. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. tgo4. The American Florist. 623. FRONT AND BACK VIEWS OF CARNATION JOHN E. HAINES. Ellwanger & Barry have extensive dis- plays of well selected nursery stock. A preliminary schedule of floricultural exhibitions will be issued soon. H. J. Weber & Sons, St. Louis, make extensive displays of nursery stock. Superintendent Hadkinson's office is in the Horticulture building. Peter Brown, of Lancaster, Pa., has his pansy exhibit in good shape. Vaughan's cannas and phlox will make conspicuous attractions. Charles


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. tgo4. The American Florist. 623. FRONT AND BACK VIEWS OF CARNATION JOHN E. HAINES. Ellwanger & Barry have extensive dis- plays of well selected nursery stock. A preliminary schedule of floricultural exhibitions will be issued soon. H. J. Weber & Sons, St. Louis, make extensive displays of nursery stock. Superintendent Hadkinson's office is in the Horticulture building. Peter Brown, of Lancaster, Pa., has his pansy exhibit in good shape. Vaughan's cannas and phlox will make conspicuous attractions. Charles Vick is on hand with the New York state exhibit. Some St. Louis hotels have doubled regular rates. Greenhouse Building;. Whitman, Mass.—R. E. Moir, one house. Utica, N. Y.—F. J. Baker, six rose houses, each 18x150 feet. Syracuse, N. Y.—Lyman C. Smith, con- servatory. Bar Harbor, Me.—F. H. Moses, store and greenhouses. Groton, Conn.—Plant estate, range of conservatories. Woodside, N. J.—Edw. Hahn, conser- vatory. Gloucester, Mass.—S. F. Haskell, house seventy-five feet long. Framingham, Mass.—S. J. Goddard, carnation house. Washington, D. C.—Department of Agriculture, eight houses, each 20x140 feet. Upsal, Pa.—Wm. Bayard, conservatory. Kingston, N. Y.—V. Burgevin's Sons, three houses, each 20x100 feet. Connellsville, Pa.—P. R. DeMuth, five houses, 14x140 feet. Springfield, O.—Eight greenhouses, each 170 feet long, are being erected by Charles N. Kriegbaum, a baker; Edward Kriegbaum and Lewis Campbell, for growing roses. Later additional houses will be built for general greenhouse pur- poses. THE CARNATION. J. H. Troy, of New York, says that the Fragrance carnation, a very fragrant light pink, sells remarkably well with him. From the Chicago Carnation Com- pany, Joliet, 111., we received some unusually fine blooms of the Cardinal carnation this week. The flowers were three and one-half inches in diameter and all that could be desired in form and color. W


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea