Febbdabx 9, 1822 



The Horists^ Review 



69 



l%e^floirlsts whose cards appear on the pages carrying this bead, are prepared to fill or ders 

 "^~ from other florists for local delivery on the usual basis. — — 



FOREIGN SECTION 



BRUSSELS, BELQUM 



MFROTITP' The leadlna FLORIST 

 . r I\V-^U 1 H., 20 Rue des Colonies 



Prompt service anywhere in BELGIUM, 

 HOLLAND and GERMANY. Orders 

 filled to your entire satisfaction. 



CABLE ME YOUR ORDERS FOR 



FRANCE 



MARY :: FLORIST 



37 Rue Lapeyrouse, near the Etoile 



PARIS, FRANCE 



CABLE US YOUR ORDERS FOB 



ENGLAND 



With flfteen important shopa in good centera, we are 

 the larsest floruta in Enitland and better equipped 

 than anyone else to carry out cable orden. 



DINGLEYS. Ltd. 



Head OfHee: CambridseSt., MANCHESTER 



LIVERPOOL Branch, 2 Paricer St. 



SHEFFIELD. ENGLAND. 

 WILUAM ARTINDALE & SON 



FLORISTS SEEDSMEN NURSERYMEN 



Amsterdam, Holland 



C. THIM, Florist V. Baerlestraat 56 



Abple nros., Npw Orleans, Iji $ 10.00 



C. Loverldge, Peoria, 111 2.5.00 



Topeka Floral Co., Topeica, Kan .5.00 



Truitt'B GrcenlioUBes, Chamite, Knn... 5.00 



WaUii & Son. Maiden, Mass 10.00 



Allied Florists' Assn. of 111., CliiciRo. 7.50.00 



Edward Towlll, Roslyn, Pa 25.00 



M. M. Baumann. Park RidRe, N. .T 10.00 



Kilward II. Blameuser. Nilos Center, 



111 10.00 



Owen McDonnell. WasliinRton. Pa .5.00 



Tri-State Florists' Assn., Fargo, .N. D. .50,00 



John Scott, HuntsTille. Ala 15.00 



H. Clay Primrose, Baltimore. Mil 10.00 



Aschmann Bros., Philadelphia, Pa 3.5.00 



Mary C. Rich. Philadelphia, I'a .5.00 



Hart Floral Co., Blackwell. Okla 2..50 



Mrs. Annie J. Diinlap, Ennis, Tex .5.00 



John CanninK, Ardsiev. N. Y 10.00 



Charles B. Thomas. Kansas City. Mo.. 1.5.00 



Miss McCarron. Lynchburg. Va 10.00 



Casper Floral Co., Casper, Wyo 10.00 



Oeorge Rye, Fort Smith, Ark .5.00 



Peter Fisher, Ellis. Mass '2.5.00 



C. A. Benson, Denver, Colo 10.00 



Patrick Welch. Boston, Mass lOO.OO 



A. A. Hlnz, Tacoraa, Wash 10.00 



Clara Brown & Co., Jackson, Mich 2.5.00 



fJrohman the Florist, Saginaw, Mich.. 25.00 



Alfred Holm, Corsicana. Tex 3.00 



O. A. Cara Janes, New York 4.00 



Oodfrey Aschmann. Philadelphia, I'a. 20.00 



C. B. Holbrow, Brighton, Mass 20.00 



Wlndmiller Co., Mankato, Minn 5.00 



Cole Bros., Peoria, 111 .50.00 



Tampa Floral Co.. Tampa. Fla 5.00 



Elche Ficjral Co., Lincoln, Neb 2.5.00 



$ 2.842.93 

 Amount previously reported 10,907.50 



Total .$13,810.43 



John Young, Soc'y. 



PUBLICITY COMMITTEE MEETS. 



Holds Important Discussions. 



A meeting of the n.ition.al publicity 

 committee wa.s held at the Greater Bond 

 hotel, Hartford, Conn., at 2:30 p. m., 

 Wednesday, January 25. There were 

 present: Cl^airman Henry Penn, Bos- 



Speaking of Com Bread 

 WhatHasItToDoWithF.T.D.? 



The first time I went south, had my mouth all fixed 

 for some of that wonderful corn bread which every- 

 body knows is as natural below the Mason and Dixon 

 Line as baked beans are to Boston. 



My disappointment was keen when at a Jacksonville 

 hotel, we were served with a regrettable something — 

 the sogginess of which sure would have played havoc 

 with our plumbing. 



When I kicked to the head waiter, he shrugged his 

 shoulders and said: "What can you expect when the 

 chef is from the North?" 



A couple of years afterward, I was riding horseback 



through the Kentucky Mountains and about noon one 



day drew rein at a cabin door and asked if there was 



any genuine corn bread to be had in that part of the 



country. 



"Yes, stranger," said the work-bent old woman, "corn 



bread is jest what we ain't got nothing but." 



Just naturally I stopped right then and there. 



And it sure was the real thing. 



Making corn bread was one of the many things that 

 Northern Chef did. 



It was one of the few of the Kentucky woman's. 

 A few things well done. 



That's why I have in my employ, a Scotchman, an 

 Irishman, an Englishman and a Jap. 

 Each of them a specialist in some special thing, each 

 doing that thing better than any of the rest can do it. 



Which may or may not be worth remembering when 

 sending your F. T. D. orders to New York. 



Don't forget your special appeal for F.T.D. orders 



on the following days: 



^' 



Lincoln's Birthday — Feb. 12th. 

 St. Valentine's Day — Feb. 14th. 



New York's Favorite Flower Shop 



Phone Plaza 8190 Fifth Avenue at 58th Street 



ton, Mass.; George Asmus, Chicago, HI.; 

 J. F. Ammann, Edwardsville, 111.; Presi- 

 dent S. S. Pennock, S. A. F., Philadel- 

 phia, Pa.; Secretary John Young, New 

 York; Major P. F. O'Keefe, Boston; E. 

 J. Fancourt, Philadelphia, and Wallace 

 E. Pierson, Cromwell, Conn., the latter 

 formerly a member of the committee, all 

 by invitation. Treasurer J. J. Hess, 

 Omaha, Neb., was absent through illness 



and Mark Mills, Philadelphia, sent re- 

 grets at his inability to attend. 



The minutes of the last meeting, held 

 at Toronto, Ont., were road and ap- 

 proved. 



Major O'Keefe reviewed the recent 

 advertising of the committee and ex- 

 plained the necessity for using small 

 advertisements throughout the series, 

 which was due to the small amotint of 



