. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. OCTOBEB 12, 1922 The Rorists' Review 37 Will the steam (or air) and oil atom- ize in exactly the right proportions? Will the oil emerge from the jet-head with exactly the right "twist," without the necessity of a complicated motor- blower-compressor system? Can I keep an even flow of oil in ex- tremely cold weather? Will my pipes, valves, fittings, etc., be standard and of equal quality to the larger parts of the equipment? If you are persistent and insistent in your 'investigations along these lines and will see that your installation me


. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. OCTOBEB 12, 1922 The Rorists' Review 37 Will the steam (or air) and oil atom- ize in exactly the right proportions? Will the oil emerge from the jet-head with exactly the right "twist," without the necessity of a complicated motor- blower-compressor system? Can I keep an even flow of oil in ex- tremely cold weather? Will my pipes, valves, fittings, etc., be standard and of equal quality to the larger parts of the equipment? If you are persistent and insistent in your 'investigations along these lines and will see that your installation meets with these requirements, you can expect and obtain satisfactory results from oil burning. SHOW AT CAPITAL 25E5E525E5HS2S2S DAHLIA SHOW HELD. By Washington Florists. Gavel Club hall was filled with choice blooms last week when the Florists' Club of Washington, D. C, staged its first dahlia show. So pronounced was the success of the event that it was im- mediately announced that a chrysanthe- mum show would be held at the proper time. Several thousand people visited the show during the two days of the exhibition. A large number of out-of town people were seen a' the show. Some of these were heard to comment that, while there was a scarcity of new varieties in the exhibition, and the num- ber of exhibitors could have been much larger, the show on the whole was cred- itable. The success exceeded the antici- pations of tluise who were in charge. Special Fopttures. Chief interest in t?!^ show was in the exhibition made by John M. Boot, of CoUiugswood, N. J. The two dahlias which he exhibited received a great deal of attention. One of these, to be named for his wife, was a yellow hybrid cactus, which took first prize, consisting of a silver medal, at the Bryn Mawr show of the Pennsylvania Horticultural So- ciety; the other is a scarlet red decora- tive dahlia to be disseminated next year under the name Henry F. Michell. The largo exhibit of W. A. Orton, of the Department of Agricu


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912