DKCBMBER 23. 1920 



The Florists^ Review 



69 



^le^a^ rii Uclivci y^epaapteie 



Th» florists whOf» cards appear on the pasea oanrytnc this head, are prepared to flU orders 

 from otbar florists for local deUvenr ob tb* usual Iwsls* 



PHOENIX, ARIZ. 



Arizona Seed & Floral Co. 



28 and 30 S. Central Ave. Member F. T. D. 



PHOENIX. ARIZONA 



Donofrio Floral Co. 



CHAS. E. MORTON. Mgr. 



Wire your orders to us for delivery in 



Arizona and New Mexico. 



DOUGLAS, ARIZ. 



^ ' "5uuut.v ELLIOTT THE FLORIST 



DOUGLAS. ARIZ. ^Tn ''^^ii^il''^ 

 GATLIFF FLOWER GARDEN 



Successor to TRAVIS FLOWER SHOP 

 Indian Blankets, Dolls and Moccasins. 



Rowers for all ARIZONA 



Tucson Seed & Horal Co., ll?io%\ 



TUCSON, ARIZ. 



7 East 



Clongross Street 

 BURNS' FLOWER SHOP 



PRESCOTT, ARIZ. 



ar*" ACKER'S FLOWER SHOP 



ROSWE-LL, N.-MEX. 



^_ _ ALAMEDA GREENHOUSES 



Headqnkrteti for llowen Raw ttoloo and Texiii. ' 



FOREIGN SECTION 



Liverpool, England 



OINGLEYS, Ltd., Florists 

 SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND 



WM. ARTINDALE & SON 



i'LORISTS SEEDSMEN NURSERYMEN 



Manchester, England 



OINGLEYS, Ltd., Florists 



SCOTLAND ORDERS NOW TO 



LEIGHTON, Florist, GLASGOW 



Scotland's Only Member F. T. D. 



'lio striijfglcH of tlioir fatlier liavc been, 

 and often thoy sit down and reason that 

 it is not worth the effort, that there are 

 "tlier industries offering a better future, 

 :nul so they drift away. When I was a 

 hoy, how often did I reason in the same 

 manner! 



When I saw some successful business 

 man of the time come into my father's 

 ^niall range, the thought that entered 



Some Kinks 

 From Kankakee 



WllKN the newspaper eartconists'set out of fuuiiy stufl', 

 they turn to Kokoino or Kankakee and hanu some 

 moth-eaten joke ou theni, of the vintage of 1SJ2. And 

 folks lauijli. 



Not seemingly at the joke— because there never is any — 

 but.because il"s Kankakee. 



1 "laugheii my last laugh at the Cleveland Couveulion. 

 Laughed in the presence cf a regular 6-foot Kaukakeer. 

 After.which, he sat uie down at lunch and between kick- 

 ing my ankles under the table, and pointing his fingers at 

 me over the table, I gradually awoke to the fact, that he 

 was talking serious. 



He hauded me out some kinks from Kankakee that 1 ave 

 put the loud pedal down on my cash register in a way that 

 makes me feel in a very grateful kind of meed. 



Drop in sonietime and I'll tell you what it was. That is, 

 provided you'll never mention Kankakee in other than a 

 serious manner. Mlk..-. 



New York's 

 Favorite Flower Shop 



F^th Avenue at 58th Street 



my mind was that no florist could ever 

 reach such heights. In those days 

 there were several ranges in the cast 

 that tlie older florists themselves used 

 to look upon as purely phenomenal, with 

 no idea of ever equaling them. 



Two Boys' Achievement. 



About the time I am talking of, or, to 



be exact, in 1880, there were in Wash- 

 ington, D. C, two boys working in the 

 old Studer range, at Anacostia, William 

 F. and Adolph Gude. These boys had 

 reached early manhood and, like every 

 other boy in the industry, were reason- 

 ing along the lines noted above. But 

 fate decreed that they should remaii* 

 florists. They both loved' the business 



