^ 



24 



The Florists^ Review 



July 10. 1919. 



ROSES 



OUR ROSES ARE OF 

 GOOD SUMMER QUALITY 



PEONIES 

 CARNATIONS 



GLADIOLI 



ARE IN GOOD SUPPLY AND OF 

 STOCK THAT WILL HOLD OUT 





OF QUALITY. THE 

 SELLING VARIETY 



OF THESE WE HAVE GOOD STOCK 

 OF THE BEST VARIETIES 



A 



L 



GALAX, SMILAX, SPRENGERI, PLUMOSUS, LEUCOTHOE, ADIANTUM, EERNS, MEXICAN IVY. 



Our Pricf arm not Higher than Othmrt; Market Prices Prevail 

 We are open until 8 P. M. on Saturday, but closed all day Sunday 



Frne ^ Company 



30 E. Randolph St. 



WBOLMBALm FLORISTS 



L D. Phone Randolph 6578 



CHICAGO 



The next room back is the workroom. 

 Then comes a well lighted room for 

 palms, etc., and back of this room is the 

 garage, which houses a White limousine 

 delivery car and a Ford delivery. All 

 the rooms adjoin, making everything ac- 

 cessible. 



P. L. McKee and family again make 

 their home in Chicago, the American 

 Greenhouse Mfg. Co., of Pana, having 

 established its general offices here. For 

 the two years the company had its head- 

 quarters at the factory the president 

 lived in the same city. 



In the program at the park: "Do 

 you like Ravinia? Fritz Bahr helped 

 make it beautiful with trees, shrubs and 

 flowers." The big, round, mounded bed 

 in front of the open-air theater this year 

 is filled with Petunia Rosy Morn, which 

 has become extremely popular on the 

 north shore for window boxes. Ravinia 

 opened June 30 and Mr. Bahr 's planting 

 is too recent to make its full showing; 

 the beds always look best in the last 

 weeks of the resort's brief season. 



Raymond Ziska was 22 years of age 

 July 5, 80 it is no wonder he favored the 

 double holiday idea. 



Roy White spent the Fourth at Adel, 

 la., where Mrs. White presented him 

 with a daughter July 3. 



H. Kusik, of Kansas City, was here 

 several days last week and made many 

 purchases, including, if the street has 

 it right, the largest lot of baskets which 

 ever left this center in one shipment. 



John Poehlmann, while driving north 

 on Broadway one day last week, en- 

 countered a crowd by the curb at Mon- 

 trose avenue and stopped to see what it 

 was all about. He found that an Italian 

 boy riding a bicycle had been hit by an 

 automobile, was badly cut and slowly 

 bleeding to death. Mr. Poehlmann put 

 the boy in his car and rushed him to 

 the Lake View hospital, where it was 

 said he arrived just in time to save his 

 life. 



E. F. Winterson is cutting perennials 

 in quantity at his Ridgewood Gardens, 

 at Highland Park. 



A. T. Pyfer is at the old family home 

 near Polo, 111., on his vacation. He will 

 be away about three weeks. 



Tom Rogers, with the Weiland-Risch 

 Co.. is vacationing at his mother's home 



TOUR 



PROTECTION 



FOR COMMERCIAL GROWERS 



OF 



CUT FLOWERS 



Adv. No. 5. 

 Watch for No. 6. 



SUPPLY AND DEMAND 



Supply and Demand will always determine the 

 selling price of Cut Flowers in the Wholesale 

 Market and for that reason every grower should 

 know to a fraction of a cent the diflferent PRICE 

 CHANGES on their products. 



This means more DOLLARS to every consignor. 



The NEW SYSTEM of a SALES REPORT is ready 

 to tell the grower just what he should know. 



Kennicott Bros. Co. 



'Exclusive Wholesalers to the Trade Since 1881" 

 Under Growers' Supervision 



CHICAGO 



at Spring Lake, Mich., and will also 

 visit his brother, Herman W. Rogers, 

 who is with the G. H. Taepke Co., De- 

 troit. 



Being of the spirit of the horse- 

 traders of other days, Fred Wehrman, 

 brother of Henry, now has C. J. Michel- 

 sen 's Packard, Mr. Michelsen has E. C. 



Amling's 1918 Twin Six and Mr. Am- 

 llng has a brand-new one. 



George J. Ball and wife are driving to 

 New York in the Moline-Knight. 



The Retail Florists' Association has 

 taken no action in the matter of busi- 

 ness hours, but most of its members, 

 now that the Fourth has been passed. 



