June 0, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



25 



June Wedding Flowers 



IN FULL SUPPLY- 



Choice Sweet Peas, Spencer Varieties, All Colors. 



PEONIES 



Extra nice KAISERIN and LA DETROIT in full 

 crop now. Try a shipment. 



FULL LINE CUT FLOWERS AT ALL TIMES 



Prompt Shipments, at Right Prices, Our Motto 



Fern orders will be filled same day as received; 

 no delay in shipping. Full supply of the best 

 Ferns and Greens in the market. 



TRIAL ORDtR^ SOLICITED 

 WIRE, PHONE OR WRITE 



Finest Valley and Baby Gladioli always on hand in large supply. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST. 



Per doz. 



Beauties, long stem $3.00 



24to30-ln 2.80 



20to24-ln 2.00 



16tol8-ln 1.00 



12-ln 75 



short 50 



Per 100 



4.00 to $10.00 



4.00 to 10.00 



3.00 to 8.00 



3.00 to 8.00 



4.00 to 10.00 



4.00 to 10.00 



2.00 to 3.00 



3.00 to 4.00 



12 60 to 15.00 



JiO to 1.00 



6.00 to 8.00 



1.00 



2.00 to 4.00 

 6.00 to 10.00 



Killamey i 



Rlcbmond 



Maids 



Brides ; 



Kalserin 



Lia Detroit 



Carnations 



Valley 



Easter lillles 



Calla LlUes per doz., $1.60 



Sweet Peas 



Iris. Spanish 



Poet's Narcissus 



Deutzla 35c to 60c per bunch 



Stocks 



Snapdragon 



Mignonette — per doz., 25c to 60c 



Peonies 



Daisies 



4.00 to 

 1.00 to 



GREENS. 



Asparagus Plumosus 3.00 to 



Aspai-agus Sprengerl. 2.00 to 



Smllax — per doz.. $1.50 to $2.00 



Adlantum 1.00 to 



Leucothoe $7.50 per 1000 



Oalax, Bronze and Green. $1.25 per 



1000; $7.60 per 10,000. ' 



Fancy Ferns $2.00 per 1000 



8.00 

 1.50 



4.00 

 4.00 



i.m 



1.00 



Michigan Cut Fiower Exchange 



AU Phone and Wire Connections DETROIT, MICH. 



38-40 Broadway 



Mention The Review when you write 



iiiembrancps from her own and lu-r 

 |i!trents' many friends were numerous 

 and beautiful. 



\V. II. Siebrecht has about completed 

 Ills improvements and plantings at 

 < happaqua. Many groups of assorted 

 /(■tinosporas have been added. Mr. 

 siebrecht autos into Astoria every 

 Tuesday and never misses practice with 

 liis associate bowlers. 



The president of the Gladiolus So- 

 liety, I. S. Hendrickson, of Floral Park, 

 states that the new land acquired near 

 stony l3rook, L. I., by .Tohn Lewis 

 I'hilds, is to be used for gladiolus grow- 

 ing exclusively. The latest of the new 

 varieties is named in honor of Mr. 

 Hendrickson. 



The annual June exhibition of straw- 

 'icrries and roses by the TairrytoWn 

 Horticultural Society will be held .lune 

 14. .June 8 the Nassau County Horti- 

 ■ultural Society will have its annual 

 Mimmer show at Glen Cove. 



Several of the nurserymen of this 

 section left .June o for the nursery- 

 men's convention at Denver. 



Many florists were at the Iloboken 

 |iier to speed .John Miesem and the 

 "ther 2(10 members of the Schwa>bisher 

 ■^angerbund on their way last week. 

 The floral offerings were numerous and 

 large; ships and lyres abounded. 



G. C. Eldering, of W. J. Eldering & 

 Son, of Overveen, Holland, left for 

 iiome last week, after a satisfactory 

 '•anvass. 



The green goods men all declare 

 Decoration day business was the largest 

 this year they ever have experienced. 



George Cotsonas & Co. are rapidly 

 • hanging their new quarters into a 



iiiodein building and will have one of 

 the largest stores in the supply busi- 

 ness when they complete it. 



The New York Cut Flower Co. will 

 close at 3 o 'clock every afternoon dur- 

 ing the balance of the summer, and in 

 the dog days at 1 o'clock, a decision 

 that could be made profitably by all 

 in the wholesale district. 



I">ank L. Moore, of Chatham, is ship- 

 ping some grand cattleyas to the firm's 

 wholesale house, where Jonathan Nash 

 presides. 



.John Evans and Gurney Hill, of Rich- 

 mond, and C. Ronnot, of .Jersey City, 

 left for Europe Wednesday, .tune 1, 

 but promised to be back in time for 

 the S. A. F. convention. 



The selling of bedding stock is at its 

 zenith now, and the long spell of cool 

 weather has been a harvest for the 

 seedsmen. 



The new front in M. C. Ford's store 

 will be complete by the end of the 

 week. When the inside is finished Mr. 

 Ford will have a thoroughly up-to-date 

 place. The big ice-box is already in- 

 stalled in the basement. 



J. K. Allen says there are many new 

 faces on West Twenty-eighth street be- 

 yond Sixth avenue, since Walter Sheri- 

 dan and Traendly & Sehenek located 

 in the center of the block. 



.James Coyle, with H. E. Froment, is 

 ill with bronchitis. 



.John T. Butterworth. of South Fram- 

 ingham, Mass., was in the city .Tune (i. 

 He has ten cattleya plants that he 

 values at $10,000. 



The Stumpp & Walter Co. has • a 

 unique window this week, containing 

 thirteen varieties of ducks, all wild. 



with minor effects, a miniature lake, 

 etc. A crowd of interested observers 

 stands before the window all day long. 

 John H. Taylor, of Bayside, is re- 

 ported to have sold 2(10 acres of his 

 land on Jjong Island at an average of 

 $3,500 per acre. 



Maurice Fuld, of Boston, was a vis- 

 itor in New York .Tune (5. 



J. Austin Shaw. 



YONKERS, N. Y. 



The regular monthly meeting of the 

 Yonkers Horticultural" Societv was held 

 in Wiggins hall, Friday, June 3. with 

 a large number present and President 

 Bennet in the chair. He appointed the 

 following as judges of the peonv ex- 

 hibits: L. Whitman, J. Goff and Mr. 

 Knapper. The competition was close, 

 the prizes being placed as follows: 

 First, R. Cochrane; second, J. Camp- 

 bell; third, W. Habach. W. H. Waite 

 had some very fine muskmelons on ex- 

 hibition and was awarded a cultural 

 certificate. 



After the judging a discussion was 

 taken part in by several of the mem- 

 bers, telling how they grew peonies. H. 

 Nichols read an able and instructive 

 paper on calceolarias and fully ex- 

 plained how to grow and handle that 

 interesting plant. There was also a 

 general discussion on the paper. 



The executive committee reported on 

 the June show and said all arrange- 

 ments are made to hohl it June 17, 

 afternoon and evening, in Hollvwood 

 Inn hall. Louis Nielliot has been ap- 

 pointed show manager. The secretary 

 of the committee is W. H. Waite, super- 



