AruiL 16, 1914. 



The Florists' Review 



79 





The Story of "Easter Greeting" 



npms photo was taken 

 * April 1, and sent us 

 by J, N. Spanabel, a satis- 

 fled customer of East 

 Palestine, Ohio, and cer- 

 tainly tells the story of 

 "Easter Greeting." He 

 writes: "What do you 

 think of this? Notice size 

 of our heads and the flower 

 heads, and then say it 

 takes an expert to grow 

 'Easter Greeting' pelargo- 

 niums. Why doesn't every 

 florist grow some 75c 

 'Easter Greeting' instead 

 of so many 12c geraniums. 

 It's easier to grow, ready 

 to sell sooner and longer; 

 sells on sight— in short, 

 it's a hummer. If we wish 

 to hold plants for stock, 

 we have to either keep 

 blooms ofif or guard with 

 wire fence. It's the only 

 sort worth growing. You 

 ought to sell a million." 

 That's the story of 

 "Easter Greeting" in a 

 nutshell. What more can 

 we say or do to induce you 

 to send $2.00 for a trial 

 25, or a full hundred at 



regular prices— 214-inch, $10.00 per 100; .3-inch, $12.00 per 100; 4-inch, $20.00 per 100, all in bud and bloom. Our stock is in 



finest possible condition, and you should have some of them. Write at once. 



S. C. TEMPLIN, "^^S:^"'" GarrettsviUe, Ohio 



