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N'OVDMBEB 30, 1911. 



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The Weekly Florists' Review. 



NOVELTIES 



IN 



CHRYSANTHEMUMS, CARNATIONS 



AND ROSES 



h eHHSUlTHENllNS 



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We will "distribute the usual hlgh-class list of six or more of 

 Mr.'Pockett's Australian varieties, which will include Mrs. Geo. 

 BurKe, a grand bronze ; Mrs. A. M. Henshaw and Annie L. Angus, 

 whites ; Mrs. Harry Turner, crimson, and Mrs. Gilbert Drabble, a 

 lov^y white, besides several other seedlings of surpassing merit. 



in NEW ROSES 



*> We are putting out the yellow " Sunburst," in conjunction with 



the'E. G. Hill Co.— the giant yellow that creates a sensation 



.t p i wherever shown. 



ECARNAiiONS 



We are distributing Wodenethe, the white you have been 

 waiting for. It has been called the most perfect Carnation ever 

 raised — a fancy in every sense of the word. 



Brooklyn, a cerise pink; a "bread-and-butter" Carnation 

 that will produce more from a given space than any Carnation I 

 know of. . 



COME AND SEC THESE VARIETIES GROWING 



CYou will alpo see our 1911 varieties of Carnations and Roses— Princess Charming 

 and White House in Carnations, and Lady Hillingdon in Roses, which is going to 

 take the place of all other medium-sixed yellows as a commercial florists' flower. 



C11AS.H.T0TTY, Madison, N. J. 



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