28 



The Florists^ Review 



Fbbhoabt 27, 1919. 



TULIPS 



Easter Lilies ' 



Valley 



Calendulas 



Snapdragons 



Carnations 



Freesia 

 Jonquils 



ROSES 



Narcissi I 



Orchids 



Daisies 



Violets 



Lilies 



Callas 

 Mignonette 



Sweet Peas 



rO-RAhT.lNE 



O-BAK-INB 

 LIQUID 





Moonvcti* 



llalax, Willow, Smilax, Boxwood, Sprengeri, Plumosus, Leuoothoe, Adiantum, Ferns, Mexican Ivy 



Oar Pricea arm no Highmr than Othert and Markmt Pric— PreoaU 

 WK ARK OPKN UNTIL • P. M. ON SATURDAY, BUT CLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAY 



F rne ^ C ompany 



30 E. Randolph St. 



▲grata for 

 TO-BAK.1NB 



WHOLV8ALX rLORXSTS 



L D. Pbooe Raadolph 6578 



CHICAGO 



MepttoB The B«t1»w wIwb yog wrtf . 



February 22, to rejoin his family, after 

 spending a few days here on business. 



Peter Pearson is having excellent suc- 

 cess in forcing bulbs which he has 

 grown from planting stock at his place 

 in Je£ferson Park. The Darwin tulips 

 are especially good. 



At Wheaton B. ScheflBer is making 

 a trial of Iris tingitana and has a fine 

 batch of it nearly ready to cut. 



On taking possession of Winterson's 

 Seed Store, A. Henderson started re- 

 arranging the establishment. A crew 

 of carpenters and painters has made Mr. 

 Henderson's new store a pleasure to 

 see. 



Carl Ickes, of the Ickes-Braun Mill 

 Co., is well pleased with the prospect 

 for greenhouse building this season. 

 Two orders of good size have just been 

 shipped to Washington, D. C, and sev- 

 eral others are in work for early de- 

 livery. The leak-proof wooden gutter is 

 popular, says Mr. Ickes, cempeting steel 

 and iron gutters still being high in 

 price. 



August Jurgens is at his bulb farm 

 at Ridgeland, Miss., for the blooming 

 season. 



Those who are accustomed to find the 

 carnations at Mount Greenwood ceme- 

 tery in good shape say they are just a 

 little better than usual this season. The 

 bedding stock, too, of which 300,000 

 plants are needed, is in beautiful shape. 



John A. Michal has come back to the 

 greenhouse business and has taken over 

 the establishment at 7045 Stony Island 

 avenue which has been conducted by his 

 brother Joseph during John 's employ- 

 ment in other fields. Joseph Michal now 

 devotes his entire attention to his place 

 at 6416 South Halsted street. 



The Albert F. Amling Co. has re- 

 ceived about 5,000 plants of Bose 

 Premier, own-root stock. 



The American Bulb Co. has received 

 notice from Bernard Judae & Co., for- 

 warding agents, of the early arrival of 

 a car of new crop rubrum and album 

 lily bulbs from Japan. 



Carl N. Thomas, who has spent the 

 winter in the cut flower department of 

 the A. L. Bandall Co., expects to leave 

 March 1 to return to his farm at West 

 Springfield, Pa. 



A. Henderson has a post-card from his 



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= s 



= s 



I St. Patrick's Green Dye | 



I SOc and $1.00 packages I 



Russells 12c to SOc 



Ophelias 8c to 25c 



Wards 8c to 12c 



Killarneys 8c to 20c 



Carnations 6c s 



Splits .: 3c I 



Peas $1.00 to $2.50 § 



Violets, doz, bu $2.50 s 



Nico-Fume in stock, all sizes, 50c to $10.50. 



I T. J. NOLL & COMPANY | 



I 1109 Grand Avenue KANSAS CITY, MO. | 



nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllilllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^ 



Mention Th« B«t1»w w^m yo« writs. 



SEASONABLE CUT FLOWERS 



— everjithing seasonable and of our usual good quality. 



Don't forget to include in your order Green Goods such as 



BOXWOOD, FERNS, LKUCOTHOE, GALAX, Etc. 



Supplies you always Deed 



Ruscus) Cycat, Magnolias, Lycopodium, Made-up Wreaths, 

 Oak Sprays, Kibbons, Crepe Paper, Chiffons, Etc. 



O. A. & L. A. TONNER 



Wholesale Cut Flowers and Supplies 



30 E. Randolph St., cfck^k^'IT^I* CHICAGO 



Urutloo lb* U»Tl« 



former bookkeeper, F. E. AJ^orphett, who 

 is a member of the 12th Engineers. Mr. 

 Morphett was resting in the Pyrenees 

 when he wrote. 



rltr. 



I William G. Earle, superintendent for 

 Emil Buettner, has a son in the 108th 

 Engineers, a part of the army of oc- 

 cupation along the Bhine. Beoent word 



