NOVEMBBB 14, 1912. 



Thc^Florists' Review 



2 



33 



Manus force, is confined to his home 

 with a severe ankle sprain. 



Woodrow & Merketos report having 

 disposed of immense quantities of box- 

 wood this fall. 



The florists' supplies department of 

 Geo. Cotsonas & Co. has developed a 

 large business, especially with those of 

 Mr. Cotsonas' nationality. 



P. H. Goodsell has leased for twenty 

 years eleven acres of the Astor farm 

 in the upper part of New York, 164 

 feet of the property on the Bronx river, 

 giving splendid facilities for shipping to 

 Connecticut and Hudson river territory. 

 Mr. Goodsell, who has been ill for many 

 weeks, has fully recovered. 



Philip Einsman, of Astoria, has re- 

 turned from Sullivan county, much im- 

 proved in health. He will make a trip 

 to Kichmond, Va., in company with 

 Messrs. Scott, Miesem, Dorval and Don- 

 aldson. J. Austin Shaw. 



Rose Milady. 



ican Institute was so crowded there was 

 not room for his firm 's handsome ex- 

 hibit of orchids and blooming and 

 foliage plants. 



The show cards supplied to the retail 

 florists of New York and cities within 

 a 50-mile radius for Thanksgiving by 

 the publicity committee of the New 

 York Florists' Club are now ready for 

 distribution. 



Charles Lenker, of Freeport, has re- 

 turned from a two months' holiday in 

 Europe. 



Charles Millang sold last week to 

 Charles Beckman, Jr., and Chas. Lust- 

 garten, of Elmhurst, each a Ford busi- 

 ness car and a 1913 touring car. 



E. H. Behre and A. P. Smith, of 

 Madison, are both cutting fine Mary- 

 land. They consign to Moore, Hentz 

 & Nash. 



Arthur T. Boddington received 500 

 cases of spiraea from Holland last week. 

 In the window they have Solanum 

 capsicastrum Melvini, originated last 

 season by Charles Pfaff, gardener to 

 George Melvin, South Framingham, 

 Mass. 



Recent visitors were A. J. Loveless, 

 A. H. Wingett and Edwin and Allen 

 Jenkins, all of Lenox, Mass.; Robert 

 Spiers, of Dalton, and Ernest Wild, 

 of Madison, N. J. 



Geo. Ditzenberger, of the Woodcliff 

 Floral Co., Woodcliffe, N. J., one of 

 the leading shippers to the Growers' 

 Cut Flower Co., November 9 was re- 

 ported ill at a hospital in Hackensack, 

 N. J., with little hope of his recov- 

 ery, 



Traendly & Schenck have been ship- 

 ping large quantities of their best mums 

 and Radiance, Sunburst and Salmon 

 Queen to the south and middle west. 

 They are much pleased with their suc- 

 cess at the flower shows. 



Wm. Herbert and David, his son, were 

 the guests of Gunther Bros, last week, 

 to whom they have shipped many thou- 

 sands of dahlias this season. 



Shannon, of Fort Hamilton avenue, 

 Brooklyn, will open a flower store next 

 week on Flatbush avenue, near Dor- 

 chester road. 



J. Weir Hartley, nephew of John 

 Weir, the veteran retailer of Brooklyn, 

 will open a new store this week on 

 Church avenue, Flatbush, near the sta- 

 tion of the B. R. T. 



Wm. Hay, of Oaklawn, R. I., was the 

 guest of J. K. Allen last week. 



M. A. Bowe had a big wedding deco- 

 ration in Brooklyn November 11. 



George Siebrecht, of the firm of Sie- 

 brecht & Siebrecht, who has been ill 

 for several weeks at his home in Chap- 

 pequa, is convalescing and is expected 

 back in the wholesale district at the 

 end of the present week. 



James Hammond, of the James Mc- 



BUSINESS EMBABBASSMENTS. 



Oil City, Pa. — It is reported that the 

 stock of Fred C. Greene's range, at the 

 corner of Innis and Seventh streets, 

 has been sold at sheriff's auction, and 

 that th6 greenhouses were to be va- 

 cated by November 11. 



TBOUBLE WITH PLUMOSUS. 



I am sending you some sprays of 

 Asparagus plumosus and ask you to 

 note the condition of the ends. The 

 dried places extend all through the 

 bench. I have just taken charge of 

 this establishment and do not know 

 anything about the way the crop has 

 been handled, but at present the soil, 

 water and everything else seem to be 

 all right. I think they have been run 

 a little too dry at some time, but I 

 should like to have your opinion. 



E. S. C. 



Lack of water seems to have been the 

 cause of this trouble, which has proba- 

 bly been aggravated by insufl5cient ven- 

 tilation during the warm weather. 

 There do not appear to be any insects 

 on the asparagus, such as red spiders 

 or thrips, and with proper care as to 

 water, heat and fertilizers there should 

 be no further difficulty. W. H. T. 



House of Rose Milady at A. N. Pierson's, G-omwell, Conn. 



