54 



The Florists^ Review 



April 20. 1922 



STUPPY SUPPLY COMPANY 



Ten-Twenty Oak Street ^*^{^^7l% KANSAS CITY, MO. 



Roses 



Carnations 



Tulips 



Peas 



Asparagus 



Valley 



Jonquils 

 Snapdragons 

 Calla Lilies 

 Easter Lilies 

 Flat Ferns 



Chiffons, Ribbons, Boxes, Designs, Ready-made Wreaths, Baskets, 



''Say It with Flowers" Paper, Greening Pins, Wired Picks, 



Cane Stakes, Magnolia Leaves, Oak a^d Beach Branches 



Yes, anything in Supplies 



A lew Rubrum and Auratum bulbs left for summer and early fall blooming. 



QUALITY AND SERVICE 



FLOWERS OF QUALITY 



Roses, Carnations, Sweet Peas, Snapdragons, Lilies, 



Darwins, Calendulas, Valley and other Flowers for buyers 



whose trade demands the best. 



JOSEPH FOERSTER CO. 



Wholesale Dealers in Cut Flowers 



160 North Wabash Ave. 



CHICAGO 



Ask the man who 

 Bays from us 



tliein n uice supply of pot plants for 

 Kaster, aud one side of the store looked 

 like the Garfield park conservatory, 

 with its showing of lilies and roses. All 

 the plants received early enough sold 

 ((uickly. 



Wendland & Kciuiel Co. counted last 

 week's hail breakage as 1.485 lights. It 

 is the company's first hail loss in the 

 fourteen years since the range was 

 started. 



W. G. Peacock, head of the supplies 

 department of the Dale Estate, Bramp- 



ton, Ont., was in Cliieago this week, lie 

 reports that the florists of Toronto and 

 \icinity, and he believes of all Canada, 

 had tlie best Easter they have ever en- 

 joyed. The Dale Estate, with a glass 

 area of nearly two million feet, is the 

 princi])al source of cut flower supply 

 of florists north of the border. All lilies 

 were sold early, and other stock was 

 cleared out almost as expeditiously. 

 The supplies department, established on 

 a pretentious scale only a year ago, h:is 

 enjoyed the patronage of the company's 



tut flower customers to such a degree 

 that Mr. Peacock is arranging for addi- 

 tional sources of material. 



Promenaders along Sheridan road on 

 Easter day created a heavy demand for 

 sweet peas. By afternoon a large sup- 

 ]»ly of these flowers had followed the 

 rest of the stock across the counter at 

 the Boyar Flower Shop, at 5004 Sheri 

 dan road, and nothing but ferns and 

 prepared grasses decorated the store. 



John Wittbold says the George Witt- 

 bold Co. had one of" the best Easters on 



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