

Mat 16, 1912. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



47 



NEW CROP DAGGER FERNS @ 



Wc will have our usual supply of 



nearby Dagger Ferns, splendid, large, 



perfect fronds, put up in neat uniform 



packages of fifty, well worth a dollar 



more per thousand than the ordinary 



ferns that are being offered for Memorial 



Day. $3.00 per 1000. Special 



prices on large orders. 



. Valley): Sj^epial, $4.00 per 100; Extra, $3.00 per 100 



^; Oa^JhiwSi *<^- Perdoz. PerlOO 



$17.50 



Per doz. 



SpeciaL...... ■ • • $2.50 



Fancy 

 Firsts, 



2.00 

 1.25 



12.50 

 8.00 



" Ca^ljtle^^s: $6.00 per doz.; $40.00 per 100. 



HEADQUARTERS FOR GREENS 



Having extensive cold storatre facilities right in our own building, we are enabled to fill, any time of the year, on short notice, orders. of 

 any size. Quality and selection the very best. 



Galax (green and bronze), $1.50 per 1000; $7.50 per 10,000. 

 Leucothoe Sprays (bronze), $1.00 per 100; $9.00 per 1000. 

 Green Sheet Moss, $3.50 per bag. 



Sphagnum Moss, 10-bbl. bales, burlapped, per bale, $4.00; five-bale 

 ■lots, $3.75 per bale; ten-bale lots, $3.50 per bale. 



Eoxwood, 50-lb. cases, $15.00 per 100 lbs. 

 agger Ferns. $2.50 per 100). 



iRIBBONS AND SUPPLIES : Many i;iew patterns in exclusive Ribbons. Write us for prices on these and on Supplies. 



S. S. Pennock=Meehan Co. 



THE WHOLESALE FLORISTS OF PHILADELPHIA 



9oau**^ 



PHILADELPHIA 

 1608-1620 Ludtow Street 



NEW YORK 

 117 West ZSth Street 



WASHINQTON 

 1212 New York Avenue 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



used. Medium and long-stemmed flow- 

 ers have taekn their place.. 



Various Notes. 



J. D. Eisele, vice-president of Henry 

 A. Dreer, Inc., says that the spring busi- 

 ness at Eiverton has never been so 

 large as it is now. - - - .-■: > • 



George Redles gave one of his happy 

 addresses on wild flowers before the 

 Germantown Horticultural Society May 

 13. Among the prizes offered for compe- 

 tition was the Charles J. "Wister memo- 

 rial prize for wild flowers. 



C. Eisele says that the spring busi- 

 ness is larger this year than for several 

 years. His specialty is rare plants, par- 

 ticularly those plants of merit that have 

 been dropped in the mad rush for novel- 

 ties. Mr. Eisele does not scorn new 



things, as the presence of Marguerite 

 Mrs. F. Sander in his greenhouses elo- 

 quently testifies. I have a friend who 

 believes that the chief mission of this 

 column is to distribute ^arly informa- 

 tion of recent arrivals. Know, then, my 

 friend, that Mr. and Mrs. Eisele have a 

 dear little baby, the fourth in their 

 family. 



M. Rice & Co. report having received 

 on the Barcelona the largest shipment 

 of cycas leaves ever made. The Amer- 

 ica, making her maiden trip to this port, 

 brought them a large shipment of the 

 finest Italian wheat. 



Montague C. Wright reports the fol- 

 lowing contracts for the Philadelphia 

 oflice of the Lord & Burnham Co.: 

 Wm. H. Parker, Baltimore, iron frame 



greenhouse 30x150; Harry A. Poth, 

 Wayne, Pa., iron frame greenhouse 20x 

 50; Coleman du Pont, Wilmington, Del., 

 iron frame conservatory; George Char- 

 man, Bethlehem, Pa., pipe frame green- 

 house 35x160; Hans J. Anderson, Balti- 

 more, two pipe frame greenhouses 20x86 

 and 30x86; William A. Keaton, Anda- 

 lusia, Pa., pipe frame greenhouse 40x75, 

 heated by large new model Burnham 

 sectional hot water boiler; Lemuel Ball 

 Estate, Wissinoming, Pa., complete erec- 

 tion pipe frame greenhouse 22x125, in- 

 cluding two of the largest new model 

 Burnham sectional hot water boilers; 

 H. D. McCann, Paoli, Pa., pipe frame 

 greenhouse 20x75 and new Burnham sec- 

 tional hot water boiler; Edward H. 

 Jacob, West Chester, Pa., pipe frame 



