Decembeb 6, 1918. 



The Florists* Review 



13 



The C. A. Dahl Co. Greenhouses at Atlanta Where Heroes go to School. 



Houston, Tex. 



Syracuse, N. Y. 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



New York City. 

 October 14 — 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Essex, Mass. 



Kansas City, Mo. 



Pittsburgh, Pa. 



Kankakee, 111. 



Auburn, Mass. 



Paterson, N. J. 

 October 15 — 



Trenton, N. J. 



New York City. 



Spokane, Wash. 



Plttston, Mass. 



Washington, D. C. 



Wilmington, Del. 



Ames, N. Y. 



Syracuse, N. Y. 



New York City. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 

 October 16 — 



Chicago, 111. 



Baltimore, Md. 



Paterson, N. J. 



Long Branch, N. J 



Hartford, Conn. 



Indianapolis, Ind. 



KnoxvlUe, Tenn. 



New York City. 



New York City. 

 October 17— 



Helena. Ark. 



Chicago, 111. 



Baltimore, Md. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



Dayton, O. 



Louisville, Ky. 

 October 18— 



Portland, Me. 



Bar Harbor. Me. 



Parmlngton, Conn. 



Cincinnati, O. 



Joliet, 111. 



Hartford, Conn. 



Pittsburgh, Pa. 



Hartford, Conn. 



New York City, 



Dayton, O. 



tJtica, N. Y. 



Albany, N. Y. 

 October 19— 



Hudson, N. Y. 



Albany, N. Y. 



Farmlngton, Conn. 



Rochester, Mass. 



Providence, R. I. 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



San Francisco. Cal. 



Philadelphia. Pa. 



Cleveland, O. 



Danville, Me. 

 October 21 — 



l«s Angeles, Cal. 



Montreal, Que. 



Detroit, Mich. 



Concord, N. H. 



Hartford. Conn. 



It is a list that 



New York City. 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



Indianapolis. 

 October 22— 



Eugene, Ore. 



North Adams. Mass. 



New York City. 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Washington, D. C. 

 October 23— 



New York City. 



New Rochelle, N. Y. 



Hartford, Conn. 



New York City. 



Jackson. Tenn. 



St. John. Me. 



Los Angeles, Cal. 



Columbus, O. 

 October 24 — 



T'niontown, Pa. 



Plattsburg, N. Y. 



New York City. 



Chicago, 111. 



Brooklyn, N. Y, 



Troy, N. Y. 

 October 25— 



Malone, N. Y. 



Newark, N. J. 



Baltimore. Md. 



New York City. 



Buffalo. N. Y. 

 October 26— 



Englewood, N. J. 



Fargo, N. D. 



Weehawken. N. J. 



Norfolk. Va. 



Milwaukee. Wis. 



Brooklyn, N. Y, 



New Haven. Conn. 



Chicago. 111. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 

 October 28 — 



IjOs Angeles, Cal. 



Washington, D. C. 



New York City. 



Pittsburgh, Pa. 

 October 29— 



Cedar Rapids. la. 



New York City. 



Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Williamsport, Pa. 



St. Johnsbury, Vt. 



Austin. 111. 



Richmond. Va. 



Washington, D. C. 

 October 30 — 



Washington, D. C. 



Biddeford, Me. 

 October 31 — 



Scranton, Pa. 



Cleveland, O. 



Hudson. N. Y. 



Brooklyn. N. Y. 



Sacramento, Cal. 



Ix)ui8ville, Ky. 



Bridgeport, Conn. 



Hartford, Conn. 



Pottsville, Pa. 



will afford interesting 



study; a great many cities, widely scat- 

 tered. Perhaps yours is on it. Did you 

 get the order? 



Only a Part of the Orders. 



This of course was not the extent of 

 the business done by the Penn store, 

 as many orders were received and sent 

 through the Postal Telegraph Co. and by 

 mail and telephone. 



Mr. Penn is just as strong for ad- 

 vertising the F. T. D. as he is to spread 

 the gospel of the S. A. F. slogan, "Say 

 It with Flowers." In the Boston news- 

 papers just previous to Thanksgiving 

 the Penn store had large advertisements, 

 each carrying "Say It with Flowers" 

 at the top and a statement of the tele- 

 graph delivery service at the bottom. 



BUSINESS EMBABBASSMENTS. 



Wilmette, HI. — Sydney C. Eastman, 

 referee in bankruptcy representing the 

 T^. S. court for the northern district of 

 Illinois, has set 10 a. m., December 12, 

 as the date for the hearing in the case 

 of Pyfer & Olsem, The place is room 

 907, Monadnock block, Chicago. 



SAFE AT BBUOES. 



A British trade paper learns that the 

 business at the nursery of Sander & 

 Sons, at St. Andre, Bruges, Belgium, has 

 been carried on by the staff during the 

 four years the town has been in the 

 occupation of the Germans. Messrs. 

 Sander have received a letter from the 

 manager, T. Mellstrom, who is well 

 known to many readers of The Eeview 

 because of his journeys in the United 

 States, informing them that he is well, 

 but that the nursery has suffered con- 

 siderable damage, mainly in broken 

 glass. He also states that they have 

 been able to maintain a portion of the 

 stock of plants. It is regrettable that 

 the head of the clerical department was 

 killed on the day before the town was 

 liberated. During the earlier part of 



the war business was possible, mainly 

 with America, but in recent times all 

 communication with the head establish- 

 ment at St. Albans has ceased, and there 

 was no knowledge as to whether the 

 nursery was even in existence. 



It is to be hoped, says the Gardeners' 

 Chronicle, that the many large nursery 

 establishments in and about Ghent may 

 be equally fortunate in escaping total 

 destruction, as the nursery trade of 

 Ghent and Bruges was one of the prin- 

 cipal industries of this part of Belgium. 



ASK ME! ASK ME!! 



A. S., N. J. — We have heard of no 

 successful way of using salt spray for 

 red spider on carnations except through 

 the device patented by John A. Evans 

 Co., Richmond, Ind. Fill the sprayer 

 with rock salt; it mixes automatically. 



C. N. W., 111.— Address the Federal 

 Horticultural Board, Washington, D. C. 

 Blanks will be supplied if a permit is 

 necessary. 



F. C. S., Wis. — Address John Young, 

 Manager, S. A. F. Publicity Bureau, 

 1170 Broadway, New York. 



C. R. R., Mass. — There is no book 

 dealing specially with lily of the valley. 

 See the chapter on the subject by H. N. 

 Bruns in Bailey's Standard Cyclopedia 

 of Horticulture. 



C. H. B., Wash. — It is a trade secret; 

 this accounts for different supply houses 

 putting out various shades of red. 



LATE PEONIES. 



I would like to know of the latest 

 blooming varieties of peonies. 



J. P. H.— Mo. 



A few good late peonies for your pur- 

 pose would be Baroness Schroeder, Mar- 

 guerite Gerard, Couronne d'Or, Kel- 

 way's Queen, Livingstone, Duke of 

 Wellington, Marie Lemoine, Felix 

 Crousse and Charlemagne. C. W. 



