56 



The Florists^ Review 



May 25, 1922 



STUPPY SUPPLY COMPANY 



Ten-Twenty Oak Street »>oo..{m^8?S§ KANSAS CITY, MO. 



PEONIES, $6.00 to $8.00 per 100 



Red, White, Light and Dark Pink, $50.00 and $60.00 per 1000, assorted. 



Per liKi 



Roses $ 8.00 to 3=20.00 



Carnations 8.00 to 10.00 



Easter Lilies 12.50 to 15.00 



Gladioli 10.00 to 15.00 



Snapdragons 6.00 to 12.00 



Sweet Peas 1.50 to 2 00 



Delphinium 3.00 to 4.00 



Larkspur 3.00 to 4.00 



Per IfKi 



Cornflowers, 15-inch stems $1.50 



Sweet Williams 3.50 



Scotch Pinks 150 



Marsfuerite Daisies 1-50 



Pyrethrum 2.00 



Gypsophila, large bunch, 75c per bunch. 



Valley 00 



Greens, regular prices. 



Wr« 



reaths, Prepared and Wax Flowers, Lycopodium, Oak and all Supplies, 

 Ribbons, Chiffons, Designs, Paper Pots, Paper, etc 



QUALITY AND SERVICE 



T. J. NOLL FLORAL CO. 



1117-19 McGee Street 



Phona Hariiton 8235 



Kansas City, Mo. 



CUT FLOWERS 



FLORISTS' SUPPLIES 



ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS 



that rose- *8 first year are being thrown 

 out at the greenhouses of the A. F. 

 Amling Co.. at Maywood, and are being 

 replaced jartly with Columbia and 

 partly with Premier, the latter being 

 of the company's own grafting. The 

 work of replacement, which involves 

 about 90.000 plants, is expected to be 

 completed by the end of this month. 

 The stf^re which bears the name of the 

 University Florist, at 6302 University 

 avenue, is to be closed at the end of the 

 month. Tlie icebox has lieen sold. 



In spite of increasing competition of 

 the kind that keeps ojien evenings and 

 Sundays, tlie E. Wienliocber Co., on Elm 

 street, pursues the even tenor of its 

 way. The store does not open on the 

 Sabbath and the curtains are down. 

 The Wienhoeber service li.-is been con- 

 sistently of the highest class for such a 

 number of years that new stores in the 

 neighborhood draw little from the Wien- 

 hoeber clientele, but find success in the 

 rapidly increasing pojiulation of the 

 noiir north side. 



Five steel frame houses, 31x100, three 

 lean-to houses, one 12x80, one 12x92 

 and one lL'xl67, also one flat-rafter 

 conservatory, 2fixoo, with vestibule en- 

 trance, are to be built for the Forest 

 Home cemetery, in Forest Park, by 

 the American Greenhouse Mfg. Co. All 

 these houses are steel-frame and repre- 

 sent the most modern construction. 



The Week's Visitors. 



Frank X. Stuppy and party passed 

 through Chicago May 22 on the way 



