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102 



The Florists' Review 



June 30, 1921 



YOU GROW PANSY PLANTS FOR SALE? 



DOUBLE YOUR PROFIT AND SALES 



BY PLANTING THE 



New Early FIoweriBg Giant Pansies 



They are three to four weeks earlier than other Pansies, in 

 coldframes or field; they have four or five large blossoms, when 

 other Pansies planted at the same time are only showing bud. 

 The richly colored, large, well formed flowers, on long, stiff 

 stems, are very fragrant. 



TRY SOME AND YOU WILL BE SATISFIED 



4. Jove. Lower petals violet, upper one light blue. 



5. Mars. Cornflower blue. 



6. North Pole. Pure snow white. 



7. Woden. Quite black. 



8. Helios. Pure yellow. 



14. Winter Sun. Golden yellow, with dark eye. 



15. Ice King. Silvery white, with dark blue eye. 



16. Celestial Queen. Light or sky blue. 



17. Charm of March. Dark velvety blue 



18. Mixed. The above nine colors. 



500 Seeds, 25c.; 1000 Seeds, 40c.; % oz. 

 $1.10; J4 oz., $2.00; 1 oz., $7.50. 



For list and price of other Kenilworth 

 Pansy Seed, see my ad of last week. 



them, was also illustrated by stereopti- 

 t'Oii slides. 



Committee Beports. 



Tlic meeting Friday morning was 

 gi\eii over to reading the various com- 

 mittee reports. The report of the com- 

 mittee on necrology was the first to be 

 presented. W. H. Barrett, of Adrian, 

 Mieh., eliairman of the committee, gave 

 brief outlines of the members of the 

 association who had died during the 

 year. Resolutions were passed to send 

 a note of sympathy to Mrs. Edward C. 

 Dnngan, and one to Dr. Tracy, whose 

 wife had died during the year. 



The committee on postal laws next 

 presented its report. G. F. Bradley, of 

 Cleveland, O., the chairman, stated that 

 the work of the committee had been 

 light, merely pursuing a policy of wait- 

 ing to see what was to be done. He 

 stated that the proposed change from a 

 minimum weight of eight ounces to a 

 miniuium weight of four ounces for 

 catalogues to go at parcel post rates 

 would be disadvantageous to seedsmen 

 and suggested that the committee for 

 the following year watch this point care- 

 fully. His report was accepted and i)ut 

 on record. 



.J. C Vaughan, chairman of the tariff 

 .■ind customs coniiiiittee, tlien made the 

 rejjort for that committee. On January 

 '2') a brief was filed with the ways and 

 means committt'e at Washington asking 

 for a continuation of the present method 

 of computing the tariff. Since then 

 nothing has been heard from the ways 

 ."ind means committee. The emergency 

 tariff did not affect the seedsmen. The 

 new tariff will probably be before Con- 

 gress about the middle of October, and 

 until then nothing can be done with it. 

 No information of the new tariff will 

 be given out until it is presented to the 

 house. Mr. Vaughan recommended that 

 the committee of the association co- 

 operate with tlu' government tariff com- 

 mission and that the small differences 

 of the seedsmen in regard to the tariff 

 l)e harmonized before the next commit- 

 tee is sent to Washington. His report 

 was accepted and put on record. 



Fraiicis C. Stokes, of Moorestown, X. 

 •T., the chairman of the nomenclature 

 committee, then made a report on the 



SEEDS -BULBS-SUPPLIES 



Highest Beckert's Seed Store ^""p' 



ilUallty FINE FLOWER SEEDS A SPECIALTY OCFVlCe 



101-103 Federal SU PITTSBURGH, PA. 



