Febbdaby 17, 1916. 



The Florists^ Review 



27 



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I Rainbow Freesial 



I OFFERED IN MANY BRIGHT COLORS I 



I It would be difficult to itn- 



I agfine anything finer for fancy 



I basket work, for centerpieces 



I for dinner tables or for corsage 



I bouquets. Extensively used, 



I not only by Chicago's leading stores, 



= but by progressive retailers in many 



I other cities. Bright, fresh, fra- 



I grant, new. 



I GUT SPRAYS THIS WEEK . . . $3.00 PER 100 



= SOLD EXCLUSIVELY BY 



I E. C ANUNG CO. 



I 174-176 N. Wabash Ave., CHICAGOJLL. 



This sterling novelty is the 

 result of seven years of careful 

 work in cross-breeding, during 

 which a wonderful improve- 

 ment has been made on the 

 earliest colored freesias. The 

 stock has now reached the 

 point where a limited quantity 

 of bulbs can be offered of 1916 

 crop. Address 



ALOIS FREY 



Oritinator and Introducer 



CROWN POINT, IND. = 



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Mention The Review when you write. 



■:l WHOLESALE GDWEPSs^CUT FL9WEDS*'^''> PLANTS 



182 N. Wabash Avenue 



CNice^^o 



VaUey 



Milady J6.00 



Russell 6.00 



Ward 4.00 



Galax, per 1000, $1.00@$1.26. 



Per 100 Per 100 



$ 5.00 Carnations 9 2.00 @$ 4.00 



15.00 Eillameys, piik ind white, 6.00 @ 15.00 



125.00 Ferns per 1000, 2.50 



112.00 Boxwood per case, 10.00 



Prices subject to market changes. 



Jonquils, per 100 $2.50 @ $3.00 



Pussy Willow, bunch . . .25 @ .50 



Calla Lilies, doz 1.60 @ 2.00 



Adiantum, per 100 1.00 



Smilax, per doz. strings. 2.00 



Meiiiiou The Kf Tiew wb«u yon write. 



paigu for the American Greenhouse 

 Mfg. Co. 



Thora Clemenson, the 14-year-old 

 daughter of Christian Clemenson, 7801 

 South Shore avenue, who suffered an 

 operation a few days ago for lympho- 

 sarcoma, has rallied wonderfully from 

 the shock and is now resting easily in 

 the South Shore hospital. 



To judge from the orders booked by 

 Weiland & Risch, the Champ Weiland 

 rose will be as extensively grown in 

 the east as in the west. 



The championship in the Windy City 

 bowling tournament was won last week 

 by Joe Mendel's team. 



A most interesting assortment of 

 glass novelties has been received by 

 the A. L. Randall Co. Many of the 



articles so nearly resemble bronze that 

 the eye alone cannot detect the differ- 

 ence. 



The Chicago market conditions are 

 much more interesting to Otto Frese 

 than law suits against the street car 

 company for personal injuries. His 

 only solace is that he can snatch a 

 few minutes from jury service each 

 day to spend at his desk. 



To demonstrate that he believes in 

 practicing what he preaches, Allie 

 Zech, of Zech & Mann, has signified his 

 intention of attending the convention 

 of the Illinois State Florists' Associa- 

 tion at Moline. 



There are few seasons at which W. 

 H. Amling, at Maywood, is not cutting 

 some crop of superlative quality. In 



the autumn it is mums; now it is Purity 

 freesia; a little later it will be sweet 

 peas planted from pots to follow the 

 mums and only waiting for a little 

 sun to give a splendid pick. 



True to promise, Henry M. Hirsch 

 opened his new store at 37 East Van 

 Buren street, February 12, and was 

 fully repaid for his diligence. 



Excellent success has attended the 

 efforts of A. Eriksson, manager of A. H. 

 Schneider's greenhouses in Oak Park. 

 His pot plants are of quality not easy 

 to beat. 



"The Review certainly has a won- 

 derful circulation, and its readers most 

 surely read it from cover to cover," 

 says A. L. Berry, of A. L. Berry & Co., 

 Chicago agent for Carter's Tested 



