The Florists^ Review 



JuNB 29, 1922 



^ * ., y**^ whose cards appear on the pages carrying this head, are prepared to fill orders 

 from other florists for local delivery on the usual basis. — ' 



I LINCOLN, NEB. 



1338 Street 



FREY & FREY 



WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 



120.000 square feet of glass at yoor 

 service 



Trad J Discount 

 Members of the Florists' Telegraph Delivery 



C. H. FREY 



WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FLORIST 



1133 O Street. . LINCOLN, NEB. 



MEMBER F. T. D. 



Will Fill Orders for the West on Short Notice 



TRADE DISCOUNTS FIRST-CLASS STOCK 



LINCOLN, NEB. 



EICHE FLORAL CO. 

 1333 O STREET 



1 38,000 ft. of glass 36,000 roses to cut from 



NORFOLK, NEB. 



& 1 



Norfolk Floral Co. ^.''¥.^&': 



For all Northern Nebraska, Southeastern 

 South Dakota and Northwestern Iowa. 



Send all SOUTHERN NEBRASKA and 

 NORTHERN KANSAS orders to 



DAVIDSON FLORAL CO.. 



Member F. T. D. 



HASTINGS. NEB. 



Flowers for All 

 Occasions, from 

 Cradle to Grave 



Lincoln, Neb. 



CHAPIN BROS.. Retail Florists 



OMAHA, NEB. "™.^- 



JOHN H. BATH. The Careful Florist 



1804 FARNAU STREET 



OMAHA, NEBRASKA 

 Lee L. Larmon isu'douglaS^s't. 



Hess & Swoboda, Florists 



Telephones 1501 and L 1588 



1415 Farnam Street OMAHA, NEB. 



OMAHA, NEB. R-f's 



Louis M. Rogers, 319 So. i6th Sl 



OMAHA, NEB. 



FLATIRON 

 FLOWER 

 SHOP 

 1728 St. MARYS AVENUE 



FOR OMAHA AND VICINITY 



ggUf L NEBRASKAn^sl^ 



ED. WILLIAMS. Grand Island 

 Oomiwte&t Florist Railroad CeaiUi- 



Mishawaka, Ind. 



The Flower Shope 



126 N. Main St. 



Phone: 

 Mishawaka, 1213 



SOUTH BEND, IND. ^L^Ust. 



WILLIAMS THE FLORIST 



South Bend's Leading Florist 



Daily deliveries to St. Mary's Academy and Notre 

 Dame University. Orders filled for Northern 

 Indiana and Southern Michigan. 



BEYER & WEBER, Florists 



226 N. Michigan Street 



SOUTH BEND. INDIANA 



Daily Deliveries to Notre Dame University and St. 



Mary's Academy. Also close connections with 



Niles, Berrien Springs, St. Joseph, Mich., 



New Carlisle, Michigan City, La Porte, 



Elkhart, Goshen, Warsaw, Ind. 



known as the Dcshler Flower Shoppe. 



Although plans have not been com- 

 pleted, a new company has been incor- 

 porated to open a seed and flower store 

 next door to the Wilson Seed & Floral 

 Co. Mr. Stephan, formerly with the Liv- 

 ingston Seed Co. and more recently with 

 Wilson Seed & Floral Co., will be a 

 member of this firm. He resigned Jiis 

 position at the latter 's store last week. 



George Meyers, of the McKellar Flo- 

 ral Co., has been spending a week's va- 

 cation at Camp Perry, on Lake Erie. 

 J. W. T., 



NEWARK, N. J. 



As is usual when the midsummer va- 

 cation months arrive, business is begin- 

 ning to grow slack. There is still some 

 wedding work and funeral work, but 

 the transient trade is dull and gradua- 

 tion business has passed for the season. 



The 1922 Newark directory, just off 

 the press, lists fifty-eight florists in its 

 business section. Three nurserymen, 

 six seedsmen and two manufacturers of 

 artificial flowers are recorded. 



^R. B. M. 



SWEET PEAS IN CALIFORNIA. 



((.'oiitlnucd from a forwaril pace) 



doors, and f\lso indoors when evaporat- 

 ing with steam pipes is out of order. In 

 California this is applied with a hand 

 machine carried on the back of a Japan- 

 ese wearing a gas mask and also with 

 a power-driven machine loaded on a 

 truck, as shown in the illustration on 

 this page. When used on large acre- 

 ages, this application is a costly item 

 for the grower, but there is no alterna- 

 tive. An unusually warm spell of 

 weather sometimes makes it impossible 

 to save the crop; the chances then de- 

 ])end on how closely the aphis has been 

 kept down. Because of this factor, the 

 crop prospects can never be forecasted 

 with any degree of certainty until it is 

 ready to harvest. 



The Lompoc valley is about fifteen 

 miles long and six or eight miles wide; 

 it is swept by the salt air of the Pacific 

 and withal a highly favored location for 

 the production of sweet pea seed, for 

 which, indeed, over 1,000 acres of the 



FT. WAYNE, IND. 



W. J. & M. S. Vesey 



2602 THOMPSON AVE. 

 1 50,000 feet of glass devoted to fine 

 Roses, Orchids and Carnations 



Prompt and Careful Service 

 Membar F. T. D. 



Indianapolis, Ind. 



241 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE 



Bertermann Bros. Co. 



LEADING FLORISTS 

 Members Florists' Telegraph Delivery Assn. 



l^stablished 1859 



A. WIEGAND'S SONS CO. 



1610 to 1620 North lUinois Street 



INDIANAPOLIS. IND. 



Indiana's oldest, largest and most complete 



retail establishment. 



Member Florists' Telegraph IX'livory Association 



LILLIAN C. TOMS 



128 East 

 Washington St. 



THE COLONIAL 



GOSHEN, IND. 



TERRE HAUTE, IND. 



129 SOUTH SEVENTH STREET 

 JOHN G. HEINL & SON 



TERRE HAUTE, INa 



COWAN BROS. & CO., Florists 



Established 1894 Twenty-first and Spruce Sts. 



KOKOMO, IND. 



COLES' FLOWER SHOP 



MEMBER F. T. D. 



RICHMOND, INDIANA 



FRED H. LEMON & COo 

 9'loristB and Decorators Send ns yoar ordesii 



RICHMOND, INDIANA 



AND VICINITY 



Member F. T. D. G. R. GAUSB 



LOGANSPORT, IND. 



PERSHING-Floristrr;^.D. 



BLOOMINGTON, IND. 



ELUS FLORAL CO. 



Members F. T. D. 



Evansville, Ind. 



atM) Sootban iDdiaam 



UKl IlUooia and 



Weatern Kentocky 



l«°Srr/lll,"p^nt JUUUS NIEDNAGEL 



ATTICA, IND. 



^"^nic™"'*" :: Attica Roral Co. 

 VALPARAISO, INDIAN/^ 



AND SURROUNDING TERRITORY 

 REINHART <& ADAMS 



FLORISTS MEMBERS F. T. D. 



