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March 3, 1010. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



29 



VALLEY , 



For the past 25 years the Pennook Brand of Valley has had 

 a national reputation and ii still the best prodnction of the many 

 Valley Speoialista. It is handled exclusively by us, thousands 

 daily. A shipment will convince you of its superiority. 



Special, $4.00; Extra, $3.00; No. 1, $2 00 



Sinsrie and Double Daffodils, extra choice flowers, $3.00 per 100 : $20.00 per 1000. 



Carnations, our selection, in lots of 500 or more, the best quality, |2.00 per 100. 



10% discount if this Adv. is mentioned. 



Sweet Peas, extra long $1.00 per 100 



Sweet Peas, long and medium 50c and 75c per 100 



White Lilac $1.00 and $1.25 per bunch 



Freesla per 100, special. $3.00; extra, $2.00; No. 1, $1.50 



Easter Lilies $1.80 per doz.; $12.50 per 100 



Daisies (white) $1.50 and $2.00 per 100 



Daisies (yellow) $2.00 per 100 



Mignonette, splendid spikes $3.00 and $4.00 per 100 



Gardenias special, $3.00; fancy. $2.00; 1st, $1.50 



Cyprlpedlums $1.50 per doz.? $10.00 per 100 



Cattleyas $6.00 per doz. ; ^0.00 per 100 



Double Violets (Lady Campbell) $7.50 per 1000 



Single Violets (Princess of Wales and California) 4.00 per 1000 



2 Klllarneys, Maryland and Richmond, special. $15.00 ; fancy. $12.00; extra, $S.0O; 

 1st, $6.00; 2nd, $4.00. , 



Beauties per doz.. special. $7.50; fancy. $6.00; extra, $5.00; 1st. $4.00; 2nd, $3.00 



FOR ST. PATRICK'S DAY 



Shamrocks, 2i4-inch pots flO.OO per 100 



Empty Shamrock-shaped Pans, 6-in. diameter, 2-in. deep 15c each 



Empty Shamrock-shaped Pans, 10-in. diameter, 3-in. deep 25c each 



These pans can be flUed from 2H-in. pots and used for table decorations. 

 GREEN DYE, enough pulverized coloring to make one quart of the strongest liquid dye for fl.OO; enough for a gallon. $3.50. 



RIBBONS. Some of the choicest novelties, exclusive patterns, an 

 endless variety to choose from. SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. 



-CATAIXKSUi: ON RKQUBST- 



Opcn 7 I. in., dose 6 p. n. 



Not open for business on Sundays 



Not responsible for flowers after delivery to express company 



S. S. Pennock-Meehan Co. 



THE WHOLESALE FLORISTS OF 



1608-20 Ludlow Street :: :: PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



1212 New York Ave., WASHINGTON, D. C. 



Mention The Review when you write 



Wilson's Corsage - Bouquet Holder 



Award of "Hlfflily Commended" at the 8. A. W. Trad* 

 Kzhlbitlon at Cincinnati 



Holds Corsage-Bouquets securely and gracefully. 



Prevents damage to apparel. 



Adjustable to any diameter of bouquet stem. 



Adaptable to anything from Violets to Roses. 



Does away with corsage pins. 



A handsomely silver plated article and ornamental in itsdf.^ 



Samples to the trade, 25o eacli, by mall postage paid. By 

 the dozen, fS.OO, postage paid. Oorrespondence solicited. 



/ ROBERT 6. WILSON, 



Address 



Pulton St. and 

 Qreenc Ave., 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



bougainvilleas are extremely promising, 

 large plants well set with buds. The 

 outlook is bright for a good Easter. 



Club Meeting. 



The carnation meeting, March 1, was 

 the best of the season in attendance and 

 exhibits. Albert M, Herr was heartily 

 applauded for his paper, which evoked 

 an interesting debate. Samuel Batchelor, 

 Jenkintown, showed White Perfection; 

 Eobert Craig Co., its white seedling, 

 Norwood; Conard & Jones Co., West 

 Grove, Eose Violet Blue, which is a Ger- 



man sport, considered by Antoine Wint- 

 zer as the real thing; also American Pil- 

 lar rose; John H. Dodds, Jenkintown, 

 Harlowarden, Bay State, White Perfec- 

 tion, Imperial, Enchantress, Eose-pink 

 Enchantress and Winsor carnations; 

 Henry Eichholz, Waynesboro, Princess 

 Charming and Washington, a deep pink 

 sport of Enchantress; Albin Harvey & 

 Sons, Brandywine Summit, May Day, 

 Victory, O. P. Bassett, Snowflake, Wi- 

 nona, Pink Delight; Joseph Heacock Co», 

 Dorothy Gordon; Charles B. Herr, Stras- 

 burg, Pink Delight from the cleanest 



place in America; William Kleinheinz, 

 Norwood; Edward C. Marshall, Kennett 

 Square, Beacon, Winsor, Georgia and his 

 own white seedling, Millbrook Lee White- 

 ford; Overbrook Nurseries, Overbrook, 

 Schizanthus grandiflora and Stock Prin- 

 cess Alexandra; S. J. Eeuter & Son, 

 Westerly, E. I., Euby, Sangamo, Pink 

 Delight and May Day; Strafford Flower 

 Farm, Strafford, Pink Delight, May Day 

 and two seedlings from M. A. Patten, 

 red and variegated; William Swayne, 

 Kennett Square, a light seedling between 

 Enchantress and Dorothy, quality fine. 

 Visitors included Eobert Pyle and Ed- 

 mond A. Harvey. 



The Drift of the Times. 



. The authorities tell us that a suffragist 

 is one who favors the voting of our bet- 

 ter-halves and daughters when they reach 

 years of discretion and wiU urge these 

 views gently. A suffragette, on the oth- 

 er hand, urges the same views violently. 

 The leader of the future must find re- 

 munerative employment for all suffragists 

 and suffragettes who may so desire. The 

 desks in the banks, the counters in the 

 stores, the machines in the factory, the 

 Eemingtons everywhere, may not give 

 sufi&cient scope. The floral possibilities 

 naturally suggest themselves, most natur- 

 ally in the shops where the field has al- 



