. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. Prize-Winning Posters of the Senior High School Students at Madison> Ind. trade are arranging to attend the S. A. F. convention in Washington in August. It looks as though the automobile route will be popular, judging from the par- ties in process of formation. Hans Eosacker and Mrs. Kosacker. of Minneapolis, were passengers for Ku- rope, June 14 from New York, on the Aquitania. A change in the sailing time gave them an opportunity to make a few calls on the trade. J. H. P. INDIANA TELEGRAPH POSTERS. One of the most conspicuous features in the p
. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. Prize-Winning Posters of the Senior High School Students at Madison> Ind. trade are arranging to attend the S. A. F. convention in Washington in August. It looks as though the automobile route will be popular, judging from the par- ties in process of formation. Hans Eosacker and Mrs. Kosacker. of Minneapolis, were passengers for Ku- rope, June 14 from New York, on the Aquitania. A change in the sailing time gave them an opportunity to make a few calls on the trade. J. H. P. INDIANA TELEGRAPH POSTERS. One of the most conspicuous features in the preparation for the meeting of the Florists' Telegraph Delivery Asso- ciation at Indianapolis last October was the contest among students of vari- ous schools in the city for the poster most expressively presenting the tele- graph delivery idea. One of the im- portant phases of the contest was the education it gave the competing stu- dents, their teachers and parents in the telegraph delivery service. This accom- plishment of the contest was so im- pressed on the mind of L. E. Hitz, now president of the Indiana State Florists' Association, that he instituted a similar contest among the students of Madison, Ind., this spring. The posters of the Madison students were exhibited at the meeting, June 7, of the Indiana State Florists' Associa- tion, at the store of the Smith & Young Co., Indianapolis. So clever did the members of the association think the work that they voted $20 in prizes to be awarded. Each group, the junior and senior students, receiveii three prizes, $5 for first, $3 for second, and $2 for third. The winners are shown on this page. In each group the winners are in order from left to right, the win- jier of first prize being on the left. Here is a way to stimulate interest in and increase knowledge of the telegraph delivery of flowers all over the coun- try. The florists in each community can promote such a competition. It is not beyond imagination that a later
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912