﻿52 



The Florists' Review 



Afsil 15, 1920 



LIKE LEATHER -ALWAYS PLIABLE 



MAGNOLIA LEAVES 



Hi 



' ' Money Talks" (it is said) . So trive 



it a chance to say "something." 



If money can talk, here's a chance 



for the "almighty dollar" to make 



SOME HOLLER . 



Prepared by 



o 



S 



I- 



o 



REEVES ins 



COLORS: 

 Brown, Green or Purple 



PBIOE 



PER CARTON 



romcrly owned NATURAL FOLIAGE CO., 



of Savannah, Qa., and St. Louis, Mo. 



25 lbs. of leaves. . . .$ 4.50 



50 lbs. of leaves 8.00 



lOO lbs. of leaves 15.00 



If Red la wanted add 16 per cent. 



YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD 



WITH PROPER REFERENCE 



Southern Decorative E vergreens 



SMILAX 



D 

 P 

 

 0) 

 M 



i 



M 



X 



Standard Cases, $3.00 

 Half Cases 2.00 



NOTICE 



We have enlarged our plant. 



Can make prompt shipments. 



No order too large or 



too small 



Let us book your 



future orders for 



Fancy Perns 



Dagger Perns 



Huckleberry Poliage 



Water Oak Poliage 



REEVES FOLIAGE CO., Inc., Brewton, Ala. 



SURE TO PLEASE 



Mwttl— TtM Herlaw when yon writ*. 



large quantities, the gladiolus bemg 

 conspicuous as a newcomer. Spanish 

 iris, pansies, snapdragons and daisies 

 are in good demand, and myosotis, 

 lupines, delphiniums, mignonette, calen- 

 dulas, primroses, lilac and wallflowers 

 clean up well at remunerative prices. 

 Sweet peas move well, at 50 cents to $3 

 per hundred, and violets, which are 

 favored by the cool weather, are bring- 

 ing 50 cents to 75 cents per hundred. 



Various Notes. 



April 26 the new wholesale market in 

 the old Greenhut building, or Siegel- 

 Cooper building, as most people prefer 

 to call it, Sixth avenue, Eighteenth to 

 Nineteenth street, is to open with a 

 good list of tenants. The large ground- 

 floor space, which is occupied, has been 

 remodeled to suit the purposes of the 

 market, and walls and ceilings painted 

 white. The store, or booth, of each 

 wholesaler embodies every requirement 

 for the business. The booths are sep- 

 arated from each other by 8-foot par- 

 titions and front on Eighteenth and 

 Nineteenth streets, with a 25-foot cen- 

 tral aisle running east and west, with 

 entrances on each street. Roman J. 

 Irwin's offices and seed and bulb store 

 are located on the mezzanine floor, 

 fronting on Nineteenth street, and it is 

 expected that the remainder of this 

 floor will shortly be occupied by other 

 interests allied to the florists' business. 

 The following wholesalers will be found 

 on opening day in the new quarters: J. 

 K. Allen, J. S. Fenrich, H. E. Froment, 

 the Henshaw Floral Co., William Badg- 

 Icy, John Young & Co., P. J. Smith, 

 M. C. Ford, J. J. Coan, James McManus, 



Wire Hanging Baskets 



Our baskets are made strong and substantial, 

 wejl painted, have strong wire hangers and are 

 guaranteed to be the best on the market. Will 

 outlast many other makes. 



Size (Measure across top) Per doz. 



10 inches $3.00 



12 inches 4.00 



14 inches 5.00 



16 inches 6.00 



GREEN SHEET MOSS 



For Lining Hanging Baslceta, Etc 



Per large &ize bag $3.00 



Geo. H. Angermueller Co. 



Wholesale Floriata 1324 Pine St.. ST. LOUIS, MO. 

 Get Our List of Other Supplies— It's Free 



ManUoa Tfc> Bmtj&w wfcen yen write. 



E. C. Horan, I. Goldstein, C. Slinn, B. 

 Jacobs, Dolansky & McDonald, George 

 Polykranas, William Mackie, S. Gilbert 

 and Edward Brenner. The Hudson tube 

 station is beneath the building, the 

 Sixth avenue elevated passes it and 

 Seventh avenue and Broadway subway 

 stations are only about a block away; 

 therefore transportation facilities are 

 excellent. In a way, the market is a 

 realization of the dreams of some of 

 the older wholesale men of a concen- 

 tration of wholesale florists' interests. 



The Von Tilzer "Say It with F]o\\-- 

 ers" song was on sale in New York ^^ 

 the beginning of the week in Columbia 

 phonograph record form and will, douht- 

 less, be on sale in other cities as soon 

 as express conditions will permit. Those 

 who have heard the record played s.tv 

 that it is tiptop. 



At the beginning of the week, p"^' 

 press service had become completely dC' 

 moralized within the two or three days 

 previous, owing to the great strike on 

 the railroads. Passenger service ^v^^ 



