Apkil 28, 1921 



The Florists^ Review 



107 



leg^fa p t i Uefiv e r sH^epgHfteHae] 



n* florists whoa* card* aiipear on tbe pares oarrylnr tills hsad, are prsparsd to fill orders. 

 -— — Iromotlierllorlsts for local deUvcrr on tlMasaallMwls. — -~ 



"F. C. Jaeger & Son have purchased the retail business of the MacRorie-McLaren Co. The 

 ^ore at 150 Powell ^reet will be closed June I. They took control of the new ^ore April 18. 

 During the remainder of April and May, F. C. Jaeger & Son will run both ^ores." — From the 

 San Francisco News Notes in The Review, April 21, 1 92 1 . 



/f.CJAEGERScSON,/ 



SEE 



how we work 

 to get orders to 

 send to YOU. 



Send us some of your 

 orders for delivery in 



San Francisco 



and 



we will reciprocate 

 upon occasion. 



F. C.Jaeger & Son 



Members F. T. D. 



141 Powell St.. 



San Francisco, Cal. 



ment. Decorations on an elaborate 

 scale were made. The publicity derived 

 from a move of this kind in advertising 

 o>ir slogan should be of great benefit to 

 all in the trade. 



The St. Louis County Growers ' Asso- 

 ciation will meet May 4 at the green- 

 houses of the W. A. Rowe Co.^ at Kirk- 

 wood. The feature of the meeting will 

 be the annual election of officers. Sec- 

 retary Joseph Deutschmann will send 

 out special notices. A large attend- 

 ance is expected. 



C. E. De Wever, of Olivette, who 

 visited Chicago and other points last 

 week, has returned home, well pleased 

 with his trip. 



W. A. Rowe, head of the W. A. Rowe 

 Co. and president of the St. Louis Flo- 

 rists' Club, celebrated his eleventh 

 wedding anniversary April 20. 



The St. Louis Association of Garden- 

 ers has arranged for a most interesting 



meeting, to be held at the municipal 

 greenhouses in Forest park. A fine pro- 

 gram has been planned, concerning 

 which Secretary Hugo Schaff will ad- 

 vise all members in his regular monthly 

 notices. 



Thomas Carr, W. C. Smith, Frank 

 Windier, W. A. Rowe and W. J. Pilcher, 

 who visited Springfield the day of the 

 growers' meeting, could not resist the 

 temptation to attend the big boxing 

 contest. The same evening the rest of 

 the delegation aftendetl the theater 

 party. 



Fred Longren, representing the Bur- 

 lington Willow Ware Shops, Burlington, 

 la., opened his sample rooms at the 

 Hotel Statler, April 20. 



C. Young & Sons Co. attracts many 

 by its artistic window displays of sea- 

 sonable plants, seeds, bulbs and shrub- 

 bery. Charles Young says the season 

 has only begun and he looks for a 



larger business than that of previous 

 years. 



H. C. Irish, in charge of the school 

 gardens for the lioard of education, has 

 organized a school boys' and girls' gar- 

 den club, in which the membership is 

 grovsMUg daily. 



Theodore Heil. brother of Baul Heil 

 Mud with the W. C. Smith Wholesale 

 Floral Co. before Uncle Sam required 

 his services, states, in a letter from 

 Mulheim, Germany, where he is sta- 

 tioned, that he has taken up general 

 florists' work and that, in spite of the 

 hard times there, the florists are all 

 prospering. 



The five high men of the "Say It 

 with Flowers" bowling league were 

 entered in the City League tournament 

 when their season ended. They were 

 Oscar Ruff, F. Hermann, J. ,1. Beneke, 

 A. Y. Ellison and Frank Plotz. They 

 bowled three games April 22, totaling 



