Mat 26, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists'' Review. 



41 



PRIMROSE 



IMPROVED CHINESE 



Finest grown, large flowering, fringed, single 

 and double, 15 varieties, mixed, 600 seeds, $1.00: 

 half pkt.. 50c; 1000 seeds, $1.50. Have the varie- 

 ties separate, also. 



PRIMULA KEWENSIS 



Grand, sweet, yellow primrose; trade pkt., 25c. 



/^IIUP^ADIA ^nest large flowering, 

 ClnltnAKIA dwarf, mixed, 1000 

 seeds. 50c. 



GIANT PANSY flowering varie- 

 ties, critically selected. 6000 seeds. $1.00; half pkt., 

 50c; oz., $2.50. 500 seeds of giant Mme. Perrat 

 pansy added to every $1.00 pkt. of Giant Pansy. 



CASH. Liberal extra count. We can please you. 



JOHN F. RUPP, Shiremanstown, Pa. 



RUPPTON: The Home of PrlmroBea 



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Never Again!! 



at these prices 



Elephant Ear Bolbs 



Clean, sound stock, witli center shoots. 



Per 100 Per 1000 

 5-7 inches in circumference $0.75 $ 6.00 

 7-9 " " 2.00 15.00 



9-11 " " 3.00 25.00 



ll-inches and up, 5.00 



200 Bulbs at 1000 rate 



GLOXINIAS 



Giant Mixed. 



Per 100 Per 1000 

 . . . $3.00 $25.00 



Johnson Seed Co. 



817 MaA>ket Street 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



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Headquarters for 



SPRING BULBS 



JOHN LEWIS CHILDS 



Floral Park, N. Y. 



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Aot C. Zvolanek 



Origifutor of all wiater ffowerinc Sw«et 

 Ptait all colon. New crop teed will be 

 ready about Aog. Itt. Order* booked aow. 



BOUND BROOK, NKW JERSIT 



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Funkia Undulata 



Extra fine planti, 

 K.OO ptr 100; $35.00 per lOOO. 



Prices on all ipring bolbi and plants cheerfully 

 tlyen. 



r. W. O. SCHMITZ 



Importer. PRIMCX BAT, N. T. 



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fol. 



var. 



Not so many seedsmen as were ex- 

 pected are making California trips this 

 season. 



In spite of the need, it is the estim.ate 

 that the world's acreage under seed crops 

 this season is less than in 1909. 



The new store of the N. L. Willett 

 Seed Co., 849 Broad street, Augusta, Ga., 

 recently occupied, is said to be a model. 



CALirORNiA appears to be having as 

 favorable a season as any other seed 

 growing section anywhere in the world. 



W. T, Fonda, treasurer of James 

 Vick's Sons, Eochester, has just re- 

 turned from a two weeks' fishing trip 

 in the Adirondack regions. 



The fourth annual meeting of the 

 Iowa Seed Dealers' Association is to be 

 held at the Chamberlain hotel, in Des 

 Moines, on Thursday, June 9. C. N. 

 Page is president and W. C. Adams sec- 

 retary. 



SEED TBADE CONVENTION. 



Hotel Strand, at the foot of Pennsyl- 

 vania avenue and overlooking the 

 ocean, has been selected for the twenty- 

 eighth annual convention of the Ameri- 

 can Seed Trade Association at Atlantic 

 City, N. J., June 21 to 23. 



The secretary announces the follow- 

 ing program of papers: 



"Recent Science in Plant and Ani- 

 mal Breeding," by W. M. Hays, as- 

 sistant secretary of agriculture, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. 



"Methods and Apparatus for Seed 

 Testing by Seed Merchants, " by George 

 H. Clark, Department of Agriculture, 

 Ottawa, Can. 



"The Spencer Type of Sweet Peas," 

 by W. Atlee Burpee, Philadelphia. 



"State Legislation, Present and 

 Future," by Prof. Charles D. Woods, 

 Orono, Me. 



"The Advancement and Protection 

 of the Interests of the Seed Trade, ' ' by 

 Curtis Nye Smith, counsel for the 

 American Seed Trade Association, Bos- 

 ton. 



"Past, Present and Prospective of 

 the Seed Trade in America," by Fran- 

 cis Brill, Hempstead, N. Y. 



An amendment to the by-laws is pro- 

 posed increasing the dues to $20 per 

 year. 



The convention will open at 10 a. m. 

 Tuesday, June 21, with the address of 

 President J. C. Robinson and the report 

 of the secretary-treasurer, and will con- 

 clude Thursday with the election and 

 installation of officers. On Wednesday 

 evening the annual banquet will be 

 held. On Friday all members and their 

 families are invited to be the guests of 

 W. Atlee Burpee & Co. at Fordhook 

 Farm, Doylestown, Pa. Special trains 

 will stop at the entrance and luncheon 

 will be served at 1 o'clock. Mr. Bur- 

 pee and Howard M. Earl, who left May 

 23 for California, will be back in time 

 to welcome their guests. 



The hotel will make the following 

 special rates: 



Single room, without bath, for one $.3.50 



Double room, without bath, for two 7.00 



Single room, with bath, for one .5.00 



Double room, with bath, for two 9.00 



Including all meals. 



The hotel states that "these rates 

 will be given to members of the Seed 

 Trade Association regardless of loca- 

 tions. In other words, rooms facing 

 Pennsylvania avenue and ocean front 

 will be the same price as land side 



Ward'sLilyBollK 



"NOT HOW CHXAP- 

 BUT HOW GOOD' 



RALPH M. WARD & GO. 



12 W. Broadway, NEW YORK 



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IMPORT ORDERS 



FRENCH AND DUTCH BULBS 



Paper White Narcissus 



Roman Hyacinths Dutch Hyacintlis 



Tulips and Narcissus 



L«t M« FlBure on Tour Wants 



CYCAS STEMS 



Assorted sizes — fresh 

 25-lb. lots at 8c lb. ; 100 lbs. at 7>ic. 



STOKES'liio STORE 



219 Market 8t. PHILADKLPHIA 



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GLADIOLI 



BrenohleyensiB, May, Paetole, Oerev, 

 La Marck, Isaac Buchanan. 



Cinnamon Vines, Milla, Besaera, 

 Oicalia, Iria, Liliea and other Bum- 

 mer flowering Balbe. 



—Send for prices.— 



E. S. MILLER 



Wadins River, Long Island, N. Y, 



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Bush Oideis 



Flower Seeds, Market Garden and 



Field Seeds, all kinds of Tender 



and Hardy Plants, Tuberoses, 



Dahlias, Gladioli, Small Fruits. 



RUSH ORDERS 



JAMES VICK*S SONS 



ROCHBSTER, V. Y. 



