Apbii. 24, 1918. 



The Florists^ Review 



31 



DAISIES 



For a week-end sale. 

 Either yellow or white Daisies. Fine large 

 flowers, $7.50 per 1000, 600 at the same rate. 



9u*i**<* 



VHl I lai 1 HO nARDPNIAC Special. $2.50 doz. ; $17 50 100. 

 • UMIU/liilUta $12.50100. First. $1.00 doz. 



VAI I FY <The Famous P-M Brand) 



VHUaj 1 Special. $4.00. Extra. $3.00. 



Fancy. $2.00 doz. 

 $6.00 100. 



HKADQUARTKIIS FOR aRKCNS 



Bronze Galax. 11.60 per 1000; $7.50 per 10,000. 



Leaoothoe Sprays (rreen and bronze). $1.00 per 100; $7.60 per 1000. 



Qreen Sheet Moss, $8.00 per bar 



Qreen Lump Moss. $1.50 per bag. < 



Sphaffnmn Moss, 10-bbI. bales, nicely burlapped. each $4.00; 5-bale 



lots, each $3.76; 10-baIn lots, each $8.60. 

 Dagger and Fancy Ferns, $2.00 per 1000. 

 Boston Fern Fronds. 27 inches long, extra fine, $1.00 per 100. 

 -Boxwood. 60-lb. cases. $7.50 each. 

 Asparagus strings, 50c each. 

 Asparagus and Sprengerl bunches, 50c each. 



RIBBONS AND SUPPLIES: Many new patterns in exclusive Ribbons. Write 

 us for prices on these and on Supplies. 

 Small shipments can be sent by Parcel Post at purchaser's risk. 



8. S. PENNOCK-MEEHAN CO. 



THS WHOLXBALB rLORUTS OF PHILADXLPHXA 



PHiLAOBLPHIA NEW YORK WASNINOTON 



1608-1620 Ludlow Street 117 West 28th Street 1216 H Street. N. W. 



£ 



Mention Tbe Rerlew when yon write. 



VALLEY ORCHIDS PEAS 

 ROSES CARNATIONS 



Rose Plants— Grafted Stock 

 Richmond, Pink and Wiiite Killarney, Ward, Hillingdon, Double White 



Killarney and Killarney Queen 



PHILADELPHIA CUT FLOWER CO., 



1817 

 SaiMom St.p 



OPKN UNTIL 6 P. IN. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



^ 



Mention Th> Rerlew when yon writ*. 



foreign contingent of next season 's nov- 

 elties. 



William J. Muth has rejoined the 

 King Construction Co. Mr. Muth, 

 who has a reputation for lining up the 

 growers, will have charge of the east- 

 ern district, with headquarters in this 

 city. 



F. J. Michell returned last week 

 from a business trip to Baltimore and 

 Washington, where his unfailing good 

 humor has won him many friends. 



John Willard, for nearly twenty- 

 seven years with the M. Rice Co., and 

 its predecessors, M. Rice & Co., Joseph 

 Marschuetz & Co. and the Philadelphia 

 Immortelle Design Co., has done much 

 'n his positions of workman and fore- 

 I'an to add to the success achieved by 

 them. 



, E. H. Outerbridge, of Bermuda, has 

 '^oen visiting in this city. 



Frederick Cramer and Miss Emma 

 I^^arnstadt were married April 16. Mr. 

 * ramer has been for the last ten years 

 ^^ith the Leo Niessen Co., where he 

 j^oftnmenced work as an errand boy, and 

 has now risen to a position of trust. 



His friends wish him happiness with a 

 right good will. 



Edward Reid, chairman of the essay 

 committee of the Florists' Club, an- 

 nounces that the speaker for the May 

 meeting will be Adolph Farenwald, of 

 Rqslyn, Pa. The subject will be "Affil- 

 iation." Mr. Reid intimates that "Af- 

 filiation" will be in harmony with 

 ' * Zeitgeist, ' ' Charles Fox 's now famous 

 discourse on "The Spirit of the 

 Times." 



William Swayne, of Kennett, Pa., 

 went trout fishing April 15. Mr. 

 Swayne is fish warden of Kennett, so 

 you may rest assured that he began on 

 just the right day and caught just the 

 right number of speckled beauties. 



Israel Rosnosky left April 21 on a 

 trip t(f New England: 



Samuel S. Pennock visited Coates- 

 ville, Ronks, Stroudsburg and Paradise 

 last week, after speaking at Lancaster. 



Gilbert Baker opened the fishing sea- 

 son on a New Jersey lake April 20, and 

 he was nearly capsized in a lively gale. 



The M. Rice Co. received this week 

 a unique memento of the flood in Day- 



ton. It was in th« form of a check in 

 payment of a number of invoices for 

 shipments to a customer there. The 

 check is dated March 13, and both it 

 and the invoices have been watersoaked 

 and covered with mud, having been 

 over a month in the trip from Dayton 

 to Philadelphia. 



In reply to a jocular remark that the 

 great sometimes work, W. J. Sherry 

 aptly replied that they could not be- 

 come great unless they did. 



The Robert Craig Co. has been suc- 

 cessful in raising an exceptionally fine 

 lot of small chrysanthemums. Phil. 



Oshkosh, Wis. — Victor Nelson, of the 

 John Nelson Co., is having exceptional 

 success with Mrs. Lawson carnation 

 this season. His present crop does not 

 look as though the variety has played 

 out. 



Nashville, Tenn.— It is said that Wat 

 Schleicher has filed suit against the 

 Joy Floral Co. to recover $5,000 dam- 

 ages alleged to have been sustained re- 

 cently while he was in the employ of 

 the company. 



