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66 



TheWeekly Florists' Review. 



jDira 6, 1912. 



FROM 



^ SPRING BEDDING PLANTS '"u^ 



CANNAS 



8i2-in. potB Per 100 

 Robusta, common red leaved. . .$6.00 



Black Beauty 6.00 



Alphonse Bouvfer 6.00 



Queen Charlotte 6.00 



Burbank 6.00 



Assorted Caonas 6.00 



GERANIUMS 



Si^-in. pots Per 100 

 S. A. Nutt, dark red $6.00 



A. Ricard, red 7.00 



B. Pfritevlne, salmon 7 00 



Mme. Buchner. white 6 00 



Bertha de Presilly, pink 6 00 



F. Perkins, dark pink 6 00 



VINCAS 



$8.00 to $10.00 per ICO 



COLEUS Per 100 



Verschaffeltll $3.00 



Qolden Bedder, $25.00 per 1000,13.00 

 Assorted Varieties 3.00 



ALTERNANTHERAS 



Per 100 

 Bed and green, $25.00 per 1000. .$3.00 



MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS 





Per 100 



Fuchsias $8.00 to $10.00 



Heliotrope 6.00 to 8 00 



Ageratum 6.00 



Ivy-leaved Qeranlums 6.00 to 8.00 



Begonias, Tuberous 8.00 to 10.00 



Begonias, Prima Donna 3.00 to 5.00 



Caladlums 8.00 to 10 00 



Petunias, double 6.00 to 8.00 



Per 100 

 Petunias, single $S.00 to $6.00 



Lobelia, trailing 3.00 



Centaurea 3.00 



Lobelia, Common 3.00 



Salvia, Fire Ball 4.00 to 6.00 



Verbenas 3.00 



German ivy 3.00 to 6.00 



WE GUARANTEE THE QUALITY. 



GEORGE B. HART, 24 to 30 Stone St, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 



Mention Toe Keview wtien you write. 



HAIL AT KANSAS CITY. 



An exciting and exclusive storm, 

 says a local correspondent, was staged 

 for the residents of Kansas City, Mo., 

 late in the afternoon of May 27. And 

 it was a real storm, too, for a time. 

 Hailstones as large as walnuts fell in 

 some parts of the city and everywhere 

 the gutters became raging rivulets and 

 sewers overflowed. In the northeast 

 and south sections of the city the hail- 

 stones were large, while in the business 

 section only a few scattered stones 

 fell. The hail continued for fifteen 

 minutes in its chosen districts. St. Jo- 

 seph and the smaller surrounding towns 

 received a slight wetting, but the rain- 

 fall could not be compared to the fall 

 in Kansas City. 



In the southeastern parts of the city, 

 where the hail was heaviest, the dam- 

 age to greenhouses was almost disas- 

 trous, while those in Kansas City, Kan., 

 and in the norlSieastern part of the city 

 escaped altogether. The Walter Heite 

 place, at Merriam, Kan., was the hard- 

 est hit. Mr. Heite reported that be- 

 tween 7,000 and 8,000 panes of glass 

 were broken in his greenhouses and 

 many of his plants and shrubs were 

 beaten down. 



The following is a list of some of the 

 principal losses: 



Samuel Murray, 3331 Prospect, 300 

 panes broken. 



William L. Eock Flower Co., green- 

 houses slightly damaged. 



J. Austin, Thirty-fifth and Park ave- 

 nue, 2,000 panes broken. 



Nelson Jarrett, Fifty-sixth and Troost, 

 500 to 1,000 panes broken. 



PERLES 



Own Root Perles $3.50 per 100 in 2^-'ui. pots; $30.00 per 1000 



BASSETT & WASHBURN, 



Office and Store. 131 N. Wabash Ave. 

 CHICAQO 



Qreenhousei, 



Hlnsdmle. III. 



Mention Th^ ReTlew wb«o yon write. 



