

26 



The Weekly Florists^ Review^ 



Sbi'TEMBKU 1), 190W. 



FANCY FERN 



FINEST 



MICHIGAN 



SIOCK 



FANCY FERN 



Per IOOO9 $1.25. Special price on large lots. 



Green and Bronze Galax $1.25 per 1000; $8.50 per 10,000 



Leucothoe Sproys, green $1.00 per 100; $7.50 per 1000 



Sphagnum Moss per bale, $1.25; 6 bales, $7.00; extra fine. 



Full line Cut Flowers at all limes. 



Michigan Cut Flower Excbange, 384o Broadway, Detroit, Mich. 



MentaoD The Kevlew when you write 



Harry Hoffmeir, wliere Wednesday, Sep- 

 tember 8, the fixtures, etc., were to be 

 sold at auction. It is rumored Mr. Hoff- 

 meir will renew his enterprise in a store 

 directly' opposite the Belnord when the 

 building is completed. 



Gilmore Clarke, of David Clarke's 

 Sons, has returned from his summer at 

 Ragnet Lake, in the Adirondacks. Mar- 

 shall Clarke and family are home from a 

 holiday in the Thousand Islands. Fred 

 Lentz and wife, in his motor boat, have 

 been doing New England and Maine re- 

 sorts, and Gus Koppel and family have 

 returned from a two weeks' outing at 

 Asbury Park. The firm is getting ready 

 for a big season. They have a big wed- 

 ding at Great Nock this week, and have 

 built another greenhouse tliis .summer at 

 their Bronx headquarters. 



Warendorff, of the Ausonia, liad the 

 decoration in honor of Edison at Brier 

 Cliff Inn last Aveek, at which 1,000 Beau- 

 ties, 4,000 Killarney and 4,000 white 

 asters were used. Over 5,000 electric 

 lights were used in the table decoration. 

 Mr. Edison himself said he never saw a 

 more beautiful floral display. Mrs. 

 Warendorff, now celebrating lier seventy- 

 third birthday, gave the work her per- 

 sonal attention. This lady, wlio may ap- 

 propriately be called the mother of flo- 

 rists, has .iust returned from ii two 

 months' tour of Europe, alone, visiting 

 all the large cities of France. Germany 

 and England. She declares, with the ex- 

 ception of Paris, American floricultural 

 art leads the world. She ])urchased many 

 novelties. Victor Warendorff has re- 

 turned from a long fisliing trip in the 

 Rowena with a 19-]>onnd nuiscallonge 

 among his trophies. 



Christatos & Koster in a few days will 

 open their new store at 717 Madison ave- 

 nue. It is one of the )ieatest and pret- 

 tiest in the city, and has at the back a 

 good-sized conservatory. This firm has 

 had a successful season at Long Brancli, 

 where at West End their enterprise has 

 no competition. The store in New York 

 is fitted up by the Foster Mansfield Co. 



N. Christatos, at Fifty-eighth street 

 and Sixth avenue, has opened a branch 

 store at the corner of Eighty-third street 

 and Columbus avenue, which is one of 

 the largest in that section, and two 

 blocks above the handsome store of 

 Mengham & Westwood. 



H. Slinn, jr., has rented the store on 

 the ground floor of the Coogan building, 

 next door to Charles Millang. 



Scherer & Co. have opened their new 

 stor^ at 106 W. Twenty-sixth street, next 

 door to the Geller Florists' Supply Co. 

 They have rented the whole building. 



C.W. McKELLAR 



LonK Dlatanoe Plion*, Cantna S598 



51 Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO 



LArse Dally Stalpmenta No^r Racalved of 



Cattleya Gigas and Gaskelliana 



$6.00 per dozen 



Beauties, Fancy Teas, Carnations, Peonies, Gardenias. 



Valley, Sweet Peas and all fancy flowers, farieyense and all 

 Fancy Greens and Deoirative Stock, Ribbons and Chiffons. 



GALAX 



Send for complete Price list. 



FANCY FERNS 



Mention The Review when vou write 



FERNS 



NEW CROP 



Fre>h from the Patch 

 Fancy and Uageer Ferns, $1.00 per 1000. 

 Green Galax, AOc per lOOO. Green Leacn- 

 thoe Sprajs, $8.50 per lOOO. Shurt L.ea- 

 cothoe, IS to 16 in., 9I.«5 per lOOO. 

 Discount on large orders. If yo>i want tlie cream 

 of the season, send orders now. Sixteen years' experi- 

 ence. Send cash with first order. 



J. M. PRITCBARU, Elk Park, N. C. 

 Mention The Review when you write. 



have large ice-box conveniences and will 

 handle everything in green goods. Felix 

 Bernstein is the ' ' company, ' ' and has 

 for yeai's conducted a successful retail 

 business in upper New York. 



John Seligman, who has been seriously 

 ill, is improving, and has gone for a 

 month's recuperation to one of the Con- 

 necticut resorts. 



W. E. Marshall is in Newport. The 

 .sympathy of the trade is extended him in 

 the loss of his sister, Mrs. Ore, last 

 month in Boston. Mr. Wheeler, of the 

 Matshall firm, returns from his European 

 trip September 8. A. Watkins, repre- 

 senting this house, has just completed a 

 successful trip on Long Island. 



Tuesday, September 7, C. C. Trepel, 

 of Brooklyn, opened his enterprise in 

 Bloomingdales, on Fifty-ninth street, 

 Manhattan, having leased the green- 

 houses and cut flower department for a 

 term of years. Herman Bershart has 

 been appointed manager. Mr. Trepel as- 



Perpetuated and Natural 

 Sheet Mosses 



Southern Wild Smilax 



E. A. BEAVEN, Evergreen, Ala. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



OUR NEW CROP 



KXTRA FINE 



Southern Wild Smilax 



IS NOW READY 



R. A. LEE & CO., Hatcher Station, Ga. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



sumes the entire responsibility of the 

 Aenture. The conservatories are in ex- 

 cellent repair; the stock and fixtures 

 have been purchased outright by this 

 ambitious young man, whose success in 

 Brooklyn has been phenomenal, and he is 

 importing heavily from Europe. Mrs. 

 Trepel resumes the management of the 

 Brooklyn store .at Losier's. Dick Corney 

 is manager of Mr. Trepel 's uptown 

 Brooklyn store on Bedford avenue. 



John Mallon, of Brooklyn, has re- 

 turned from Mattituck, L. I., where he 

 has spent the summer at what he call* 



