V. ■ ' l-'/ilt 



52 



The Florists' Review 



Ocvous M. itao 



FLORISTS WHO WANT 



BASKETS 



For All Occasions 



should place their orders with 

 us, as we have the larj^est and 

 most complete line of Willow 

 and Reed Baskets on the 

 market. 



Try a Sample 

 Assortment 



of Baskets at 



$10.00, $25.00 

 or $50.00 



We can make 

 shipment'. 



immediate 



Order Now 



No. 248. 



Price. $1.25. Complete with metal liner. 



No. 275 



Price. 76c each. Complete with metal liner. 



A * 1 X 1ir*ll 117 /I Sixth and PayMm Avcs. 



Qmncy Art Willow Ware Co.,Quincr,iii.,u.s.A. 



The Home of Quality and Style 



pretideat of the Florists' Club of Phila- 

 delphia, was the live wire in this emer- 

 gemey. 



We Will Prosper. 



[Not iHtendcd for pnbllcatlon — ^]u8t an boneat 

 opfnlom, (iTcn offhand, for wbicb permiaslon waa 

 Undly (ranted to record wbat could be recaUed.] 



"I do not think," said Baymond 

 Brunswiek, secretary and treasurer of 

 the M. Biee Co., "our business is likely 

 to experience the dullness which affects 

 other industries, because I think we 

 offer something that stands next in 

 importance to food. I know the gov- 

 ernment decided we were nonessential, 

 but that was in war time. The war is 

 over now and I think our business is 

 essential to the most important events 

 of life — birth, marriage and death. I 

 do not include entertainments because 

 they are not, strictly speaking, essen- 

 tial. You would not wonder at my in- 

 cluding birth, if you knew of the in- 

 crease in the sales of cradles, which are 

 useful only on this one occasion. About 

 the need of flowers on the other two 

 occasions there can be no question. 

 Now, it seems to me that, as these things 

 go on all the time and as our country 

 is prosperous, there can be no reason 

 why our trade should not have contin- 

 ued prosperity. We should prosper, 

 even if other industries have difficulty 

 in adjusting themselves to postwar con- 

 ditions. * * 



Various Notes. 



Mrs. John H. Glaus celebrated her 

 thirty-fourth business anniversary by 

 giving each of her callers a pretty little 

 pteris in a neat paper pot, enclosing a 

 sensible card. Strictly speaking, the 

 anniversary falls on October 25, but for 

 good business reasons Mrs. Claus antici- 



£JlllillllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiU 



I WE SPECIALIZE I 



■►IF 



ANCY 53-«l I 



(Spmcial Picked) p„ 



ERNS 1000 = 



4 



Lmv« raar ardar wi& as Iw ragalar 



I CiLKDEHN^l^FLORIST | 



= 1312 PINE STREET ST. LOUIS, MO. E 



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LYCOPODIUM 



Dyed natural color and chemically 

 prepared, pliable and everlasting. 



10 lbs. m carton $3.25 



h lOcartoslots 3.10 



Cases of 25, 50 and 100 

 Ibt., per lb 30 



Cash with order. Full weight and 

 satisfaction guaranteed. 



Reference, Catawba State Bank. 



JOHN PERMAN, Catowba, Wis 



Mention Tbe ReTlew when yon write. 



pated the event a few days and held it 

 the Friday and Saturday previous. 



New Crop— Now Ready 



SOUTHERN WILD SMILAX 



Stendard Case. S2.50 Half Case. Sl.fiO 



CHAHAHOOCHEE FLORAL CO., 



Hatcher Station, Ga. 



Beat Elqalppcd and Qmekeat Shipper* in tbe Soatb. 



Natural Green Sheet Moss 



Per lO-lb. bag, $1.75 



Dyed Green Sheet Moss 



Per lO-lb. bag, SSJSO 



KNUD NIELSEN, Evergreen, Ala. 



Mention Th» Bertgw wbea yoa wrlta. 



In the cargo of the steamer Boma, 

 just arrived in New York, are early 



