pink 40 2.75 22.50 



White 40 2.75 22.50 



Yellow 40 2.75 22.50 



Mixed. w i. .35 2.60 21.00 



Scarlet &5 



PInki 65 



White 65 



Yellow .65 



Mixed 50 



100 

 $4.75 

 4.75 

 4.75 

 4.75 

 4.75 

 3.75 



1000 

 $37.50 

 37.50 

 37.50 

 37.50 

 '37.50 

 33.00 



TUBEROSES 



Our Tuberose Bulbs are all hand selected and 

 are entirely reliable, blooming the first 

 season. 



Mammoth Pearl. Pure white 20 



W rite For Our Wholesale Catalogue. 



1.00 



V^ 



HENRY F. MICHELL CO., 



Saed Growers and Merchants. nij|| inri nUII 



Market St. above 10th St., rillUlULLrniAi 



16.00 

 10.00 

 8.00 

 12.50 

 14.00 

 17.50 



32.00 

 32.00 

 32.00 

 32.00 

 32.00 

 32.00 

 31.50 



9.00 



PA. 



Menticn The Review when you write. 



Blonder Ribbons 



are usually cheap Ribbons that look all right until you use 

 them with your decorations, and then you wish you had 

 something different. Something different in Ribbons, are 

 the qualities that bear THE PINE TREE LABEL. These 

 are the Ribbons for Novelty Decorations, funeral 

 Decorations, Banquets, Weddinsrs, etc.; they are 

 rich tone<l Riblwns, have a high luster, are soundly con- 

 structe<l and yet they often cost little more than these 

 Blunder Ribbons. 



You will find it pays to use the best Ribbons, especially 

 when you can get them at our close quotations direct from 

 the mill. 



These will be continued every week 

 until the middle of April. 



H. A. Bunyard is back from his west- 

 ern trip. 



Jury duty has laid its hand on many 

 of the wholesalers during the last three 

 weeks. Fortunately the obligations will 



all be out of the way during the dull 

 season. 



Eobert Wilson and C. Weber are en- 

 thusiastic over the prospects of their 

 new pink carnation, Brooklyn. 



John Young has given up the office 

 in the Childs building and his New York 



headquarters will be with Traendly & 

 Schenck, who handle the cut of Beau- 

 ties from his big plant at Bedford Sta- 

 tion. 



F. H. Henry, of Henry & Lee, is 

 back again at his desk, after a visit of 

 many months, with his family, in Japan. 

 Mrs. Millang, mother of the quartette 

 of wholesalers, Charles, Frank, August 

 and Joe, recently had a serious fall and 

 has been in the Long Island hospital, 

 where Mrs. Charles Millang also was re- 

 covering from an operation. Both are 

 now restored to health. 



Mr. Watkins, with W. E. Marshall & 

 Co., who has been ill since January 22 

 with inflammatory rheumatism, is re- 

 covering and is now at the office of the 

 firm. W. E. Marshall is back from a 

 successful month's trip in the west. 



Recent visitors in the city were: J. F. 

 Huss, of Hartford, Conn., superintend- 

 ent for J. J. Goodwin; J. Febrlin, who 

 has resigned his position at Catasauqua, 

 Pa., and is now superintendent for J. P. 

 Morgan, Jr., of Glen Cove, N. Y.; A. 

 Mason, superintendent for O. H. Payne, 

 of West Park, N. Y.; and Charles E. 

 Bussell, superintendent for W. P. Hamil- 

 ton, of Sterlington, N. Y. 



The projecfed retinion of the old em- 

 ployees of Pitcher & Manda has as- 

 sumed definite form, and a meeting, to 



