November 15, 1006. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



J 733 



JL J^^^^^ There Is a Reason ^^^^^^A 



Our 



PlaLTFoRMj 



For Our Progress. 



Our customers know the value of our services. 

 We give you the Sesi Goods for the Least Money with- 

 out sacrificing the quality. Our Prices Are Right 



and our goods paramount in quality. Poor goods gives poor satisfac- 

 tion at any price. Good Goods gives the best satisfaction, invites and en- 

 courages the retum of regular buyers, and is the best stimulant for the prospective ones. 



We Are Growing Only Through Transactions that IMake 

 Pleased and Permanent Customers. 



WE DO BUSINESS 



EVERYWHERE 



EADERS IN OUR 

 INES :: :: :: 



FLORIST SPECIALTIES, GREENHOUSE REQUISITES 



PinSBURG CUT FLOWER CO.! 



Plttsburs's Oldest and Largrast WboIeuUe Florists 



Removed to New Location, 222 Oliver Ave., Pittsburs:, Pa. 



HEADQUARTERS FOR 



Chrysanthemums Beauties 



Roses Lilies Valley 



Adiantum Hybridum Boxwood Sprays 



Carnations 



Violets 



Wild Smilax 



/ 



cd as one of the attractions of old New 

 Orleans. 



Not far from his place A. W. Stech- 

 mann has his garden. Mrs. Stechmann's 

 father was an old florist during ante- 

 bellum times. The present owner is a 

 regular market florist. He is proud just 

 now of his dahlias, the old-fashioned 

 flower of New Orleans, before people 

 took a fancy for large mums. He has a 

 large patch of beautiful red ones of the 

 cactus type. He says the more he cuts 

 the more they grow, and if frost does 

 not come he will have some for Christ- 

 mas. 



E. Valdejo has been sending to his 

 friends postal cards from Strasburg, 

 stating that he will leave Europe Novem- 

 ber 17, coming back to New Orleans. 



M. M. L. 



OKLAHOMA NOTES. 



Angels' Greenhouses is the style of a 

 new establishment in Oklahoma City. 

 They have erected 5,000 feet of glass 

 and are still building. Angels' flower 

 store is located at 230 West Main street, 

 Oklahoma City. 



The Stiles Co., Oklahoma City, has se- 



cured a lease on one of the choice rooms 

 in the center of the shopping district 

 and will occupy it December 1 with an 

 up-to-date flower store. 



Furrow Bros., of Guthrie, moved to 

 larger grounds the past summer and now 

 have a modern plant of 10,000 square 

 feet. 



T. A. Butler, of Shawnee, moved to 

 the outer edge of town for more and 

 cheaper ground and now maintains a 

 flower shop uptown. 



Montgomery's book on Grafted Bosea 

 sent by the Review for 25 cents. 



