. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. tgoj. The American Florist. 1101 Organization and system form the key to this institution and were well ex- •emplified in the commodious business offices occupying the second floor of two adjoining buildings, on the first floor of ?which are the post office and one of the town's two banks. The largest room of the suite, a comer of which is shown in our illustration, is devoted to the corre- spondence work, the volume of which CHRYSANTHEMUMS The Chrysanthemum. ITS PAST. PRESENT FUTURE. A paper by C. H. Totty,


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. tgoj. The American Florist. 1101 Organization and system form the key to this institution and were well ex- •emplified in the commodious business offices occupying the second floor of two adjoining buildings, on the first floor of ?which are the post office and one of the town's two banks. The largest room of the suite, a comer of which is shown in our illustration, is devoted to the corre- spondence work, the volume of which CHRYSANTHEMUMS The Chrysanthemum. ITS PAST. PRESENT FUTURE. A paper by C. H. Totty, Madison, N. J., re<ad before the ' .and Flo- rists' Club of Boston, June 18, 1907. The chrysanthemum, in Its various forms as grown today, is essentially modern In Its varieties and it is a far. THE MOSB.«;ii GREENHOUSE CO., ONARGA, ILL. Asparaj^us plunio^us uu left—Mi^celliineous bedding stock on right. can be judged from the fact that the shipping business is necessarily conduct- ed through the trade press and the cour- tesy of Uncle Sam. In New Jersey. Komitsch & Junge of Secaucus, N. J., in addition to the orchids with which they are stocking up, have fine crops of lilies, sweet peas and chrysanthemums coming on. They are now working the Wiegand Bros, range, where this season they to grow over 100,000 chrys- anthemums. At the main range work is now being pushed on the installation of two new Lord & Burnham boilers. Herman Schoeltzel of New Durham, has a house, 250 feet long, filled with Scottii ferns. The uniformity and excellent quality of the stock makes it noteworthy. He is also showing fine stocks of kentias and araucarias. On the Ferdinand Tschupp estate, Union Hill, of which Joseph RafTerzedes is foreman, very fine crops of Ulrich Brunner rose are now coming in. Paul Riechert, who has had a suc- cessful season with bulbous and pot stocks, is now preparing for chrysanthe- mums. Emerson McFadden, of Short Hills, is pushing work on the r


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea