Fbbbdaby 24, 1916. 



The Florists' Review 



31 



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s \MkM LI ^^^ |kl ^^ ^f Send your orders to a house that can be relied i 



s W 1^1 ■ 1^ \^ I upon to fill your orders when scarcity exists? | 



S During the period of SCARCITT we were filling orders complete when other houses were wiring their customers "Im- 5 



= possible to fill." TODAY finds us BETTER THAN EVER able to give you = 



I W^ Good Values for Your Money. Try us and convince yourself. "WU | 



I HEAVY SUPPLY of the most popular Roses. | 



I Russell, Ophelia, Sunburst, Double White Killarney in short or long length = 



I stock. Also plenty of Pink Killarney, Killarney Brilliant, Richmond, = 



5 Milady and Ward Roses. | 



i Orchids, Callas, Lilies, Valley, Daisies, Freesia, Tulips, Daffodils, | 



I Jonquils, Narcissus and all other Cut Flowers and Greens. Heavy cuts of | 



S Carnations being received daily. Special price in quantity lots. 5 



i You can increase your profits and business | 



I by sending all your orders direct to I 



E QUALITY 

 I SPEAKS 

 i LOUDER 

 I THAN 

 i PRICES 



J.A.BUDLONG 



184 North Wabash Avenua, CHICAQO 



??JS!%,y-^^^ "'' WHOLESALE 

 CARNATIONS ennuicp 



A Specialty DnUWtN 



^CUT FLOWERS 



PRICES i 

 AS i 



LOW = 



AS I 



OTHERS i 



s 19" SHIPPING ORDERS GIVEN CAREFUL ATTENTION ^M = 



£ Wc ire in daily touch with market conditions and when a DECLINE takes place you can rdy upon orders sent US receiviaf SUCH BENEFIT = 



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as the regular buyer for the E. Wien- 

 hoeber Co. He likes to look after this 

 end of the business personally at this 

 time of year. Lewis J. Bunt, who grad- 

 uated from the greenhouses and who 

 has been buying during the winter, is 

 taking a vacation to battle with the 

 grip. 



Hinsdale is experiencing an epidemic 

 of scarlet fever of such a serious na- 

 ture that schools and churches have 

 been closed and many homes are under 

 quarantine. The 9-year-old boy of 

 Charles Swanson, a grower in the Bas- 

 sett & Washburn greenhouses, is quite 

 ill with the fever. As a result, C. L. 

 Washburn came near being quarantined 

 the other day, when he approached 

 near enough to Swanson 's home to 

 make inquiries into the state of affairs 

 and throw a pay envelope onto the 

 porch. 



Out at Deerfield, W. G. Gaddis, whose 

 specialty is giganteum and calla lilies, 

 has had so good a season he is plan- 

 ning to add considerably to his facili- 

 ties this summer. 



A new delivery car has recently been 

 added to George Wienhoeber's facit- 

 ties. 



At Michael Beese hospital early this 

 week, Charles Erne suffered a slight 

 relapse, after his recent highly success- 

 ful operation, but is again gaining rap- 

 idly, with the prospect that he will be 

 back at the store next week. 



Did you ever see a pedometer! It 

 looks like a watch, but it measures the 

 distance a man walks the way a speed- 

 ometer measures the distance a motor 

 runs. Just for fun, Emil Beichling 

 slipped a pedometer into his pocket one 

 morning as he was starting out on his 



Violets and Sweet Peas in Large Quantity 



California Violets in Large Bunches. . . .per doz. bu., $1.50 



Home-grown Violets per 1000, 7.50 



Peas per 100, 50c to 1.00 



Jonquils 2c to 3c 



Tulips 3c to 4c 



Rainbow Freesia 3c 



Mignonette 6c to 8c 



Easter Lilies 10c to 12c 



Valley 5c 



White and Pink Killarney . . 4c to 10c 

 Russell, Milady, Sunburst. .6c to 12c 



Carnations 2>^c to 3c 



Mexican Ivy 50c per 100 



Adiantum 90c per 100 



Fancy Ferns $3.00 per 1000 



T. J. NOLL & COMPANY 



1109 Grand Avenue, KANSAS CITY, MO. 



Phonas: Horn* Main 6487-Ball Grand 3143 



Mention The Rerlew when yon write. 



rounds of the Peter Eeinberg green- 

 houses, where he is superintendent. At 

 night, he was surprised to find he had 

 walked over twenty miles that day. 

 Bepeated tests showed that he some- 

 times walked twenty-six miles in a day; 

 never less than eighteen miles, all un- 

 der glass. 

 According to A. T. Pyfer, the easier 



277^0 MOR 

 BLOSSOMS 



on plants raised In 4-lnch SQUARE paper pota 

 (64 cubic inches of soil and roots) than on plants 

 raised In 4-lnch clay pots (31 cubic Inches of soil 

 and roots). See our 2-paKe advt., pages 12-13. 

 F. W. BOCHEIXE & SONS, Cheater, N. 3. 

 Mention The Rerlew when yon write. 



