34 



The Florists^ Review 



JuNB 3, 1920 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



1121 Grand Ave. 



Buoessaora to 0«o. M. KallocB noiml Co. 



Wholesale Florists 



Kansas City, Mo. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



Roses 



Ophelia Per 100. 



Richmond Per 100, 



Sunburst Per 100, 



Sha%vyer.. Per 100. 



Klllamey Per 100, 



Kalserin Per 100, 



S4.00 to Slo 09 

 4.00 to 15 00 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 



15 00 

 15.00 

 15.00 

 15.00 



CARNATIONS Per 100, $ 2.00 to S 4.00 



EASTER LILIES Per 100, 12.50 to 20.00 



CALLA LILIES Per 100. 12.50 to 16.00 



Miscellaneous 



Peonies Per 100. $4.00 to 



Sweet Peas Per 100, 1.00 to 



Snapdragon Per 100, 8.00 to 



Calendula Per 100. 3 00 to 



Adiantum Per 100, 



Sprengerl, Plumosus Per bunch, 



Smilax Per dozen. 



Ferns Per 1000. 



I 8 00 

 2 00 



16 00 

 6 00 

 2 00 

 .50 

 3.00 

 6.00 



Home Phone Main 2765 

 Bell Phone Grand 2765 



Store dosed all day Sunday. Open weekdays until 5x80 p. 

 Sunday shipping orders accepted at Oreenhouses: 

 Pleasant Hill, Mo., Phone 18 



OVER 500,000 FEET OF GLASS 



This Is All Good Stock 



ASPLENIUM NIDUS-AVIS 



(Bird's-NestFern) 



Heavy, 4-in 76c each 



Heavy, 3-in 60c each 



Good Strong Table Ferns 



3-in $15.00 per 100 



PANDANUS VEITCHII 



4-in 76c each 



6-in $1.00 and $1.26 each 



6-in 2.00and 2.26each 



BOSTON FERNS 



4-in 35c each 



5-in 50c and 75c each 



6-in $1.00 and $1.25 each 



7-in 2.26 and 2.50 each 



8-in 3.00and 3.60 each 



MACAWII FERN- New 



Good 4-in . . 60c and 75c each 



HOLLY FERN 



4-in. .. 35c each 



Packed in paper pots. Packing 5% 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



Wholasalo Stora: 

 Kansas City, Mo. 



SHCcassors to Oao. M. Kalloas Floral Co. 

 WHOLESALE FLORISTS 

 Greenhouses: PLEASANT HILL, MO. 



Cash or satisfactory references 

 Part cash if C. 0. D. 



the cut of roses, especially Premier and 

 Columbia, from young plants will be 

 large this summer. Considerable space 

 still is given to Beauty for the summer 

 crop. 



A novel and yet simple system of 

 keeping track of peonies is being used 

 by A. T. Pyfer & Co. They supplied 

 each consignor with small, strong ship- 

 ping tags on which the consignor's dis- 

 tinguishing number had been printed. 

 With one of these tied into the string 

 on each bunch of peonies all chance for 

 confusion is removed. 



P. C. Schupp says that the sales of 

 the J. A. Budlong Co. were as much in 

 the first four months of 1920 as in the 

 first five months of 1919, while May 

 shows an increase of over forty per 

 cent. He believes production again 

 next winter will be far short of the de- 

 mand, no matter how great it may be 

 during warm weather. 



H. B. Kennicott reports that the crew 

 of Kennicott Bros. Co. worked until 2 

 a. m. for three nights last week. They 

 were packing peonies. 

 * "Paul Klingsporn has a rievv M-rrl^rn?- 

 Knight, the big 6-cylinder sport model. 



G. Swenson, the eminently successful 

 Elmhurst grower, is 76 years of age and 

 is beginning to weary of business. He 

 will sell his property and retire when 

 a favorable opportunity arises. 



Edward Hunt, with the Chicago Flow- 

 er Growers' Association, buried his fa- 

 ther May 29. 



The lady who was Miss Winifred 

 Owen, now Mrs. John Owen Evans, 

 known to many in the trade as the man- 

 ufacturer of high-class bouquet holders, 

 corsage shields, brides' muffs, etc., has 

 removed her factory to Jamestown, Colo. 



The Wise Owl Says 



ORDER 

 PYFER'S 

 PEONIES 



Best Varieties at Lowest Prices 



YELLOW DAISIES 



Roses, Carnations, Sweet Peas 

 IN LARGI: supply for you in JUNE 



A • A • j y^b:ir^ S ^^ji.p& ir 



Our Motto: "Nothing is too much trouble to please a customer." 

 164 NORTH WABASH AVENUE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 



Mention The Eevlew when you write. 



Mrs. Evans took her departure May 30. 

 A. L. Vaughan celebrated his fifty- 

 sixth birthday anniversary .Tune 1. 



Visitors. 



W. T. Usinger, of Pittsburgh, has 



been here this week. Mr. TTsinger was 

 one of the last of the trade's repre- 

 sentatives to return from the great war 

 and he developed so great a liking for 

 France that he has booked passage on 

 the St. Paul to sail from New York 



