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OCTOBEB 26, 1916. 



The Florists' Review 



25 



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I You II f ind Good Mumstiere I 



I the largest and most varied supply of CHRYSANTHEMUMS | 



I in the market. Pink, Yellow and White. Ours are not the | 

 I common sort— imperfect blooms and poor necks— but the kind | 

 I YOU are I looking for. POMPONS, too. t | 



i YOU'LL like our ROSES— so wiU your CUSTOMERS. Every variety, all lengths. | 



rue color, clean foWage. 'They are thfc kind you always get AT RANDALL'S. 

 I 



I A. L. RANDALL CO.. 



= Rush Orders Are Welcome WHOLESALE CUT FLOWERS Phone Central 7720 E 



I Wabash Ave. at Lake St., C H I C A G O | 



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Mention The Review when you write. 



Z M 



H 



N 



HEAVY SUPPLY 



MUMS FOR ALL SAINTS' DAY 



WHITE 



PINK 



YELLOW 



All buyers can safely place their orders with us with the assurance 

 that they will be properly taken care of and with the same fancy 

 grade of stock that we supplied our customers with last year. 



Chicago Headquarters for RUSSELL and OPHELIA 



Our supply of Russell and Ophelia roses is large and of such good 

 quality that they are recognized as the best in this market. In 

 addition to Russell and Ophelia, we have our regular supply of 

 Ward, Sunburst, Richmond, Milady, Killarney and White Killarney. 



Lilies, Carnations, Valley, Greens 



■^^^Remember ^rhen ordering tbat our line la so complete that It Includes 

 ^^V every Item offered In tbe Great ChtcaKo Market. 



30 E. Randolph Street, 



It. D. Phones 



Central ] g||3 



Aatomatlo 42-96S 



CHICAGO 



Meption The ReTlcw when yon wrlf. 



in addition to the new entrance in the 

 comer. Philip C. Schupp, the manager, 

 says the increase in space was necessi- 

 tated by the growth in the volume of 

 business transacted, which has practi- 

 cally douoied during the last eighteen 

 months. 



Various Notes. 



It is stated that October 19 A. Hen- 

 derson acquired the interests of G. M. 

 Reburn and A. Miller in the firm of 

 Henderson & Co., of which he now is 

 sole owner. 



Swift automatic stokers for the six- 

 teen boilers which heat plant A of 

 Poehlmann Bros. Co., at Morton Grove, 

 have recently been installed. To facili- 

 tate the bringing of coal to the heating 

 plant, an overhead coal dump from the 



switch is being constructed. This will 

 reduce the labor required to shovel the 

 coal from the cars. Four new stokers 

 have also been installed in plant B. A 

 7%-ton Sterling auto truck has been or- 

 dered to carry coal from plant A to 

 plant B. The great capacity of Ster- 

 ling trucks was shown last week by the 

 manufacturers in a demonstration in 

 which they moved, in one machine, fifty 

 tons of coal in two hours and twenty 

 minutes. Having recovered from the 

 after effects of a minor operation which 

 was necessitated by a broken nose. Earl 

 Poehlmann, son of August Poehlmann, 

 has returned to Urbana, where he is 

 taking work at the University of 

 Hlinois. 



At Mt. Greenwood cemetery the an- 

 nual requirements now run to about 



125,000 bedding plants, of which about 

 30,000 are 4-inch geraniums. Some of 

 the stock, however, is planted in Mt. 

 Olivet, across the street, where there 

 are no greenhouses. 



The order book of the E. Wienhoeber 

 Co., just around the corner from the 

 Lake Shore drive, is the best index of 

 the activity of the approaching social 

 season. Mr. Wienhoeber says the or- 

 ders on file indicate an unusually large 

 number of debutante affairs next 

 month. 



The fall flower show of the Illinois 

 State Florists' Association will be held 

 at Bloomington, November 9 and 10. 

 The Chicago & Alton train leaving the 

 Union station at 10:15 a. m., Thursday, 

 November 9, has been selected for the 

 Chicago delegation and it is hoped this 



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