^ANUABT 0, 1913. 



The Florists^ Review 



78 



BETTER UNDERSTANDING 



of our firm, its products and its method of doing business, 

 means to you, the buyer. Better Service, Better Goods and 

 Better Satisfaction. Our aim is to produce quality in 

 quantity at reasonable prices. 



Better business means to us better employees and to 

 them a better living. We guarantee that you get 100 per 

 cent of what you order in a quality that will be satisfac- 

 tory to you as a buyer and to us as producers. 



Selling job lots at low prices is not a business, and 

 there is no standard of quality in job lot buying. From 

 us you get a guaranteed quality at a price fair to the 

 buyer, and at which there is a reasonable profit and an 

 insurance against damage in transit. Our goods are insured 

 to you against loss. Producing young stock is a business, 

 and job lots at low prices are left-overs and culls. 



Our Catalosfue of Roses, Carnations, Chrysanthemums and Beddinsr 



Stock is yours for the askingr. 



A. N. PIERSON, Inc., Cromwell, Conn. 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



HRONOUNCING 

 DICTIONARY 



A list of PLANT NAMES and the BotMkal 

 Terms most frequently met with in irtides 

 on trade topics, with the correct pronunci- 

 ation for each. 

 € Sent postpaid on receipt of 25c 



FLORISTS' PUBLISHING CO. 

 608 So. Dearborn St., Chicago 



affair where a florist acted as chairman 

 of one of the big committees. 



George C. Shaffer has taken posses- 

 sion of his new store at 900 Fourteenth 

 street, N. W., and has a much better 

 location. Two sides of the store are 

 entirely of glass, while a third side is 

 covered by a large plate glass mirror. 

 The ceiling is of white art metal and 

 from it are suspended three antique 

 electric chandeliers. The floor is of 

 mosaic, with a border of green. A 

 balcony runs around nearly the whole 

 of two sides. The stairway to this is 

 partly hidden by the ice-box and the 

 cashier's desk. Back of the mirror 

 is a workroom. The cellar runs be- 

 neath the whole store and under the 

 sidewalk. The latter portion will be 

 used for cold storage purposes and 

 here also is the moss bin, the covers 

 of which are fitted with folding legs 

 80 that they may be used as tables in 

 the mossing of wreaths and when 

 closed throw all the surplus material 

 back into the bin. For the next few 

 week8> Mr. Shaffer will conduct both 

 the new and the old stores. 



C. L. L. 



MANETTI STOCKS 



"t^ 7B HAVB a surplus of 30,000 Manetti Stocks 

 to sell. These are McHutchison's best 

 grade of English stocks. They cost us $12.00 per 

 1000, and we will sell at that price. We have 

 for our own use 130,000 of the same stocks. 



BASSEH C WASHBURN, >,. H.VI 



Offfic*. 



CHICAGO 



OrsmhousM, HINSDALE, ILL. 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



ANETTI STOCKS 



Well-rooted. English-grown Manetti Bose stocks, especially selected for florisb' fraftiif. 



5-8m/m, $12.00 per thousand: 3-5m/m, $10.00 per thousand. 



Duty paid. We are filling orders NOW; can take care of a few more late buyers. Are YOU 

 supplied? Send us your order. Shall we ship by freight or express? 



JACKSON g PERKINS CO., :: Newark, New York 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



The Eeview certainly has been a trade 

 getter for us. — The O. A. Kimball Co., 

 Goldfield, Nev. 



Discontinue our Chinese primrose ad, 

 as we are all sold out. — J. Ullrich, 

 Tiffin, 0. 



