. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 86 The Florists^ Review J0LT 17. 1919. Beauties that have been arriving the last fortnight. The annual meeting of tlje Cincin- nati Florists' Society was held July 14 at the flower market. L. H. Kyrk has been getting in some excellent sweet sultan from George Klotter during the last fortnight. C H. H. PROVIDENCE. The Market. Outdoor sweet peas are arriving in great abundance and have completely cut the price on the greenhouse product, but the demand is somewhat limited. Asters are stronger each day, both as to quantity and quality. As carnations gr


. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 86 The Florists^ Review J0LT 17. 1919. Beauties that have been arriving the last fortnight. The annual meeting of tlje Cincin- nati Florists' Society was held July 14 at the flower market. L. H. Kyrk has been getting in some excellent sweet sultan from George Klotter during the last fortnight. C H. H. PROVIDENCE. The Market. Outdoor sweet peas are arriving in great abundance and have completely cut the price on the greenhouse product, but the demand is somewhat limited. Asters are stronger each day, both as to quantity and quality. As carnations grow scarcer, asters replace them, so that the market is well sustained for funeral work. Business is unusually quiet, and vacations, with renovation of shops, are now the order for the coming six weeks. Various Notes. Fred Hoflfman and family, of Paw- tucket, are at Oakland Beach for their summer vacation. Simon Colitz, of Woonsocket, is en- joying a vacation trip to Atlantic City. William Cohen, of Cohen Bi-os., Low- ell avenue, is to be married this month and will take a wedding trip through the White mountains. Joseph McCarthy, with Timothy O'Connor, is spending a two weeks' va- cation at Block Island. Hugo de Wildt, of the Elmwood •Greenhouses, who was operated on for appendicitis last week at the hospital, is reported as getting along satisfac- torily. Howard Vose, of Attleboro, has just purchased an automobile, in which he contemplates frequent trips this sum- mer. The Bank Street Greenhouses, of At- tleboro, had the family and store flow- ers for the funeral of A. Clisholm, a manufacturing jeweler of that town, last week. One piece was a 56-inch standing wreath of white roses. Louis J. Reuter, formerly of Wester- ly, now near Boston, visited his old home over the Fourth and participated in the trap shoot of the South County Rod and Gun Club. Charles Smith, of the Eastern Wreath Mfg. Co., was a business visitor in New York and Philadelphia last week. Frederick Dietz has


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912