

r '.^ytv^yv J7^y\\ •- 



76 



The Florists' Retrfcw 



AUQDST 29, 1012. 



Till rf- 



JosepIfHeqjCock Company's Palms 



HOME GROWN. 



WELL ESTABLISHED. 



»L99n 



Pot 



2ia-inch 

 3-inch . 

 4-iDfthf* 



6-iQCh • ' 



Cedar tub 



7.inch 



9-inch 



9-inch 



9-inch 



9-inch 



9-inch 



Cedar tub 

 9-inch 

 9-inch 

 9-inch 



Kentia B«linor«aiia 



Leaves In. high Each 



4 8 to 10 



5 12 



•6 16 $0.85 



6 to 7 18 .60 



6 to 7 24 1.00 



Leaves In. high Each 



6 to 7 84 to 86 $ 2.60 



6 to 7 40 to 45 4.00 



6 to 7 42 to 48 5.00 



6 to 7 48 to 54 6.00 



6 to 7 ftft. -^ 8.00 



6 to 7 «ft. -T lO.OO 



Clbottum Boliladel 



Spread 



4 feet 



5 feet 



6 feet 





Jfiri 



Doz. 



I 1.50 



2.10 



4.00 



6.00 



12.00 



Doz. 



$80.00 



48.00 



Each 



$3.00 

 6.00 

 6.00 



•Cif 



STRONG AND HEALTHY. 



"^kaitla Voraterlana-Made up 



~ ' In. high Each 



36 $ 2.50 



36 to 40 9.00 



40 to 42 440 



42 to 48 JiM 



48 to 54 tM 



5 ft. 7J» 



5^ ft. to 6 ft. 15.00 



Cooos WaddMlUma 



In. high 

 8 to 10 



▲reoa Lutesoens 



Plants in tub In. high 



Several 5 ft. 



Ceder tub 

 9-inch 



PQt; Phoenix Roebelenll 



5-lnch, nicely characterized. 

 6-inch, 18 to 20-lnch spread. 



Cedar tub 

 7-inch 



High 

 18-inch 



Spread 

 24-inch 



Doz. 



$80.00 

 36.00 

 48.00 

 60.00 



100 

 $10.00 



Each 

 $7.50 



Each 



tl.OO 



1.50 



Each 

 $2.00 



We are growing all our Kentias above 6-inch size in neat C«dar Tnbi, made especially for us, with electric wire hoops, painted areen. 



These tubs cost several times the price of pots, but we sell the plants at the same price as though jirown in pots. The buyer has the 

 advantage of receiving his plants without breakage of pots and in handsome tubs in which they have become well established and in which 

 they will continue to do better than in pots. 



When In Philadelphia be sure to Look Us Up. 



We are easily reached— only 25 minutes from Reading Terminal, 12th and Market Streets, Philadelphia. We have fine train service— fifty 

 trains each way every week day— so you can suit your own convenience, both going and coming. When you will see our palms of aU 

 •lz«8, from 2^-inch pots to 12-inch tubs. We are strong on DeooratlT* Palms, in 7-inch, 9-Inch aud 12-inch tubs (made-up or single 

 plants), which we can supply in any quantity. All our Palms are home-ero'vni (not an imported plant on the place) and well established 

 in the tubs. They are strong and healthy. 



With increased glass devoted to Palms, our stock is mnob lararer than •■vmr before and never in bettor condition. '^i, 



JOSEPH HEACOCK CO,, m!^tSJBI!^ 



ST. PAUL. 



The Market. 



'^ 



Business continues quiet. Stock is in 

 fine shape and so abundant that there 

 is a slump in nearly all outdoor stock 

 and little indoor stock is moving. 



Various Notes. 



The florists veho attended the conven- 

 tion at Chicago are again at their work 

 and all were well pleased with the trip. 



C. N. Hanson is cutting an abundance 

 of Killarneys, but he says there is a 

 poor market at this time. 



E. W. Eeed, of Holm & Olson's land- 

 scape department, left last week for 

 Glacier Park, Mont., with a crew of 

 men. The Great Northern railway is 

 improving that country and Holm & 

 Olson will put in all the landscape work, 

 to begin with spacious grounds sur- 

 rounding the depot. 



The Minnesota State Fair is creat- 

 ing quite a little enthusiasm among the 

 florists of the Twin Cities. The State 

 Fair Board offers $1,853 in premiums 

 for plants and cut flowers. Gustave 

 Malmquist, of Minneapolis, will have 

 charge of the staging of the exhibits. 



