104 



The Florists^ Review 



Dechmber 4, 1919. 



f9 



This is what thpy say about the 

 LOZIER FLOWER BASKETS 



^^They Sell Themselves 



and many other favorable reports are coming in from 

 florists who have tried them out. 

 This new basket is an Instant seller, money-maker and 

 saver. It should be in every .Oower store. ORDER NOW. 

 Description: Heavy paraffined wood fiber tumbler with 

 attractive wire handle, all finished in gold. Size. 15 inches 

 high; tumbler, 4 inches deep, SHs inches in diameter. 



They Do Actually "Sell Themselves" 

 Think of It. only 



$18.00 per 100 - $9.00 per 50 - $5.00 per 25 



EUGENE'S FLOWER SHOP, Distributors 



Box 726 SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 



LOZIER FLOWER BASKET 



Patent applied for 



Florists' Club the table decorations were 

 unusual, being the famous Glenrose 

 Greenhouse beans, which have now 

 reached the size of vegetable marrow. 



Peters & Sons, of Hillyard, Wash., 

 have lost their boiler house by fire. Sev- 

 eral of the greenhouses were burned on 

 the ends, but owing to the mild weather 

 no damage was done to the growing 

 stock. At present they are moving a 

 large crop of lettuce, which is grown as 

 a side line. 



Mr. Lozier, of E. S, Eugene's store, 

 reports large sales of the Lozier flower 

 basket. 



Miss Sadie Mclnnis, formerly with 

 Donart's House of Flowers, has accepted 

 a position with the Hoyt Bros. Co. 



The remodeling of Donart's House of 

 Flowers is completed and A. Boehning 

 is expecting big business. 



A. J. Burt reports much funeral work. 



.Tack Burt, of Jack Burt's Flower 

 Shop, has had a fine display of mums. 



Harry Saunders, of Donart & Louis, 

 Coeur d'Alene, Ida., has been calling on 

 the trade. His firm has recently been 

 shipping some fine blooms of white and 

 yellow Turner. 



H. E. Reimers has had many sales of 

 the concrete flower pot machine. 



Davenport's, of which E. A. Hedger 

 is manager, continues to have a large 

 amount of corsage work. H. H. 



PORTIiAND, ORE. 



The Market. 



The market conditions are all that 

 could be desired. There is a large show- 

 ing of first-class flowers and the demand 

 for th(*m cleans them up about as fast 

 as they arrive. We have never seen a 

 finer lot of first-class stock at this time 

 of the year than is being shown now. 

 Chrysanthemums, especially, are the 

 finest that have ever been shown in this 

 market. Possibly business will not come 

 up to that of last year, on account of 

 the influenza epidemic, which swept 

 over the country last year and which 

 required everything in the way of flow- 

 ers for funerals, but business is a great 

 deal better than it was two years ago. 



Among the potted plants being 

 offered are primroses, cyclamens and 



GET 1910 CATALOGUE 



For DetcriptioB of Separate Colors 



SEED 



Steele's Mastodon Greenhouse, 



special mixed, 0. K. outside, yi oz., 

 $L00; oz., $7.00. 



Steele's Mastodon Private Stock, 

 mixedi H oz., $L00; oz., $6.00. 



Steele's Mastodon Mixed, ^ oz., 

 $1.50; oz., $5.00. 



STEELE^S PANSY GARDENS, Portland, Oregon 



50,000 Chrysanthemums 



READY FOR SHIPMENT FROM NOW 

 ON TILL THE FIRST OF JANUARY 



WRITE FOR PRICES 



Donart & Louis 



FLORISTS 



COEUR D'ALENE IDAHO 



