The Florists' Review 



Decbmbbb 4, 1919. 



Th« O^Lt. whoS«««. appMtf on the pare* emmrln* «"• ^••i^'^SJ'*^ ** "jT**!^ 



- »--'-i>-a-.-^- -«>- 



< »>,■■». o - . v;- a '- A^- o ---t^ 



DETROIT 



Alien ICATM 



Orders given 

 best of care 

 by these five 



F. T. D. Members 



J. Breitmeyer's Sons 



Broadway and Gratiot Ave. 



Fetter's Flowers 



17 Adams Avenue E. 



Scribner Floral CJo. | 



604 East Fort St. 



G. H. Taepke Co. 



WaltkbG. Takpkk, 95 Gratiot Ave. 



The 

 L. Bemb Floral Co. 



AlbkbtPochku)N', 153 Bates Street 

 Ytmn For More Co-operation 



Detroit, Mich, floral co 



1617 Grand River Avenue 



LANSING, MICH. 



J. A. BissiNGRR ''T::^^r'F%T 



PORT HURON, MICH. 



ASMAN. LEADING FLORIST 



Prompt Delivery 



STURGIS, 

 Mich. 



MpnUx>r V T.T>. 



Coldwater, 

 A,> Mich. 



S(i MIrh. |>olDt( 



IONIA, MICH. tVl^^h^VeU^tr, 



SoTtlS,^"^^,"^^^"^ ByroB L Smith. Florist 



OWOSSO, MICH. 



OWOSSO FLORAL CO. 



HAno«n« Thiemann Pron Member P. T. P 



Kalamazoo, Michigan 



G. VAN BOCHOVE & BRO. 

 F. T. D. Orders Satistactorily Filled. 



GRAND RAPIDS. MICH. 



GRAND RAPIDS FLORAL CO. 



WENOEL L. CUKER8KI will fill yoar orders for 



DeeiffOS and Cat Flowers tn Mlchl^aD. 



Flint, Mich. EJANJ 



House of Personal Service 



Muskegon, Mich. 



LL?r BUTTERWORTH FLORAL CO. 



at the old homestead now occupied by 

 her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and 

 Mrs. John A. Zuck, 902 James street, 

 north side. The interment was Mon- 

 day morning. Mrs. Harvey, who died 

 Thursday night, November 20, was 

 9G years of age. She was the 

 widow of Walter S. Harvey, who for 

 many years was active in business cir- 

 cle* on the north side. Twenty-five 

 years ago he was identified with Ludwig 

 & Richter, then engaged in selling cut 

 flowers at the corner of Federal and 

 Isabelle street. E. E. S. 



The death of Councilman Enoch Rauh 

 brought into prominence in the local 

 papers his custom of always wearing a 

 white carnation in his coat lapel in 

 memory of his mother. Every day it 

 appeared there, from morning till night. 



KNOXVILLE, TENN. 



The Market. 



Thanksgiving business was the best 

 ever experienced, being over fifty per 

 cent better than that of any previous 

 year. Thanksgiving trade is getting to 

 be as large as that of Christmas and 

 Easter of a few years ago. There was 

 a shortage of stock, or sales would have 

 been even better than they were. There 

 seems to have been a shortage over the 

 entire country, as it was impossible to 

 get stock anywhere. Everything that 

 looked like a flower was sold, even such 

 stock a.s usually goes into the trash box. 

 There was a good demand for plants 

 and every one that could be obtained 

 was sold. There wore a fow good cycla- 

 mens, bi'gonias and pdmpon chrysanthe- 

 }iium jilants. Tiic supjiiy of chrysan- 

 themums was good, but tlie demand for 

 them was better; Dolly Dimjjle was the 

 leader and sold as high as $1 each for 

 the best blooms. Koses were scarce and 

 the few that were in stock moved quick- 

 ly at good j)riccs. Tlie demand for car- 

 nations also exceeded the siipjily. There 

 was a good crop of orchids, and owing 

 to the heavy demaiid for eorsage bou- 

 quets tliey .sold fast at good j)rices. Fu- 

 neral work lias been heavier during the 

 week than at any time during the 

 season. 



Various Notes. 



The executive committee of the Ten- 

 nessee State Florists' Association, con- 

 sisting of H. G. Bramm, president, of 

 Bristol; Prof. G. M. Bcntley, secretary- 

 treasurer, of the T'niversity of Tennes- 

 see; A. n. Dailey. A. J. McNutt and 

 Karl P. Baum, of Knoxvillc, met at 

 ]?aum's Friday night, November 28, to 

 make jilans for the annual convention 

 which will be held in Knoxvillc Febru- 

 ary 5 and 6, 1920. S. S. Skidclsky, of 

 New York, who happened to Vje here at 



MICHIGAN 



ORDERS WILL BE CAREFULLY 

 CARED FOR BY 



HENRY SMITH 



GRAND RAPIDS 



WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FLORIST. 



Member F. T. D. 



200,000 FEET OP GLASS DEVOTED TO 

 FLOWERS AND PLANTS. 



CHICAGO 



DETROIT 



Central Floral Co. 



"FLOWERS THAT LAST LONGER" 



35-37 Broadway, Detroit, Mich. 

 132 N. State St., Chicago, 111. 



CENTRALLY LOCATED 

 OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS 



Members F. T. D. 



DETROIT, MICH. 



Peter F. Reuss & Co., 



56 BROADWAY 



GRAND RAPIDS 



ARTHUR F. CRABB 



F.T.D. Member. 13 Jefferson Ave., S. 



Serving all West Michigan Towns 



MX. PLEASANT, MICH. 

 nn: Walter W. Caple 



MIDLAND, MICH. 



PERCIVAL F. PENFOLD 



Saginaw, Michigan 



GROHMAN THE FLORIST 

 Member F. T. D. Asa'n. 117 NORTH FRANKLIN ST. 



J. B. GOETZ SONS ' 



SAGINAW, MICH. 



OR ANY CITY IN MICHIGAN 



Ann Arbor, Mich, ^t'a 



BluMaize Blossom Shop 



Battle Creek, Michigan 



S. W. COGGAN, Florist, 25 E. Maia St. 

 Member o* Florists' Tel egraph Delivery 



PETOSKEY, MICH. 



AND NORTHERN MICHIGAN RESORTS. 

 Member Fiorists' TeleRraph r 1 lir- 



Delivery Association. frailk WmanS 