The St. Paul Floral Co. is busy re- 

 modeling and getting shaped up for 

 the falL 



Victor Huot, of Duluth, spent a few 

 days in St. Paul last week. He was en 

 route to Montana. C. R. F. 



Scranton, Pa.— John W. Beagle has 

 bought the greenhouses on Capouse ave- 

 nue formerly conducted by Ira G. Mar- 

 vin, of Wilkes-Barre, for wAom Mr. 

 Beaglo worked. 



LILIUM UARRISII 



GROWN FROM THX ORIGINAL. 

 FURK STOCK. XZTRA TTHK. 



6 to 7-lnch bulbs, 350 to the case, 115.00 per case. 

 Full thousand lots. 140.00 per 1000. 



Lilium Candidum 



Extra sized bulbs, $5.00 per 100; $40.00 per 1000. 

 Mammoth bulbs, 6.00 per 100; 50.00 per 1000. 



Freeslas— French- grown 

 Mammoth bulbs, % inch and up, $12.00 per 1000. 

 Extra sized bulbs, ^ to %-inch, 9.00 per 1000. 



Paper White Grandlfflora Narcissus 



18 c/m bulbs, $8.50 per 1000. 14 c/m bulbs, $10.50 

 per 1000. 



Piioenix Roebeienii 



The finest and most graceful of all palms. Hardi- 

 est palm for summer decoration. Ironclad. 

 Does splendidly out-of-doors. Fine specimens, 

 in new 12-inch tubs, $5.00 each. 



Crotons 



Best assorted varieties, in 5-inch and 6-inch pots. 

 $6.00, $9.00 and $12.00 per dozen. 



Coid Storage Liiy of tiie Vailey 



Packed in cases of 500 and 1000. Very finest 

 quality obtainable. 



FINE FERNS 



We have a magnificent stock of exceptionally 

 fine NEPHROLCPIS in the following varieties, 

 viz.: 

 ElesantieeliMai 6-inch poto, 50c each; g-inch, 



$1.00 each; extra fine specimens, 12-inch, $4.00 



to $5.00 each. 

 Boatonlensis, 10-inch and 12-inch, $5.00 tp $7.50' 



each. 

 QIatrasli, 8-inch, $1.00 each; 10-inch, extra fine 



specimens, $3.00 each. 

 Scottll, 6-inch pots, 50c each; 10-inch, extra fine 



specimens, $2.50 each. 

 VIridlsalma, 10-inch, $2.00 to $3.00 each. 

 Masniffica, Muscosa, Elesantlsalma Com- 



paeta, 3'2-inch pots, 25c each. 

 aiatraell, VIridlsalma, Bostonlensle, 3>3- 



inch pots, 15c each. 

 Small Ferns for Fern Pans, assorted varie- 

 ties, 214-inch, $3.50 per 100. 

 Asparasus Plumosus Nanus, 2H-inch pots. 



$4.00 per 100. 



Coid Storage Liiium GIganteum 



7 to 9 inch bulbs; case lots of 300. 



F. R. riERSON CO., TarnrtgwnonHudson, NEW YORI 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Pandanui TTtilit, 3^-inch pots, at $12.00 per 

 hundred. 



Dracaena Indiviia, 5-lnch, pot grown, ready for 

 repotting — excellent value — at $25.00 per hun- 

 dred. 



Cypenii Altemifolius, 3%-lnch pots, very bushy 

 and compact, at $8.00 per hundred. 



Deutzia Oracilig, specially grown for Easter 

 forcing, very busb.v, at $15.00 per hundred. 



Campanula Mediom, 2^ -inch pots, fine for 

 growing on for Easter, at $3.00 per hundred. 



Honeysuckle, O-lncb, pot-grown, bushy, 3 to 4 

 feet long, for Immediate effect, at $25.00 per 

 hundred. caah with order. 



A. L. MILLER, 



Jamaica Ave., opposite Schenck Ave., 

 BROOKLTN, N. Y. 



Alwayi mention flic Floiriibf Reyitw whca 

 writing s dvc f ti iC M . 



FOR SALE— HiTiBC Slid Greenhnses 



Will sell stock on hand to clean up quick . 



Cyciamen, 3- in., 3c. 



Piuinosus, 2-in., Ic. 



Sprengeriy 2, 3, 4- in., at Ic, 2c, 5c. 



Caiia Buibs, 3c. 



Giass Refrigerator, Siiow Casesr 

 Table, Wire Designs and other odds- 

 and ends. All at a bargain if taken at- 

 once.. 



C. H. WOOLSEY. Rocklord. llj^ 



Aifways mention tiieFloritts' Review iHte» 

 writlii|^ uTcrtiwnB 



