:■' ,jrf^'». ' . 



38 



i^lbttes^ J^cwfew 



JUMB 10, 1920. 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



% %t%% /^ 1 A Buooaasora to Qmo. M. K«11obk Floiml Co. w^ /^a «» 



llZl brand Ave. whoiesau Fiarhts Kansas tity. Mo. 



WE ARE NOW OFFERING A BIG SUPPLY of Columbia, RaMcll, QpheUa and other Rosm of line qvaUtlcs, cut fresh from 

 our own Greenhouses daljy. Plenty of stock of all Idnds for June Weddings and Commencements. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



Miscellaneous 



Roses 



Russell Per 100, 



Columbia Per 100, 



Ophelia Per 100, 



Killamey Per 100, 



Sunburst Per 100. 



Richmond Per 100, 



Kaiserln Per 100, 



S6.00 to S25.00 

 6.00 to 20.00 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 

 4.00 to 



15.00 

 16 00 

 15.00 

 15.00 

 16.00 



Valley .Per 100. 



Gypsophila Per bunch. 



Home Phone Main 2765 

 BeO Phone Grand 2765 



8.00 to 12.00 

 .76 to 1.00 



Store closed all day Sunday. 



CARNATIONS Per 100, S 3.00 to $ 5.00 



EASTER LILIES Per 100, 12.00 to 20.00 



CALLA LILIES Per 100, 12.00 to 16.00 



Snapdragon Per 100, 6.00 to 10.00 



Delphinium Per 100, 10.00 



Adiantum Per 100, 2 00 



Sprengeri, Plumosus Per bunch, .60 



Smilax Per dozen, 3.00 



Open weekdays nntil 5:S0 p. m 

 Sunday shlpplns orders accepted at Qrecnhouscs: 

 Pleasant Hill, Mo., Phone 18 



Ferns At market price 



OVER 500,000 FEET OF GLASS 



Field-Grown Carnation Plants 



We are booking orders for July Delivery. Price, $90.00 per 1000. 150,000 

 extra strong, good, healthy plants. 



Cyclamen Plants 



We are booking orders for heavy 4-inch Cyclamen, July Delivery, 40c each. 

 We advise placing your order now, as stock is scarce. 



PINEHURST FLORAL CO. 



WholoMi* Storw 

 Kansas Ctty, Mo. 



«• Q—. M. K a M a ss Ftoral Ca. 

 WHOLESALE FLORISTS 

 Greenhotises: PLEASANT HILL, MO. 



Cash or satisfactory references 

 Part cash if C. 0. D. 



the trip in the new 6-cylinder Knight 

 and visited growers at Bichmond and 

 New Castle en route. 



A. Miller, of the A. B, C, is enter- 

 taining his brother from Texas. 



Frank M. Johnson and Eric Johnson 

 made a trip last week to Traverse City, 

 Mich., to inspect the factory of the 

 Johnson-Randall Co. They made the 

 trip in Frank Johnson's new Cadillac. 



The express company once more is 

 giving daily pick-up service in the 

 market up to 5 p. m., another indication 

 that the war is over. 



After a serious illness with pneu- 

 monia, Bert Cole was able, June 7, to 

 resume his duties with the E. C. Amling 

 Co. He says the remembrances received 

 during the six weeks spent in the hos- 

 pital and the welcome accorded him on 

 his return to his post have served to 

 show him, as nothing else ever did, how 

 many warm friends he has. 



Emil Buettner has returned from a 

 trip to Eagle Eiver, Wis., where the 

 Buettner family will summer as usual. 



George Goehst has bought the business 

 of Charles Kaester at 11030 Fairfield 

 avenue, Morgan Park. 



The twenty-third bank stockholders' 

 number of the Post, published June 5, 

 shows that Albert F. Amling, florist, 

 owns 116 shares of the Maywood State 

 Bank, of which he is vice-president, 

 and an equal number of shares in the 

 affiliated Melrose Park State Bank. 

 Other florist stockholders in the two 

 institutions are Herman G. Amling, 

 Herbert A. Amling and William Collatz, 

 five shares each. 



William A. Peterson, proprietor of 

 Peterson Nursery, recently returned 

 from a 5-day visit in Philadelphia full 



T. J. NOU FLORAL CO. 



OPEN FOR BUSINESS 



New Address, 1117-1119 McGee St., 

 Kansas City, Mo, 



Handling Kansas City Grown Stock Exclusively 



WATCH THIS SPACE FOR FUTURE ANNOUNCEMENTS 



of enthusiasm concerning the progress 

 made by the American Iris Society since 

 its formation January 29, 1920. Mr. 

 Peterson is vice-president of the society 

 and acted as one of the judges of the 

 iris show held in John Wanamaker's 

 store, where six exhibitors each showed 

 fifty blooms of fifty different varieties. 

 On his way back he stopped at Wooster, 

 O., and inspected the state experi- 

 mental farm, where much work of value 

 to the trade is being done. 



John P. Degnan, once familiarly 

 known as the King of Ireland, says a 

 rose by any other name might smell as 

 sweet, in accordance with the Shake- 



V 



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y -^ w CHOICE -^ ^ 



A L L E 



— Per 100, $8.00 



= lieave yoor order with oa for regular ahipmenta = 



I C. A. KUEHNwHoSm FLORIST I 



g 1313 Pine St.. 8t. L,oa\». Mo. □ 



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spearean view, but at Henderson's Seed 

 Store it has been demonstrated much 

 sales value reposes in popular nomen- 

 clature. Cobsea scandens sold slowly, 

 but the same plants labeled "Cathedral 

 Bells" move briskly. Salvia Bonfire 

 was in little request, but nearly every 



