48 



The Florists' Review 



Ootobib 7, 1920 



FANCY TERNS 





I 



$3.00 per 1000 



FiB«at Btock in the eoaatiy 



$3.00 par 1000 



SuUeot to Chuun Without Notice. 



Green Leacothoe, 100 $lJIO; 1000 $10.00 



Magnolia Leaves, green and bronze, per oarton 1410 



Galax Leaves, green and bronze, per case of 10,000 15.00 



GREEN SHEET MOSS, very fine for basket work, trimming 



pots, etc., per bag, 15 lbs. to the bag 2.00 



Sphagnnm Moss, per bale 2410 



Wild Smiiaz, 60-lb. case, $7.00; 25-lb. case 4.00 



FULL SUPPLY CUT FLOWERS AT ALL TIMES 





J 



FDCIDGAN CUT FLOWER EXCHANGE, 264.266 Randolph St., Detroit,Nicli. 



< 



SMILAX SNILAX SMILAX 



New Crop Now Ready 



Orders filled promptly on short notice. $3.00 per case 



PERPETUATED MOSS $3.50 per ba^ 



NATURAL MOSS 1.75 per ba^ 



Wire, Write, Phone 



E. A. BEAVENy Evergreen, Ala. 



tive autumn window, suggestive of the 

 harvest season. 



Baur & Steinkamp have some early 

 pink seedling chrysanthemums of the 

 large type that will be ready to cut 

 next week. 



A. F. J. Baur and family motored to 

 Lebanon October 3 and spent the day 

 with Paul Tauer. The latter has been 

 made mayor of Lebanon. 



The Smith & Young Co. will have a 

 display of florists' supplies at the Clay- 

 pool hotel during the F. T. D. conven- 

 tion. 



Miss Marguerite Hillegass Elder, of 

 Harrisburg, 111., stopped off in Indian- 

 apolis on her way east and made several 

 purchases here. E. E. T. 



NATIONAL PUBLICITY CAMPAIGN. 



Sesnlts of Slogan Advertising. 



Reference has frequently been made 

 to orders for flowers and plants directly 

 forthcoming from our national maga- 

 zine advertisements. The advertise- 

 ments all feature the telegraph delivery 

 service and the filling of orders in any 

 city or town in the United States and 

 Canada. Sometimes the magazine pub- 

 lishers receive requests for names of 

 florists performing such service in speci- 

 fied towns, which information they 

 readily supply from printed lists avail- 

 able. Robert L. Graham, the Baltimore 

 florist, recently received an order from 

 Seoul, in far-away Korea, for the de- 

 livery of a plant in Baltimorfe on a cer- 



FANCY *••' 

 (Spieial rickMl) M 



ERNS 33.00 



ti««veyoarord«r with ua for ratniUr ■UpDMata 



C. A. KUEHN±H6LESALk_FL0RI8T 



131S Pine St. M. LoaU, Mo. 



New Crop— Now Ready 



SOUTHERN WILD SMILAX 



Standard Case, $2 50 Half Ca<e $1.50 



CHATTAHOOCHEE FLORAL CO., 



Hatcher Station, Ga. 



Best Equipped and Quickest Shippers in the Sooth. 



Natural Green Sheet Moss 



P«riO-lb. bag, $1.78 



Dyed Green Sheet Moss 



P«r 10-lb. bag, M.80 

 KNUD NIELSEN 



■VKRORRKN. ALA. 



riicyCit Peru aid Uil-M«M-g-,«j;«,>i«° 



Christmas Trees, Trees, Shrubs, Plants. Seeds 

 and Seedlingti. Write fordescriotive pricelists 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY CO.. rtmUm: Wbt-da. 



tain date. The order was credited to a 

 campaign advertisement in the Literary 

 Digest, and the sender wrote: "This 

 experiment is being looked upon with 

 great interest by many, and, if success- 

 ful, will no doubt prove a benefit to 



SMILAX 



Now ready — per case, $3.00 

 REEVES FOLIAGE CO., Inc., Brewton, All. 



your society." The plant was to be in 

 flower and was a birthday g^ft to a 



