Mabch 8, 1919 



The Florists*^ Review 



silllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllillllllilllllllllillllllllllllllllliillllllllilllllU: 



I PLENTY GOOD FLOWERS I 



Prices You Can Afford to Pay 



i 



I GOOD ROSES IN ALL LENGTHS | 



I Our crops are on the increase and no order goes unfilled — you can | 



I get the Roses you need at the price you want to pay if you order I 



I Roses of Randall. Quality excellent; all lengths and all varieties. | 



I CARNATIONS SWEET PEAS | 



I We offer a good supply in all Choice Spencers in all colors; good | 



I colors; excellent quality; sellers in any store that | 



I will ship well. does corsage work. § 



I Orchids, iris Tingitana, Valley, Jonquils, Tulips, Paper Whites | 



I No Matter What You Need, Order of Randall 



= When you send to Randall you are drawing on the largest supply of Cut Flowers in the 



S Central States — you can rely on Randall. Anything that's in the market, Rag^all has it. 



i All GREENS in constant supply 



ir.i 



A. L. RANDALL CO. 



Wabash Ave. 

 at Lake St. 



CHICAGO 



Phones: 

 Cent. 7720 



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PERCY 

 JONES 



Inc. 



56 EAST 



RANDOLPH 



STREET 



CHICAGO 



Magnolia Leaves 



Best in country 

 $1.60 per carton 



Leucothoe Sprays 



$6.00 per 1000 



Corsage Pins 



5 inches long 



All colors 

 $1.25 per gross 



Meyer's Silkaline 



8 spools to box 

 $1.75 per 1-lb. box 



Mention The Review when you write. 



a salesman. It is understood the five 

 days' bookings represented a total of 

 $18,000. 



John Poehlmann says that word has 

 come to him from Morton Grove that 

 this spring's crop of cattleyas will be 

 the largest ever cut in the Poehlmann 

 establishment. 



The Illinois State Florists' Associa- 

 tion will hold its thirteenth annual 

 convention at the University of Illinois 

 March 11 and 12. It has been arranged 

 for the Chicago party to leave the Park 

 Row station of the Illinois Central rail- 

 road March 11 at 8:45 a. m., due at 



Champaign at 11:.59 a. m. Fare $4.08 

 in each direction. 



The feature of the Florists' Club's 

 meeting, March 6, at the Randolph ho- 

 tel, will be a paper on bulb growing in 

 America, by Peter Pearson. The vari- 

 ous supply houses have been invited to 

 make displays of Easter novelties at 

 the meeting. 



The Vim delivery truck of the E. C. 

 Amling Co., stolen last week, was re- 

 covered after a day or two, but in such 

 condition that C. J. Michelsen promptly 

 traded it in on the purchase of a new 

 Dodge truck. 



The trade learns with regret of the 

 death, February 26, of Gustave Poehl- 

 mann, one of the five Poehlmann broth- 

 ers, two of whom now are gone. He was 

 not a member of the firm, but had been 

 timekeeper at the Morton Grove estab- 

 lishment for a number of years follow- 

 ing a long term of service in the City 

 hall. 



After thirty-five years in the florists' 

 business on the drive that leads to Rose- 

 hill cemetery, H. Hansen is forced to 

 place his establishment on the market. 

 Ill health keeps him from ever attending 

 to business. The business was to have 



