42 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



July 28, 1910. 



Wintersoii's "Combination" 



Pansy Mixture 



Has a reputation of 16 years^ standing. A 

 trial will convince you that it is a "good" mix- 

 ture in every sense of the word. To those who 

 "know Pansies," Combination Mixture is espec- 

 ially recommended. 



Trade pkt., 50c; yi oz., 75c; X oz., $1.50; 

 % oz., $2.75; per oz., $5.00. 



Winterson's Seed 



READY NOW 



A Very Good Strain 

 of Genuine 



Lilium Harrisii 



Supply limited, as we have arranged for 

 *' quality" rather than ''quantity." 



Quantity in case Per 1000 



5 to 7inch 400 $40 00 



6 to 7-inch 335 60 00 



7 to 9-inch 200 85 00 



Qj.^^ 45-47-49 Wabash Avenue, 



OlUre^ CHICAGO 



Mention The Review wben you write. 



J. C. Robinson, who in his address at 

 Atlantic City as president of the Amer- 

 ican Seed Trade Association, said: 



"The satisfaction of knowing just 

 what your goods are to cost you much 

 more than offsets this increase in rate. 

 The whole situation is pertinently ex- 

 pressed by a heavy importer, who says: 

 'I may say that we are greatly pleased 

 with the operation of the new measure. 

 The possibility of being charged with 

 fraud if goods were entered at the 

 prices paid had been a nightmare to the 

 company's officers for more than thirty 

 years, and under the old system there 

 seemed to be no escape from the di- 

 lemma of running the risk of fine or 

 imprisonment on the one hand or sub- 

 mitting to the humiliation of swearing 

 to false values on the other. No sys- 

 tem of imposts could be worse than 

 one entailing these consequences, and 

 both as seedsmen and citizens we re- 

 joice in the enactment of a schedule 

 which applied equally to the importer 

 of one pound or a thousand tons and 

 which can be administered and com- 

 plied with without stultification.' 

 Tariffs may change, but the seed trade 

 will always stand for specific duties 

 as against ad valorem duties." 



ULY BUI.BS. 



On the steamer Trent, from Bermuda, 



arriving at New York July 21, there 



were the following consignments of 



bulbs: 



Conaignee. ^"S? 



Maltas & Ware g 



Vaagban's Seed Store 80 



Croumond, L. D., & Co 528 



Total 578 



SEED TRADE IK BOOHESTEB. 



The seed trade in Bochester is doing 

 its full share of the work of preparing 

 the welcome for the Society of Ameri- 

 can Florists, which holds its annual 

 convention there in August, and Charles 

 W. Crosinan, of Crosman Bros., has pre- 

 pared an article, **The Seed Trade in 

 Boohester," for publication in the Sou- 

 venir that is to be published to defray 

 part of the expenses. He writes as fol- 

 lows: 



"The extent to which both whole- 

 sale and retail production of seed is 

 carried on in and about this city is 

 very great and has been for many years. 

 The cultivation of garden and flower 

 seeds in large quantities began in this 

 vicinity about 1838, and has been car- 

 ried on ever since, gradually increasing 

 from year to year. Tracts of land used 

 for the cultivation of seeds in earlier 

 days are now covered with fine resi- 

 dences, and in many instances business 



blocks have driven seer'-producing in- 

 terests to the suburbs of the city and 

 farther into the country. The county 

 of Monroe has in the past turned out 

 many growers who have established 

 themselves in the business, and have 

 become popular throughout the United 

 States from the Atlantic to the Pacific. 

 "Not only are standard varieties of 

 vegetable seeds produced in this vicin- 

 ity in large quantities, but flower seeds 

 as well. In the immediate vicinity of 



Charles "W. GtMttnan. 



