.V'.V 



74 



The Florists^ Review 



Mabch le. 1923 



The HwcUUm whoa* cards appear on the pages carryiag this head, are prcpaired to fin ordcra_ 

 "■ "" fram other florists for local delivery on the usual basis. 



uffalo 



NEW YORK 



F.T.D. MEMBERS 



W. J. Palmer & Son 



304 Main Street 



Scott the Florist 



Main and Balcom Streets 



Qiarles Sandiford 



2692 Main Street 



Felton's Flower Shop 



1388 Main Street 



W. H. Sievers 



330 Genesee Street 



S. A. Anderson 



440 Main Street 



G)lonial Flower Shop 



230 Delaware Avenue 



Wm. H. Grever 



77 and 79 Allen Street 



Kramer the Rorist 



1291 Jefferson Street 



Lehde & Galley 



2 1 65 Seneca Street 



I 



Albany, New York 



23 STEUBEV 

 STREET 



Best Service. 

 ■ Send your 

 S^ orders to us. 

 Members Florleto' Tele«rspta DeUvery Am'q. 



SYRACUSE, N. Y. 



JOHNSTON'S 



SYRACUSE'S FINEST FLOWER SHOP 



IMMEDIATE MESSENGER SERVICE 

 Syracuse and Vicinity 



WASHINGTON and WARREN STREETS 



For SYRACUSE, N. Y. 

 W. E. Day Co., 



Onondaga Hotel Bids. 

 F. T. D. 



A I KAMV M V THE CAPITAL DISTRICT 

 ALlJ/llNI, ll. X. and aU Eastern New York 



WM. GLOECKNER 



WE GUARANTEE ABSOLUTE SATISFACTION 

 Member of Florists' Teleirrapb Delivery. 



MEDINA, N.Y., White Bros. 



Mdikbcn 

 F. T. D. 



Orders for Western New York 

 handled with ttromptness. 



TROY, N. Y. 



33 Fourth St. 



MEMBER 

 F. T. D. 

 H. LOUIS MENAND 



operative organizations, will get a good 

 return, and you northerners will not pay 

 more than in previous years. Truck gar- 

 deners and farmers will, in the main, get 

 as good prices as in the past, for only 

 one or two items are down to cost of 

 production. The 'tourist crop' was a lit- 

 tle slow in maturing, but since the mid- 

 dle of December visitors have come in 

 large numbers, and the hotels and apart- 

 ment houses are completely filled. We 

 folks here believe that Florida is des- 

 tined to become one of the great agricul- 

 tural states of this country." 



The Rambler is strongly inclined to 

 agree with the latter statement. The 

 United States census reports show that 

 the population of the state has doubled 

 in each twenty-year period since about 

 1880, and these people become permanent 

 residents, not mere tourists and travel- 

 ers. Again, when one considers that 

 only about five per cent of the entire 

 area of the state is under cultivation, 

 the great future for agriculture is read- 

 ily apparent. Ditching and draining 

 operations are opening up large dis- 

 tricts in all parts of the state. In al- 

 most every direction the traveler sees 

 timber-cutting and land-clearing going 

 on at a rapid pace, yet it will take gen- 

 erations to put all the tillable land under 

 the plow and harrow. Climate, tempera- 

 ture, moisture, soil and sunshine, seem 

 to unite in making Florida an ideal loca- 



KANSAS 



cm 



F.T.D. 



MISSOURI 



WiUiam L Rock 

 Flower Co. 



1106 Grand Ave. 



Alpha Floral Co. 



1103 Walnut St. 



Joseph Austin 



311 1 Troost Ave. 



W. J. Barnes 



38th and Euclid 



Chandler's 

 Flowers 



4700 Ward Parkway 



Muehlebach 

 Flower Shop 



1208 Baltimore 



Samuel Murray 



1017 Grand Ave. 



J. E. Murray 

 and Co. 



217 East lOih St. 



A. Newell 



1 1 th and McGee 



