NOVEMBEB 17, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



35 



RIBBONS 



ARE THE 

 BEST 



Those who for years have specialized 

 along certain lines, giving their cus- 

 tomers the best and most up-to-date in 

 those particular lines, that brains, time 

 and money could produce, have not won 

 success by chance, but by perseverance, 

 application and knowledge, with the 

 thought always in mind of giving some- 

 thing better each succeeding season. 



This principle is applied in every 

 detail and branch of our rapidly ex 

 panding business, and in no department 

 is this Detter demonstrated than in Om* 

 Bibbon Department. Our twenty years 

 and more of practical experience in 

 handling Flowers has given us ideas 

 obtainable in no other way. Each 

 Flower has suggested Some Beautiful 

 Bibbon Creation, each one more beauti- 

 ful than the last, thus giving us the 

 largest and best supply of Choice Flo- 

 rists' Bibbons of any house in the 

 country. Customers re-ordering time 

 after time demonstrates to us that the 

 Pennock-Meehan Quality Bibbons are 

 'aiid must be by far the best. 



We are now booking orders for Robert Scott & Son's new roses 



Per doz. Per 100 



Melody, own root $6.00 $30.00 



Double Killarney, own root 3.00 20.00 



For grafted add $5.00 per hundred on Melody and $10.00 per hundred on Double Killarney. 



Per 260 Per 1000 



$70.00 $250.00 



150.00 



2^-inch, March delivery. 



Ribbons and Supplies of All Kinds 



Catalogue on Request 



CUT FLOWER 

 SPECIAL 



WHITE LILAC 



Bztra 



Fine 



Sprays 



The First 

 ol the 

 Season 



$1.50 



Per 

 Bunch 



S. S. Pen nock =Meehan Co. 



THE WHOLESALE FLORISTS OF PHILADELPHIA 



'JKVt 



PHILADELPHIA 

 1608-1620 Ludlow Street 



NEW YORK 

 109 West 28th Street 



WASHINQTON 

 1212 New York Avenue 



Mention The Review when you write. 



cured when the Messrs. Aschmann first 

 took the place bears evidence of careful 

 selection and good culture in growing. 

 Much of it is now ready for use, the 

 varieties and sizes showing clearly that 

 knowledge of market requirements for 

 which the Aschmanns are noted. Ferns 

 of the Boston type are a leading fea- 

 ture—Bostons, Scottii, Scholzeli, Whit- 

 niani and Whitmani compacta, a pleas- 

 ing form of the older variety. Small 

 ferns for table use and Pteris Wilsoni 

 in medium sizes look well. Araucaria 

 excelsa has just arrived and is doing 

 nicely and there are also quantities of 

 Asparagus plumosus and Ficus elastica. 

 The flowering plant class is represent- 

 ^'^. by promising lots of Begonia Lor- 

 raine, Primula Chinensis, Primula ob- 

 "'pnica, azaleas in variety and medium 

 ^'zps of poinsettia, a new departure for 



the brothers, who have never grown 

 this Christmas plant before. All these 

 varieties looked well. Then there was 

 a block of solanums, well berried; for 

 later use lilies, hydrangeas, hardy ivy, 

 all testifying to foresight and hard 

 work, both so important to success. One 

 house was devoted to carnations — 

 White Enchantress, Afterglow, Winsor, 

 White Perfection, Victory, and one or 

 two other sorts. The place had been 

 cleaned thoroughly and renovated, si- 

 lent witnesses to the determination to 

 win success. 



A Notable Wedding. 



A wedding will take place on the eve 

 of Thanksgiving in New Castle, Ind., 

 that will be of more than usual inter- 

 est in this city and all over the coun- 

 trv. Miss Caroline Forkner will be- 



come the bride of Patrick Joseph 

 Lynch. 



Just think of it! Joe Lynch is to be 

 married 1 What will all the pretty girls 

 in West Grove say? What will the 

 lovely ladies in Philadelphia think? 

 Brilliant, talented, versatile Joe Lynch, 

 who is able to do easily and well a 

 little more than the rest of us can 

 do with prodigious eflfort, has been 

 captured at last. A western girl tri- 

 umphs where the eastern ones have 

 failed. 



To be serious — Patrick Joseph Lynch, 

 managing owner of the Dingee & Con- 

 rad Co., West Grove, Pa., and manag- 

 ing owner of the Heller Bros. Co., New 

 Castle, Ind., is a leading exponent of 

 the mail plant industry today. Tie 

 catalogues that he inspires and the 

 roses that are produced under his 



