\ , ■■^T'y.v^^.^-^^. z- / • VT. 



:iv'r- vr ■^ '' '^'^ 



•; %/'^!i\ ' »',7 ^^' 



28 



The Florists^ Review 



JULT 81, 1919. 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



Buooesaora to Geo. M. Kallocc noral Co. . -W 



1109 Grand Avenue Wholesale Florists KANSAS CifY, MO. 



ROSES AND CARNATIONS 



DELPHINIUMS, GLADIOLI, SCABIOSA, GYPSOPHILAS, CANDYTUFT and Other Seasonable Flowers 



Killarney, Sunburst, Richmond, Ophelia, Shawyer, $3.00 to $10.00 per 100 

 Gladioli, $5.00 to $8.00 per 100. Carnations, $2.00 to $3.00 per 100. Gypsophila, 50c per bunch 



New Northern Ferns, $3.00 per 1000 Sprengeri and Plumosus, 50c per bunch 



OVER 500,000 FEET Or GLASS 



Home Phone Main 2765 

 BeU Phone Grand 2765 



Store closed all day Sunday. Open weekdays until 5 p. m. 



Sunday ahipplnflr orders accepted at Qreenhouaes: 



Pleasant Hill, Mo.. Phone 18 



of the outdoor crops in his locality are 

 in pretty bad condition on account of 

 the lack of rain. 



J. E. Jones, of the Advance Co., Eieh- 

 mond, Ind., was here last week. 



KANSAS CITY, MO. 



The Maxket. 



Stock is beginning to show the effects 

 of the hot, dry weather and there is prac- 

 tically little outdoor growth. The supply 

 of gladioli is about half what it should 

 be, but the quality is still good. Home- 

 grown Eussell roses are good, but they 

 and carnations are rather scarce. The 

 latter are $2 per hundred. Gladioli are 

 $6 and $8 per hundred,^ roses from $5 to 

 $12 per hundred and gypsophila, of 

 which there is plenty, 60 cents a bunch. 



Funeral work was heavy again last 

 week and there have been a number of 

 luncheon decorations, for which the cus- 

 tomers have generously and willingly 

 paid. 



.Various Notes. 



Miss Nettie Seymour, one of the chief 

 dependables of the W. L. Eock Flower 

 Co., is again on duty after a month's 

 vacation in Cleveland, Detroit and other 

 points in the east. 



Miss J. F. Murray will leave shortly 

 for a month's rest in Colorado. 



Among the recent visitors in the city 

 were Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Steinhauser, 

 Pittsburg, Kan., and E. E. Moss, Vinita, 

 Okla. 



Eay Blessing, of T. J. Noll & Co., has 

 returned from a two weeks' vacation 

 spent near Kansas City. 



Samuel Murray received a telegram, 

 July 25, telling of the death of his 

 brother, Eobert Murray, a contractor in 

 New York city. Mr. Murray had been 

 in poor health for some time, but his con- 

 dition was not regarded as Serious. He 

 was to have visited relatives in Kansas 

 City in September. Besides his brother 

 and two sisters, he is survived by his 

 wife and one daughter. 



Walter Newell and Dix Teachenor won 

 the doubles championship in the Kansas 

 City Athletic Club's city tennis tourna- 

 ment last week. These young men played 

 the doubles in the western tournament 

 at Eockhill the week of July 28. Mr. 

 Newell, who is the son of A. Newell, was 

 a crack tennis player at Missouri Uni- 

 versity and was a keen rival of Dix 

 Teachenor when the latter was a star 

 player for Kansas University. 



James Eagan, who consigns carnations 

 to T. J. Noll & Co., has no need to worry 



