130 



The Florists' Review 



OCTOBBB 13, ltf21 



EDNA 



The best commercial scarlet carnation to date. Get a start this year. We 

 still have some nice strong plants. $15.00 per 100; $120.00 per 1000. 



POINSETTIAS 



We have a fine lot of plants in 2-inch pots. If you can use 500 or more, we will bill them at 5 cents. 

 You can't make money faster than by putting four of these plants in a 5-inch pot and growing them for 



Xmas. Good poinsettia pans always clean up at Xmas. 

 Gloire de Chatelaine — Better order a few hundred of these to grow on for winter sales, $6.CO 



per 100; $50.00 per 1000. 



Add S % of invoice on all orders for packing 



BAUR & STEINKAMP 



3800 Rookwood Ave. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 



New White Seedling Carnation 



THOMAS C. JOY 



Rooted Cuttings, $12.00 for 100; $100.00 for 1000; $450.00 tor 5000 

 Deliveries beginning January, 1922, and filled in order 



JOY FLORAL CO., "^^^^ 



permitted to use it," that the phrase, 

 "Say It with Flowers," could not be 

 copyrighted. "The copyrighting of the 

 slogan has been suggested time and 

 again," says the secretary, "but it was 

 ascertained at the outset that no phrase 

 composed of dictionary words was copy- 

 rightable." 



A meeting of rose growers was called 

 Monday, October 10, at the Hotel 

 Breslin. The object of the meeting was 

 for the formation of a new trade organ- 

 ization. 



C. H. Brown, retail florist of 2366 

 Broadway, with Mrs. Brown, left Octo- 

 ber 8 by automobile for the F. T. D. 

 meeting in Toronto. Expecting to leave 

 on Monday night, via the New York 

 Central, was H. G. Perry, of Dard's; 

 G. E. M. Stumpp, E. J. McCarthy, 

 of Weir's, Brooklyn, and J. V. Phillips. 

 A. Saltford, of Poughkeepsie, joined 

 the party at Poughkeepsie. Max Schling 

 left by train on Sunday, October 9. 



M. C. Ford, the Eighteenth street 

 flower market wholesaler, is receiving 

 daily shipments of the new rose, Ameri- 

 can Legion. 



Frank Valentine, the One Hundred 

 Tenth street florist, is chairman of a 

 committee of business men in his neigh- 

 borhood seeking to have the old cross- 

 town ear line on One Hundred Tenth 

 street operated, and it is likely that the 

 movemeat will be successful. J. H. P. 



BIDDEFORD, MAINE 



CARNATION CUTTINGS 



Rooted Cuttings, Maine Sunshine $120.00 per 1000 



White Delight 100.00 per 1000 



JANUARY DELIVERY 



LANCASTER, PA. 



Attend Dahlia Show. 



Thursday, October 6, the Lancaster 

 County Florists' Club held a sociability 

 run to the dahlia show of the E. Vin- 

 cent, Jr., & Sons Co., White Marsh, Md. 

 The weather was ideal and more than 

 150 Lancaster florists and their families 

 and friends made the run, most of them 

 going via New York to Baltimore, with 

 a short tour of Druid Hill park, noted 

 for its romantic drives and wonderful 

 planting of century-old trees. At White 

 Marsh the members were met by E. Vin- 

 cent, Jr., himself, and conducted over 



the company's mammoth place, first 

 looking over the new things in dahlias 

 in the trial plot, judging from which 

 there are numerous beauties soon to be 

 introduced to the dahlia lorers of 

 America. Vincent's Patrick O'Mara 

 has set the pace for a glorisus class of 

 dahlias. The numerous greenhouses are 

 simply packed with vigorous young 

 stock in small pots, consisting of gera- 

 niums of every description, lantanas, 

 petunias, heliotropes, begonias, fuchsias 

 and many others. 



-, Various Notes. 



Saturday, October 8, from 3 p. m. 

 until 8 p. m., the Iris Club, composed of 



