. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. ?>r. ^ 7'#S'> ;-H'Z V. J ^;7i;;;r'HF^y^. 134 The Florists^ Review NOVEMBEB 9< 1922 wedding. Pink snapdragons and vio- lets were used on the bride's table. Smilax, autumn foliage and baskets of bronze chrysanthemums were used. In the living room, where the ceremony took place, autumn foliage and mums were combined. There were bouquets for the bride, matron of honor, brides- maid and flower girl, and corsages for a number of guests. Myron Bloy, who was with Max Schling for two years, is now a mem- ber of the sales force of the W. L. Eoc


. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. ?>r. ^ 7'#S'> ;-H'Z V. J ^;7i;;;r'HF^y^. 134 The Florists^ Review NOVEMBEB 9< 1922 wedding. Pink snapdragons and vio- lets were used on the bride's table. Smilax, autumn foliage and baskets of bronze chrysanthemums were used. In the living room, where the ceremony took place, autumn foliage and mums were combined. There were bouquets for the bride, matron of honor, brides- maid and flower girl, and corsages for a number of guests. Myron Bloy, who was with Max Schling for two years, is now a mem- ber of the sales force of the W. L. Eock Flower Co. A. Newell made up a beautiful casket cover Friday, November 3. It was of bronze chrysanthemums and Columbia roses, with some small yellow mums. When completed, the cover was six and one-half feet in length. Longview Farm is cutting good Bon- naffon mums. E. L. Isherwood, of Pleasant Hill, Mo., was in the city October 31. Samuel Murray had numerous orders for the welcoming of new officers of the National Bank of Commerce Wednesday, November 1. One order was a large vase of American Beauties. L. E. Bohannon, of the Kansas City Wholesale Cut Flower Co., has returned from a successful business trip through Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. He was impressed with the spirit of progress and the activity of the cities he vis- ited. J. E. K. Breckenridge, Minn.—Two new green- houses, 29x100 feet, are being erected by the Wahpeton Floral Co. near the Bois de Sioux river, and a short dis- tance south of the tracks of the North- ern Pacific Railroad Co. When these greenhouses are completed, the firm will no longer be compelled to have so much of its stock shipped in as is now the case. Sandwich, 111.—The Sandwich Green- houses, owned and oi)eratod by Mrs. Frances Spickerman, have been under the cliarge of Mr. and Mrs. Chancy Gunckel for the last three mouths, dur- ing the former's sojourn in Europe. Mrs. Spickerman visited her old home, which she left forty-one years ago, and sl


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912