126 



The Florists' Review 



August 4, 1921 



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SAN rRANCISCO NOTES. 



[OoDcluili-d from page C2.1 

 who retired and has been in Europe 

 for the last fifteen years, but is still 

 •well remembered in the trade," said 

 Mr. Cohen. 



The first goods of the Eichmond Pot- 

 tery, Inc., will be on the market by Au- 

 gust 15, according to Frank Pelicano, of 

 Pelicano, Rossi & Co., who is a moving 

 spirit in the enterprise, with H. Plath, 

 of the Ferneries, and other florists. Mr. 

 Plath is chairman. 



J. A. Axell has taken almost two 

 weeks to reach St. Louis, for he has 

 been calling on the trade en route to 

 Minneapolis from San Francisco and 

 has been detained by the hospitality 

 shown by florists in every city. 



Mrs. Darbee, while motoring recently 

 through northern California and Ore- 

 gon, visited the Franklin Bulb Farm, 

 at Salem, Ore., where she found that 

 most of the tulip, iris and other bulbs 

 from the Cottage Gardens Nurseries, 

 Eureka, had been transplanted. The 

 Franklin Bulb Farm has about seven 

 acres planted and seems to be doing 

 well. Most of the California bulb 

 growers are looking for an ideal bulb 

 .soil, and Mrs. Darbee has some remark- 

 ably fine bulbs to prove that she has 

 found it, but the location is something 

 she will not divulge. General and Mrs. 

 (roocb, of Darbee 's, are motoring in the 

 Hierras. 



The C. Kooymau Co. is showing its 

 first outdoor rubruni of the present sea- 

 son. 



The E. W. McLellan Co. is drying off 

 its plantings for the winter, but many 

 gardenias ;ire .still coming in. The firm, 

 JI. A. Avansino st.'ites, is planting some 

 half million freesias. 



F. C. Jaeger, of F. C. Jaeger & Son, is 

 working to have the Hunday closing 

 movement put up to the people of this 

 city at the next municipal election. 



George P. Wagner, head decorator for 

 Joseph 's, is showing Mrs. Wagner the 

 beauty spots of southern California, on 

 an automobile v;ication. Mrs. Wagner 

 is an eastern l)ride, who has just cele- 

 brated her first anniversary. 



T. Joseph Arellano, of Visitacion Val- 

 ley Nursery, says that the churches of 

 San Francisco are using floral decora- 

 tions more and more for special fes- 

 tivals. They now have floral stands 

 in aisles, etc. 



The United Flower & Supply Co. has 

 Golden Glow chrysanthemums coming in 

 plentifully for local customers. By the 

 middle of August, Chrysolora mums will 

 be coming in and by the end of the 

 iT^onth they will be of good shipping 

 quality, according to I. Inque, who has 

 just returned from a trip to the nurs- 

 eries. 



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X 



