114 



The Florists' Review 



DlOBMBBB 16, 1921 



Jhe fl orists whose cards appear on the pages carrying this head, are prepared to fill orders 

 "*"' from other florists for local delivery on the usual basis. ■ ' 



uffalo 



NEW YORK 



F.T.D. MEMBERS 



:^liS^l^t«411ili!l^l^JliS^. 



Wm. H. Grever 



77 and 79 Allen Street 



Kramer the Florist 



1 29 1 Jefferson Street 



Lehde & Galley 



2 1 65 Seneca Street 



W. J. Palmer & Son 



304 Main Street 



Scott the Florist 



Main and Balcom Streets 



Charles Sandiford j 



2692 Main Street | 



Felton's Flower Shop | 



352 Wil.iams Street 



W. H. Sievers 



330 Genesee Street 



S. A. Anderson 



440 Main Street 



Colonial Flower Shop | 



230 Delaware Avenue 



z 

 e 



fTmninnnnnnn?miiniinmtniiHnitni'tmniiinmnmiimtmrnmri»tn»'i»r'' 



KANSAS 



KANSAS 

 CITY . . . 



MRS. T. A. MOSELEY 



"Service Above Self" 7 1 2 Minnesota Ave. 

 MEMBER F. T. D. 



KANSAS CITY, MO. 



Akin's Floral Co. 1 203 Baltimore 

 KANSAS CITY, MO. 



O'CONNELL FLOWEE SHOP 



FOR SERVICE 

 ■J W. COR INDKPKNOF^NCB AVR. AND OAK. 



KANSAS CITY, MO. 



Midland Flower Shop, T^^v^t^'^street 



is, without waiting as long as some of us 

 have had to do. 



Of course, sports have contributed to 

 the rose family; they have given us 

 desirable varieties — Bride and Brides- 

 maid, White Killarncy and two or three 

 other Killarncj's. It is a strange law 

 governing the production of valuable 

 things. You take the variety Madame 

 Catherine Mcrmct. As nearly as I could 

 find out, this variety sported into a 

 climber in Oakland, Cal. This same 

 variety had the same growth in France, 

 6,000 or 8,000 miles away, and nearly 

 every variety of rose that has been 

 forced has produced a climbing sport. 

 We had last year a sport of Columbia 

 that ran up eight or ten feet. Who can 

 explain that? What is the law that 

 governs those sports I The plantsman, 

 the scientist cannot explain it. I have 

 never heard any explanation that is 

 satisfactory. 



Sarah's Work. 



Naming a rose is a great thing, and it 

 is beset with difficulties. I think I have 

 had a hundred applications to name 

 America for some dear lady or some nice 

 young miss, but I do not have any 

 authority at Richmond. My sister runs 

 the naming of the roses. She gets away 

 from Miss This and Miss That, and gives 

 them good names; she picked out Pre- 

 mier and Butterfly and Richmond and 

 America. She deserves the credit. 



Now I am trying for an ideal crimson, 

 scarlet rose that will force in winter. 

 Tlicre are four or five in sight. Of 

 course, Milady, a beautiful rose, is 

 grown by a few people. I wish we could 

 grow it at Richmond. If you go to 

 Poehlmanns' today, you will find Milady 

 in splendid shape, and if we could grow 

 it as thoy do we should like to have a 

 good big lot of them. We have not suc- 

 ceeded, I do not know why, wliether it is 

 cultural ignorance or laclc of something 

 in tlie soil, or something else. 



Frod Lemon is tlie luckiest fellow I 

 ever knew. I was after him to go into 

 cross-fertilization, and the first job ho 

 made he got tliose two roses, Angelus 

 and Amelia Gude. The way the latter 

 name originated was that Miss Gude 

 took such a liking to it that we named 

 the rose after her. Of course, she is a 

 lovely little girl, and Fred Lemon could 

 not say no. So the rose is nicely named 



KANSAS 

 CITY 



F.TD. 



MISSOURI 



Muehlebach 

 Flower Shop 



1208 Baltimore 



Samuel Murray 



1017 Grand Ave. 



J. E. Murray 

 and Co. 



217 East 1 0th St. 



A. Newell 



llth and McGee 



William L Rock 

 Flower Co. 



1106 Grand Ave. 



Alpha Floral Co. 



1 1 05 Walnut St. 



Joseph Austin 



3111 Troost Ave. 



W. J. Barnes 



38th and Euclid 



Chandler's 

 Flowers 



4700 Ward Parkway 





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