70 



The Florists^ Review 



June 19, 1919. 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



1109 Grand Avenue 



Suoo«aaors to Geo. M. KelloBB Floral Co. 



Wholesale Florists 



KANSAS CITY, MO. 



ROSES AND CARNATIONS 



DELPHINIUMS, GLADIOLI, CALLAS, GYPSOPHILAS, DAISIES and Other Seasonable Flowers 



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



Carnations, $2,00 to $3.00 per 100 



New Northern Ferns, $4.00 per 1000 Sprengeri and Plumosus, 50c per bunch 



OVER 800,000 rCET OF GLASS 



Home Phone Main 2765 

 Bell Phone Grand 2765 



Greenhouses : 

 PLEASANT HILL, MO. 



Mention The Bavlew when you write. 



in existence about five years, having 

 been founded in the autumn of 1914. 

 The lack of interest is undoubtedly due 

 to divided interests on the part of the 

 members, the majority of whom belong 

 to the Florists' and Gardeners' Club of 

 Pittsburgh. Then, too, the florists and 

 gardeners of the Sewickley valley orig- 

 inally were aflUiated with the Horticul- 

 tural Society of Western Pennsylvania, 

 but finding the journey too long to the 

 East Liberty Carnegie library audito- 

 rium, where the meetings were usually 

 held, withdrew to form a local organi- 

 zation of their own. 



Wllklssburg Notes. 



Miss Helen Louise Lehman has be- 

 come saleswoman for J. Leo Giesey, of 

 Bebecca street, succeeding Misses Cath- 

 erine McGivern and Helen Schott. 



William M. Turner, of Penn avenue, 

 has installed the Skinner irrigating sys- 

 tem on his 7-acre farm on Laketon road, 

 Penn township. The farm is now under 

 the care of Douglas James, who has suc- 

 ceeded his brother, Walter James, the 

 latter having returned to his old job of 

 superintending the greenhouses on the 

 W. Henry R. Hilliard estate. 



Corporal Wesley A. Mellon has re- 

 turned to the employ of Miss Emma B. 

 Maxwell, of Wood street, after about a 

 year's service in France with the 103rd 

 Motor Supply Train. 



William E. Shackelford, who has been 

 in the salesroom of William M. Turner 

 for several years, expects to spend two 

 or three weeks in July at his former 

 home in Richmond, Va., combining busi- 

 ness with pleasure. 



Various Notes. 



C. Leroy Kirkley anticipates spend- 

 ing a two or three weeks' vacation 

 sometime this summer at his old home 

 in Baltimore. Mr. Kirkley came to 

 Pittsburgh about two years ago and 

 now has a flourishing business in the 

 busiest section of the south side. 



Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Ludwig have 

 gone to their farm at Ludwig Station, 

 near Mars, Pa. Their sojourn there will 

 last three months. The elder son, De 

 Forest W. Ludwig, will remain at his 

 town house and supervise the store, 

 while his brother, Edward Earl Ludwig, 

 will camp out with his parents and 

 commute back and forth. He and his 

 fiancee, Miss Jane McDaniels, of Wil- 

 kinsburg, just returned from a few 

 days' visit in Martinsburg, W. Va., 

 where they were members of the wed- 

 ding party of B. G. Pratt, Jr., of Hack- 



FANCY GLADIOLI 



Best Varieties, both Greenhouse Grown 

 and Outdoors 



GLADIOLI ..6c to 10c 



RUSSELLS 6c to 14c 



COLUMBIAS 6c to 12c 



OPHELIAS 4c to 8c 



SHORT ROSES ... 3c to 5c 



EASTER LILIES 12c 



DELPHINIUMS .... 4c to 8c 



CARNATIONS 3c 



Fancy Ferns, per 1000, $4.50 

 Sprengeri, bunch 50c 



T. J. NOLL & CO., 



1108-10 Grand Avenue, KANSAS CITY, MO. 



Mention TTie ReTlew when you write. 



Per 100 



PLUMOSUS ( '"sEeir ) $2.00 



ASP. EDULIS for greens ( '^TX'X: ) .50 



CUT GLADIOLI (^•'^L'.erteS.r^" ) 6.00 

 CUT TUBEROSES (irJiTX) 3.00 



IMPERIAL GARDENS 



SUGAR LAND, TEXAS 



100,000 Cut GLADIOLUS AMERICA and Assorted Colors 



$6.00 to $8.00 p«r 100 



ExceptionaUy fin* »tock WIRE or PHONE We ahip anywhere 



WASHINGTON GARDENS, 3018 Wishnftoi Ave., HontttD, Texas. 



ensack, N. J., an old chum of Mr. Lud- 

 wig at Cornell University. 

 Isaac M. Baversdorfer was a recent 



visitor in the city, in the interests of 

 H. Bayersdorfer & Co., of Philadelphia, 

 Pa. E. E. S. 



