Business & Finance: Orchids

Business & Finance: Orchids
Most expensive of flowers is, of course, the orchid, for which
collectors have sometimes paid as much as $5,000 a plant. In the
tropics orchids are found as brilliant patches of color at the top of
high peaks or hidden in luxurious forests. In northern climates their
reproduction and culture is an exacting scientific task over which
specialists must labor for the seven years that elapse between the time
the orchid seed is planted and the day the flower bursts into bloom.Favored as the prime floral gift, the orchid has been an object on which
many a Wall Street dollar has been spent. Last week, however, to the
orchid industry went 2,500,000 Wall Street dollars, not squandered, but
carefully invested. The investors were Selected Industries, Inc., an
investment company headed by R. S. Revnolds and the affiliated Reybarn
Co., both of which are units in the $200,000,000 group of holding
companies headed by Chas. D. Barney & Co. The investment was the
purchase of Thomas Young Nurseries, Inc., of Bound Brook, N. J.To Selected Industries, Inc., whose holdings include a substantial
interest in Kraft-Phenix Cheese Co., last week's purchase was
consistent with a policy of investment in standard commodities. The
demand for orchids is constantly increasing, and the price has been
stable. Only companies with large capital, long experience, and
adequate plant facilities can supply the increasing demand. All these
conditions are met by the Thomas Young Nurseries, largest orchid
growers in the world. The 28 Young greenhouses are spread over 55
acres. Inside these greenhouses, where the native climate of each
species of orchid is reproduced, are some 500,000 orchid plants,
ranging from seedlings in little glass tubes to blooming flowers, with
stems inside specially corked bottles of water, ready for shipment.
Daily output of the Young Nurseries averages between 1,000 and 3,000
flowers, reaches such heights as 11,000 on Easter Sunday.

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