24 



The Weekly Florists' Review^ 



Mabch 11, 1909. 



59 WabasK Ave. 



LEADING WCSTE'"' 



American Beauty Perdoz. 



Long stems 15.00 



Stems 80 inches 4 00 



Stems 24 inches 3 00 



Stems 20 Inches 2.00 



Stems 16 inches 1.60 



Stems 12 inches 1.00 



Short per 100, $4.00 to 6.00 



ROSES Per 100 



Killarney . select 18 00 to 910.00 



medium 4.00to 6.00 



Bridesmaid, select 6.00 to 8.00 



mediam 3.00 to 6.00 



Bride, select e.OOto 8.00 



medium S.OOto 6.00 



Richmond, select 8.00to 10.00 



medium 4.00 to 6.00 



CABNATIONS ^erioo 



Common $1.00 to $ l.PO 



Select, large atid fancies 2.00to 3.00 



White 2.00to 4.C0 



Miscellaneous 



Violets, New York doubles 50 to .75 



Fancy singles 40to .60 



Valley 3.00to 4.00 



Callas perdoz., $1.25 to $160 



Harrisli.. " 2.00 15.00 

 Mignonette " .60 to 1.00 



SweetPeas 60to 1.00 



Paper Whites 3.00 



Jonquils 3.00 



Daffodils 3.00 



Tulips 2.00to 4.00 



Freesia 3.00 



GREEN GOODS 



Asparagus Plumosus,per string, $0.36 to $ 0.60 



per bunch, .36 to .76 



SpreDgeri...Per 100, 3 00 to 6.00 



Adiantum " l.OOto 1.60 



Farleyense " S.OOto 10.00 



Smilaz per doz., $2.00 15.00, 



Ferns .... per 1000, $2.C0 to 2.50 .96 



Leucothoe Sprays " 6.00 .75 



Qalax, green and bronze. .per 1000, 1.00 



per case, 10,000, 7.60 



Boxwood, per bunch, 35c; per case. 7.50 



Sobject to Change Without Notice. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Watch Is Grow 



Our steadily mcreasing business demands increased facilities 

 to take our usual good care of every flower and of every 

 order — so we move May ( to much larger quarters^ at 52 

 and 54 Wabash Ave.^ now being remodeled for our 

 occupancy. 



ALWAYS OPEN FOR MORE BUSINESS 



Order of us — g^et what you want, w^hen you want it, as you want it 



Vaughan & Sperry 



Wholesale Florists, 58-60 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO 



BBAUTIBS Per doz. 



30to 36-inch $4.00to $6.00 



24to 30-inch 2.50to 3.00 



18to 20-inch 1.50to 2.00 



8 to 12inch l.OOto 1.50 



Shorts .76 



ROSES Per 100 



Bride and Maid $4.00 to$ 8.00 



Richmond 4.00to 10.00 



Killarney 4.00to 10.00 



Perle 4.00to 6.00 



Roses, our selection 3 00 



CABNATIONS, medium l.OOto 1.50 



fancy 2.00 to 3.00 



MISCEIiLANEOUS 



Violets, double 50to .76 



single 50to .60 



HarrisU LiUes 12.50 



Callas 12.50 



Valley 4.00 



Paper Whites 3.00 



Jonquils 3 00 



Sweet Peas 50to 1.00 



GREENS 



Smllax Strings perdoz. 1.50to 2.00 



As paragns Strings each .50 



Asparagus Bunches " .35 to .50 



Sprengerl Bunches " .25 to .85 



Adiantum per 100 1.00 



Ferns, common per 1000 2.00 



Galax " 1.00 



Leucothoe sprays " 7.60 



SUBJECT TO MARKET CHANGE. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



of Bayside, L. I., and Miss Emma Tro- 

 jan, of Elmhurst, L. I., were married on 

 inauguration day, March 4, at the resi- 

 dence of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lynch, the 

 retail florist at Jersey City. Mrs. Mil- 

 lang has been the efficient bookkeeper of 

 the firm during the last six years, and 

 will continue in her position for a time. 

 She is a charming and popular young 

 lady. 



St. Patrick's day, Wednesday, March 

 17, promises a procession of nearly 100,- 

 000 loyal Hibernians, every one of whom 

 will wear a green carnation if the florist 

 has enough mesmeric power to make the 

 demonstration popular. There will be 

 many a green wholesale window Tues- 

 day. 



March 17 the annual banquet of the 

 National Association of Gardeners takes 

 place at Sheffel hall. Seventeenth street 

 and Third avenue, at 8 p. m. At the 

 same place the two days' exhibition will 

 be seen and many prizes will be awarded. 

 Large crowds are expected. After the 

 baliquet several New Yorkers will take 



the midnight train for the rose conven- 

 tion in Buffalo. 



J. Von der Linden is no longer presi- 

 dent of the Growers' Cut Flower Co., 39 

 Twenty-eighth street. Jacob Houck, of 

 Bloomfield, N. J., now holds that honor, 

 and J. J. Brozat, instead of A. Kramer, 

 is the treasurer. Manager Coan reports 

 the aggregate of business for February 

 in advance of any month since the asso- 

 ciation was formed. 



Miss Murray, of Montreal, was a re- 

 cent visitor. 



W. Atlee Burpee, of Philadelphia, and 

 .T. C. Vaughan, of Chicago, were among 

 those from a distance at E. V. Hallock's 

 funeral. Many of the prominent growers 

 and wholesalers of New Jersey, Long 

 Island and New York were also in at- 

 tendance. 



Julius Eoehrs, Sr., is back from his 

 southern trip with .John Westcott and 

 Eobert Craig to Cuba and the Isle of 

 Pines. 



James Lyons, with M. A. Bowe, a son 

 of one of the old-time Staten Island flo- 



rists, has the sympathy of all in the loss 

 of his sister March 4. On the same day 

 the mother of F. W. Creighton, one of 

 A. T. Boddington's representatives, 

 passed away, and the trade extends its 

 sympathy to the bereaved. 



The new Fleischman store is open at 

 the corner of Forty-second street and 

 Fifth avenue, only one door away from 

 the establishment of Thomas Young, Jr. 

 Only a couple of blocks away another 

 high-class store will open in the fall. 

 Fifth avenue from Thirty-fourth street 

 to Fifty-seventh street will have more 

 handsome florists' stores appealing to 

 esthetic Manhattan than any other city 

 on the globe can show. 



Charles Thorley moves from Broadway 

 to West Twenty-eighth street April 15. 



The old Fleischman store on Broadway 

 and Twenty-fifth street, with its $30,000 

 fixtures and $10,000 ice box, still has the 

 sign "To let" in its windows. 



A. L. Young & Co. have leased the 

 large store at 46 West Twenty-eighth 

 street, between the stores of Traendly & 



