. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. CARBUNEi i4t Boylaton St., BOSTON MMubcr noriats* Tderiph Delivery AssodaUM BOSTON, MASS. HENRY R. COMLEY. Florist, 6 Paris St. 50 years' experience in the florist business guarantees efSciency to take care of all orders. 20% allowed. receipts of azaleas, palms, etc., from Belgium this season. A. H. Hews & Co. have all their sheds filled with clay for the coming season—over 10,000 tons in all, ensur- ing an ample supply of pots. They fear the European war will seriously cripple the demand for pots. At Penn 's, funeral work continues good. The d
. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. CARBUNEi i4t Boylaton St., BOSTON MMubcr noriats* Tderiph Delivery AssodaUM BOSTON, MASS. HENRY R. COMLEY. Florist, 6 Paris St. 50 years' experience in the florist business guarantees efSciency to take care of all orders. 20% allowed. receipts of azaleas, palms, etc., from Belgium this season. A. H. Hews & Co. have all their sheds filled with clay for the coming season—over 10,000 tons in all, ensur- ing an ample supply of pots. They fear the European war will seriously cripple the demand for pots. At Penn 's, funeral work continues good. The decorating and painting of the store have been completed. The loss by drowning, August 13, of W. H. Diehl, one of the firm's most esteemed designers and decorators, caused con- siderable gloom here when the tidings came. The store which has been occupied by Edward MacMulkin, on Boylston street, for a number of years, now is closed and advertised to let. F. W. Fletcher & Co. have their bed of Antirrhinum Nelrose in good flower for convention week. They are adding two new greenhouses at their estab- lishment. J. T. Butterworth has had some fine Cattleya gigas this season; one plant carried seventy-five flowers. He still has a nice crop of Miltonia vexillaria, Phalsenopsis amabilis and Cattleyas Gaskelliana and Harrisoniae. Henry R. Comley has his store look- ing attractive for the convention. The repainting and new floor make a vast improvement. Trade, for the dull sea- son, continues satisfactory. The Boston Cut Flower Co. is spe- cializing on .^O-cent boxes of roses at present. Funeral trade has been good of late. Thomas and Charles Neil, of Dorchester, are enjoying a vacation on a farm near Portland, Me. The Fottler, Fiske, Rawson Co. was the first of the local firms to receive supplies of French bulbs. All the stores have now received some, with more on the way. W. .T. Collins, of Carter's Tested Seeds, Inc., is home from a business trip in New York state. His firm's. Or
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912