l' ' 



96 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



AVGDST 10, 1911. 



DETROIT. 



Club Meeting. 



At the last meeting of the Detroit 

 Florists' Club the following officers 

 were elected: 



President — G. Browne, reelected. 



Vice-President — J. F. Sullivan. 



Secretary — H. Schroeter, reelected. 



Treasurer ^Robert Eahaley, re- 

 elected. 



Librarian — E. A. Scribner. 



The annual outing will take place at 

 Bois Blanc August 29. 



Various Notes. 



Robert Bahaley, manager of the 

 Michigan Cut Flower Exchange, left 

 August 6 to join Mrs. Eahaley at 

 Mackinac Island and spend a week on 

 the lakes. 



B. Schroeter is having good results 

 with his sale on Boston ferns. 



Mrs. J. F. Sullivan, who has been ill 

 a long time, was able to take a walk 

 up the grounds August 6 and it is 

 hoped that from now on her recovery 

 will be rapid. H. S. 



FORT WAYNE, IND. 



The Market. 



The prices of cut flowers are about 

 as low as they can fall here at present, 

 though the quality is all that could be 

 asked for. The weather has been favor- 

 able, with plenty of rain, and the crops 

 in general, both flowers and vegetables, 

 have done well. Fruit, also, is plenti- 

 ful. 



Various Notes. 



Christian Young, the vegetable and 

 plant grower, recently completed a new 

 market house, entirely of concrete con- 

 struction. His trade in the spring and 

 early summer was so brisk that his own 

 stock was completely exhausted and he 

 was obliged to have large quantities of 

 various sorts of plants shipped in from 

 other towns. He is now busy prepar- 

 ' ing his houses for his winter crops. 



PAXTON, ILL. 



Addems, Morgan & Co. expect to be 

 ready for business with their new 

 greenhouses by September 1, and will 

 have one of the finest establishments 

 in this part of the state. When com- 

 pleted there will be four houses, each 

 238 feet long, comprising about 30,000 

 square feet of glass, together with a 

 boiler house and workroom, 22x100. 

 Two sixty horse-power boilers will heat 

 the range and the new residence of Chaa. 

 Addems, which adjoins. With Mr. Ad- 

 dems will reside his father, Joseph, and 

 his sister. Miss Ida. 



Chelsea, Mass. — B. B. Smalley spent 

 two weeks' vacation at East Machias, 

 Me. 



. BENCHES 



TILK or 



PIPX VRAM 



Write for prioM. Dralnace perfect. 



TILE BOTTOMS ""iTH 



rnmlab mnj qnantltr. 



The Cimp Cwdwt Ct."«cL«ET^M%-: 



Mention The Review when you write. 



THE FLORISTS' HAIL ASSOQATION 



Hm paid $192,000.00 for arlMB broken darlnc the 



laat 33 yeers. For partlcalan oonoemln g 



Hail Insurance, addreaa 



J«ha O. Eeler, Seo'r, Saddle RiTer H. J . 





■'•' >-'^;Af 



The Greenhoii^G as an Gniamental 



Part of tKe Landi<;cape Treat rneint 



ThUisthe U-Bar 

 — the Bar that 

 makes U-Bar 

 Greenhouses the 

 famous green- 

 houses they are. 



Here is a beautiful formal sunken garden, flanked on 

 two sides by U-Bar greenhouses. These bouses replaced 

 those of other constructions that were torn down because 

 they were not in keeping. 



The U-Bar was chosen because of its airy graceful- 

 ness, durability and unmatched productiveness. These 

 are the points on which it wins out. Always it is a case 

 of superior points— and not one of mere price. The 

 best, of course, must cost more. But U-Bar bouses are 

 worth a good deal more than their difference in cost. 

 The catalogue both tells and shows why. Send for it. 



U-BAR GREENHOUSES! 



PIERSON U-BAR CO 



ONE MADISON AVE, NEW YORK 

 CANADIAN OFFICE. lO PHILLIPS PLACE, MONTREAL 



LEASED to 



see you at our 

 Booth at the 



CONVENTION 



King Construction Co. 



Horn* Offloe and Factory, 



N. TONAWANDA, 



N. Y. 



bMtam Sal** Olfle*, 



No. 1 VADISON AVIm 



NEW YORK 



