Mahcii 19, 1914. 



The Florists'fteview 



88 



.*-^i- ^. ■*•* 



The strenuous weather of February completely disarranged our plans, and now everything comes at 

 once. Two lots of plants ready tp go out and another lot ready to go in. We shall give you the benefit of a 

 reduction in price to quickly make room. Our plants are branched and stocky, and were never better. The 

 price is only $20.00 per 1000; $3.00 per 100; 200 for $5.00. These plants, if benched, will blossom 



from Memorial Iky throughout the sumjner. If potted on and pinched, they will 

 make you a leader for spring sales. Potted into S^ or 4-inch pots and set on the back 

 side of carnation benches, will yield a surprising profit. While you can get fine plants 

 at a small price make room somewhere. No other plant will do the amount of busi- 

 ness in so short a time as our ■ • 



Silver Pink Seedling. 



Every shoot of the 40 or 60 that it throws is a flower spike. Make room today and 



secure your plants. 

 Now is the time to sow seed for plants to bed out. Snaps are fast coming into 

 favor for garden use. 



INCOURAGE IT PUSH IT PREPARE FOR IT. 



You will fuss with a geranium for nine months and sell at $1.00 to $1 ./50 a dozen, while 

 you can get the same money for our SEEDLING snap plants in THREE months, and 

 at one-tenth the cost of production. This is not theory, but a plain fact. Pure seed 

 at $1.00 per pkt.; 3 for $2.60; 7 for $5.00. All orders cash. Free cultural directions. 



GC D A 1i>ICRT n>n SOMERSWORTH. 

 • 0« I\/\lVl0DUIxVJy NEW HAMPSHIRE 



- SEEMJNG saw fiik 

 Sna^Mi. picM MM. 

 Curia U (bwtc 

 ixdiunt •! P^ 

 <l kw •( tkt fin M 



.Jgf*^ J 



SihirhiUSMtfiiy 

 mil uilvp. 



M'»»nt1nn T\\t^ R#t1pw vhAn t«wi writ* 



Antirrhinum Nelrose 



Th« Cut Flowar Novalty of th« Y«ar 



Doien, $3.00; 25, $5.00; 100.112.00 

 DeliTery in rotation. 



r.W. FLETCHER & CO., Aiibiini(lale,Nasi. 



Mention Tb« R«Tlew wben 70a write. 



right for Easter. His giganteum lilies 

 are twenty-four to thirty-six inches 

 high and bristling with buds, as fine 

 a lot as I ever saw;. Mr. Boyle's Kil- 

 larney and Richmond roses are now in 

 fine crop. 



Mann Bros., of Randolph, have their 

 largest bulb sales now, of the follow- 

 ing varieties: White Hawk, Murillo, 

 Couronne d'Or, L^Reine and Keizers- 

 kroon tulips, Vicjroria, Golden Spur, 

 ornatus, EAiperoi^ Princeps and Dou- 

 ble Von Sion narcissi. 



At the nqw market of the Boston 

 Cooperative Market, at 260 Devon- 

 shire street, business boomed all the 

 opening week and stall holders have 

 been delighted with the increase. Few 

 flowers remained unsold March 14 at 

 9:30 a. m. 



"Wheeler & Co., of Waban, have some 

 hundreds of phalsenopsis in flower, 

 among other orchids. One plant of 

 p. Schilleriana carried over 100 flow- 

 ers, and many from fifty to seventy- 

 ^ve each. 



The New York spring show, whio4i 

 openf March 21, will attract many vis- 

 itors from Boston and vicinity. The 

 inajority will not go before March 24. 

 Tew plants *will go , from here, but 

 there will be a number of cut flower 

 exhibit's. 



Thomas Roland, William Sim and F. 

 J. t)olaiWliy have commodious and con- 

 venient quarters at the new Boston 

 Cooperative Flower Market. Their 

 leased spaces run side by side. 



Chester Paine, of Randolph, has been 

 getting fancy prices for his bulbs this 

 week and has been in exuberant spir- 

 its. The real cause was the arrival. 



FINE PLANTS FOR FLORISTS 



TABLE FERNS, $4.00 per 100. 



BOUQAINVILLEAS, specimen plants in bloom, $1.00 to $10.00. 



SHAM ROC KSy 1-inch and 2-inch pots, $40.00 per 1000; larger pans put up if 

 desired, 12^c and 25c. 



AZALEAS* all varieties and sizes, 60c to $7.50 each. 



We are now booking orders for the beautiful, n«w wlnter-bloomlng 

 B«gonla, FLORENCE DAVENPORT, for June and July delivery, at 

 $26.00 per 100. 



A. Ml. DAVENPORT, :t t: WatoHown, Mass. 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



Geraniams and Other Stock 



IN FINE SHAPE 



Out of 2J4-inch. 100 1000 



S. A. Nutt $ 2.25 $20.00 



22.60 

 22.50 

 20.00 

 '20.00 

 22.50 

 20.00 



Harcourt (white) 2.50 



Poitevlne 2.50 



QERMAN I VY. 2'4-lnch 2,25 



BLUE AGERATUM 2.25 



HELIOTROPE. . 2.50 



SALVIA Splendens 2.25 



TRADESCANTIA, Var. and Green... 2.00 



SMILAX, 3-inch 2.60 



SPRENQERI, 3-inch 5.00 



VINCA Varieiirata, 3-inch 6.00 



VINCA Varleirata, 4-inch 7.00 



DRACAENAS, 5-inch 28.00 



DRACAENAS, 6- inch 86.00 



Cash with order, please. 



NAGNUS riERSON, ■ CromweU, Conn. 



Mention The Rerlew when yon write. 



March 13, of a baby girl in his house- 

 hold. He will never again believe that 

 the thirteenth is an unlucky day. 



Leonard Cousins, of Concord Junc- 

 tion, hias " had, as usual, the largest 

 sales in Boston of any near-by sham- 

 rock specialist. Prices on shamrocks 

 have ranged all tlie way from $3 per 

 hundred for small pots to $1.50 per 

 dozen for small made-up pans. 



H. r. Calder, of Norwood, is pick- 

 ing quantities of top-notch Campbell 

 violets; also a smaller quantity of 

 Swanley White. 



The Scituate Greenhouses, Scituate, 



CLEAN AND BEALTHY ROOTED 



Carnation Cuttings 



Benora and Pink Delight 

 $6.00 per 100 $60.00 per 1000 



Olorioaa and White Wonder 

 $4.00 per 100 $86.00 per 1000 



White Perfection and Wanoka 

 $8.00 per 100 $26.00 per 1000 



Winsor 

 $2.60 per 100 $20.00 per 1000 



See classified adv. for nursery stock. 

 LITTLEFIELD & WYMAN 



NORTH ABINQTON, MASS. 



Mention The ReTlew wben yon write. 



277^^ MORE 

 BLOSSOMS 



on plants raised In 4-lnch SQUARE paper pots 

 (G4 cubic inches of soil and roots) than on plants 

 raised In 4-inch clay pots (31 cubic inches of soil 

 and roots). See our larger advts, on pp. 113, 117. 

 F. W. BOCHELLE & SONS, Ch ester, N. J. 



Mass., are sending in fine spikes of 

 Lilium candidum, and antirrhinums in 

 three colors.. 



Neal Boyie, of Maiden, i$ passing 

 cigars over the birth of a boy at his 



