A. E. KUNDERD, GOSHEN, INDIANA . 
27 
One of Hundreds of Similar Testimonials 
We Receive 
Woodcote, Alverstoke, Hants, England, Dec. 17, 1919. 
MR. A. E. KUNDERD. 
Dear Sir:—Your announcement in this month’s 'Flower Grower” 
made me very sad, as I was looking for your catalog by every mail. 
When I exhibited some of your varieties in London this year I had many 
inquiries for your address and I have no doubt you have heard from 
some. Mr. Barr wrote to me on more than one occasion and I sent him 
a bloom of ‘‘Purple Glory”, with which he was very much struck. I 
also sent you a page of the “Queen” which contained a notice of one 
of my exhibits. 
Now I must exercise my soul in patience until next year, perhaps 
again to be disappointed. I was wondering whether the purchaser was 
Mr. Cave, of Essex. He told me that he was growing on all your 
Primulinus varieties for his son, who is now at one of the Horticultural 
Colleges, so that he might have a good stock available by the time his 
son was ready to go into the business. 
While congratulating you on your great success this year, I hope 
that you will give your old friends a “look in” next year. 
Yours faithfully, 
GEO. CHURCHER. 
All who receive this booklet will receive our catalog for 1921 in 
due season. Should any of our friends remove to other locations, please 
advise us, so we may send mail to your correct address. 
We never send our catalogs to miscellaneous lists, but are always 
grateful to any of our friends who give our address to any one who may 
be interested in fine Gladioli, or send us the address of their friends who 
are interested. The following letter from Mr. Harold J. Child to Mrs. 
Francis King, the famous authoress and horticulturist, will show the 
good you can do for others in this way: 
“Of all the flowers of this year I must give the palm to Kunderd. 
I am not going to attempt a description, because I cannot, but if you 
had done nothing else for me than to give me Kunderd s name I could 
never forget what I owed to you. I simply raved over his flowers and 
so did every one who was fortunate enough to see them. 
