. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. CYPRESS BY TEST. SUBSTITUTES BY TALK Is there value to you in an endurance test of 50 years in greenhouse sashf It is reported to us that sash made of heart Cypress by a prominent greenhouse contractor in Chicago and placed in position in a greenhouse at Des Plaines, 111., in 1868, are still doing service. Jacob Fries, Bethlehem, Pa., has Cypress sash that have stood the racket for 30 years and are still on the job. And these are not isolated cases—they represent no more than a fair test of "The Wood Eternal" for greenhouse use. It will s
. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. CYPRESS BY TEST. SUBSTITUTES BY TALK Is there value to you in an endurance test of 50 years in greenhouse sashf It is reported to us that sash made of heart Cypress by a prominent greenhouse contractor in Chicago and placed in position in a greenhouse at Des Plaines, 111., in 1868, are still doing service. Jacob Fries, Bethlehem, Pa., has Cypress sash that have stood the racket for 30 years and are still on the job. And these are not isolated cases—they represent no more than a fair test of "The Wood Eternal" for greenhouse use. It will serve you as well and save you the nuisance and expense of repairs and replacements. The argument backed by such facts cannot be answered by mere talk. Ask the manufacturer or eon- tractor who wants to give you a "substitute" for Cypress to cite you to an endurance test of 30 or 50 years to the credit of the so-called "; That is no more than a fair precaution on your part—good, ordinary business sense. If he would meet the Cypress record with more talk, and no test, then there's a "nigger in that wood- ; You know you would better pass up the "substitute" and stick to the real article, which is Cypress. "PECKY" CYPBE88. You greenhouse men know how common it looks and how uncommon it lasts. The U. S. Govt. Eept. (Forest Service Bui. 95) says—"That the disease (which produces the 'peck') has been a long time preying upon Cypress timber is apparent from an examination of Cypress logs dug from alluvial deposits many feet below the present level of the Gulf of Mexico. Some of that prehistoric timber is pecky, though it has been buried during a period estimated at no less than 30,000 years. . The effect of the disease (known as ' Pecky') . . is believed to act as a preservative . . and to hinder ; Is 30,000 years' "hindering of decay" long enough for YOUB greenhouset There la no known reco
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912