•■5-irr^'"r?7 ▼V."^"™ ' *> ■ . rT"Jl.r-y'V" y^y. 



Mjiacu 16, 1911. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



27 



GARDENIAS® 



With their purity and fragrance, and 

 i^ ^m^mF^^ rich, glossy green foliage, nothing 



choicer or more beautiful. 



Specials per doz., $4.00 



Fancies per doz., 3.00 



Firsts per doz., 2.00 



-^^^—— Best quality, in lots of 100 or more, at $25.00 per 100 



VALLEY, every day in the year. Special, $4.00 per 100; 

 Extra, $3.00 per 100. 



CATTLE YAS, $6.00 per doz.; $40.00 per 100. 



^ -.^^^ Some Splendid New Roses 



MELODY, the best yellow rose today. 



■^ "^^^^^ DOUBLE PINK KILLARNEY, the Killamey that will super- 

 R^^M^^^^^^^^^^^^H sede the Killamey now grown. 



™^^^^^^^^^^^^ PRINCE DE BULGARIE, entirely different from any rose 



grown. 



Write for our DESCRIPTIVE LIST and 

 PRICES of these and other introductions 



BOXWOOD, splendid dark green sprays, no surplus wood, the very best quality for florists' use, 

 $7.50 per 50-lb. crate. Special prices in large quantities. 



S- S. Pen nock =Meehan Co. 



THE WHOLESALE FLORISTS OF PHILADELPHIA 



VUai.»<* 



PHILADELPHIA 

 1608-1620 Ludlow Street 



NEW YORK 

 109 West 28th Street 



WASHINGTON 

 1212 New York Avenue 



Mptition The RpvIpw when vou write. 



Advertisement of 



THE PINE TREE 

 SILK MILLS CO. 



An Exquisite Moire Ribbon 



ALL FLORISTS' COLORS AND SHADES 



No. 100, $1.50; No. 150, $1.80 coffTJi\ffn^ 



806-808-810 ARCH STREET. PHILADELPHIA 



Mentinn The Review wtien you wnte. 



Considerable surprise was created in 

 the Philadelphia market about a week 

 ago, \yhen Patrick Joseph Lynch dropped 

 in on the P. M, Co. In the course of 

 conversation with Samuel S. Pennock, Mr. 

 Lynch, as though searching mentally for 

 something that interested his hearer, re- 

 marked that glass was so cheap that he 

 could not resist a little flyer of five and 

 a half carloads. Mr. Pennock, who knows 



the value of glass from top to bottom, 

 was startled and to make sure that his 

 caller was in earnest asked what was to 

 be done with the five and a half carloads. 

 But Mr. Lynch had not made up his 

 mind; he just had it in reserve to use 

 when it became necessary, to furnish a 

 few more hundred thousands of the dol- 

 lar-a-dozen rose plants in New Cnstle 

 or from West Grove. 



Various Notes. 



Maurice Fuld gave the Germantown 

 Horticultural Society some dahlia inspir- 

 ation derived from his Boston experience 

 in his delightfully taking way March 13. 



The King Construction Co. will build a 

 palm house 28x37, with handsome orna- 

 mentation, and two other houses 30x67 

 each for W. H. Tauble, Riverside, N. J. 



