M 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



JuLz 0, 1911. 



*^ 



Six Pages of Retailers' Cards 



This department for the cards of Leading Retail Florists — those florists who have the 

 facilities for filling the orders sent them by other florists — has made possible the recent rapid 

 development of this branch of the business, a branch of the trade now established for all time and 

 so helpful that its volume will keep on increasing for many years. 



Are you sending and receiving your share of these orders? You can send your share (and 

 make 20 per cent profit without effort) if you let your customers know you can perform this service 

 for them. To receive your share — well, The Review's department for Retailers' cards remains the 

 one way of getting prompt action Qn the order in hand. 



To be represented costs only 70 cents per week on a yearly order. This is for one-inch space. 

 Other spaces in proportion. 



Why not send your order today — now — before you forget it? 



LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 



JACOB SCHULZ, 



Flower Shop, 550 South Fourth Avenae« 

 Greenhouses, 831 Cherokee Road. 



Personal attention given to out-of-town orders for Louisville and surrounding territory. 



E. R. FRY, Florist 



Rochester, N.Y. 



I bsTS constantly on hiind a seasonable 

 Tarintr of fresh cut flowers, which I will deliver 

 promptly in Rochester and adjoining towns. 



KENOSHA, WIS. 



and all pointa between 



CHICAGO AiiD MILWAUKEE 



Mall, wire or phone your orders to 

 • II. UDLKlln, BKN08HA, WIS. 



J. H. SNALL & SONS 



FLORISTS 



HEW YORK, WASHINGTON. D.C. 



list Broadway. Cor. 14th <& 6 Sts. 



AHP WALDOBF-A8TOBIA. 



Lexington, Ky. 



JOHN A. KELLER, Florist 



Hiffh Ch*ade Cut Flowers 

 ajad Designing : : : : 



All oidan entrosted to us for Central Eentookj 

 will have carefiil attention. 



iMg floral & Nursery Co., ^tS? 



Write or wire headqiurters for flowers for Texas. 

 Okhkoaa, Louisiana, New Mexico. No orders too 

 lane, nooe too small. 



Prompt and personal attention given all orders. 



MRS. J. T. HINCHLIFFE 



FI.OBIST 

 g04-g06 Wiaconsin 6t.. Racine, t^li. 



Bpedal care taken with telegraph orders for 



DETROIT AND VIONITY 



LBm* riMll Co., Akert PschdMi. Pfh.. 153 Bates St 



Oml W. Cnnck. KN0XVII1E«IENN. 



The Leading Florist of the South 

 ■AU OKimrm Qtwen Special Attention 



DATID O. ORILLBOBTZKB 



Ale!x«nflria, Va. 



B«B Pftone 2B. All orders reeelre prompt attentton. 



JF Wn fAY & CANC ^^^ Bnadway, Ccnncfl Bluffy bwt. 

 • 1 e lIlLvUA tt uUill)) Wliolesale and RetaU 



Largest Greenhouse Establishment 

 West of Chicago. 



Orders delivered anywliere, Inclndinr Iowa, Nebnwlus, North Dakota and South 



Dakota. Free deliveries to Omaha. 



Re Strohmeier, Aberdeen, S. D. 



Prwpt AtteitJM GireM t» Oit-<It>wB Ortei 



ST. Loxns. 



The Market. 



The extremely hot weather last week 

 was anything but beneficial to the cut 

 flower market, which was considered 

 dull. A few of the large stores report- 

 ed some good-sized funeral orders, but 

 anything outside of that was small. 

 Stock is plentiful, but of poor quality. 

 About the only flowers of good quality 

 are gladioli, lilies and valley. Roses 

 ship in poorly and open quickly; the 

 market has plenty of these. Carna- 

 tions are much off in size and color and 

 the bulk of them do not bring over $10 

 per thousand. All outdoor stock is suf- 

 fering for want of rain. Adiantunt, 

 smilax and asparagus sold well all the 

 week. Fancy ferns, too, were in good 

 demand. 



Club Anniversary. 



The twenty-fifth anniversary ban- 

 quet of the iPlorists' Club took place 

 Wednesday evening, June 28, at Pech- 

 mann's hotel, and fifty-three members 

 were seated at the tables. The large 

 room was nicely decorated with palms 

 and the tables with cut flowers, and the 

 members voted it one of the best af- 

 fairs the club has yet given. 



After a splendid feast, Toastmaster 

 J. F. Ammann called on George As- 

 mus, president of the S. A. F., who 

 spoke on S. A. F. matters. H. B. Dor- 

 ner, of Urbana, HI., secretary of the 

 S. A. F., was next called on for a talk 

 on *'The Relationship of the S. A. F. 

 to Florists' Clubs." President Con- 

 non spoke on "The Florists' Club," 

 and Luther Armstrong en "The Early 

 Days of the Florists' Club," he being 

 the first secretary. C. C. Sanders spoke 



Canada^s Florist 



96 Yonge St^ TORONTO 



Winona and Rochester, Ninn. 



For prompt and particular attention send 

 your orders for Southwestera Wisconsin and 

 Southern Minnesota to 



John Fuhlbruegge 



Qrower and Retailer 



New Tork 

 Tci i i h sas. Ban Prtspect 



Louisville, Ky« 



f . WALKER & CO., 634 fourth Ave 



Pontiac,in.4i2SL^BSt' 



All orders receive i>rompt and personal attention. 



LOU HELEN DUNDORE, £SsW 



110 W. IGiig St, LANCASTER. PA. 



CORNELL ud WELLS COLLBQES m4 



CENTRAL NEW YORK ORDERS 



lw>hhwASeii. Wl iel» M »eiiiM»BM»arwi«t< «iihw.^vv. 

 MINNESOTA NORTH DAKOTA iVIONTANA . 



SMEDLEY& CO. < 



Fwf*. Nwtli DiMa jatf Miles Oly, 



;_-i>_.-^ — ^t-._-,-, 



