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40 



The Florists^ Review 



Mat 22, 1919. 



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IrOR MEMORIAL DAY I 



BEST QUALITY 



ALL COLORS 



A choice and heavy supply off 



§ 



CPiRNKTIONS 



Sweet Peas 



Calendulas 



Valley 



Orchids 



Also a heavy supply of 



Snapdragons 

 Daisies 

 Mignonette 

 Pansies 



Spanish Irisr 

 Callas 

 Baby Glads 



Darwin Tulips 



And ail other seasonable Cut Flowers and a complete line off Greens 



Galax 

 Sprengeri 



Plumosus 

 Leucothoe 



Adiantum 

 Ferns 



OUR PRICES ARE NO HIGHER THAN OTHERS AND MARKET PRICES PREVAIL 



FRNE a ft OMPANY 



I 30 E. Randolph St. 



WHOUC8AI.K IXORIST8 



L D. Phone Riadolpli 6578 



CHICAGO i 



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Mention The Beylew When you write. 



tity and quality of flowers the funeral 

 was the most notable they ever have 

 encountered. 



Wendland & Keimel Co. has planted 

 trial batches of the new Montgomery 

 roses, Pilgrim and Crusader, illustrated 

 in last week's Review, and which are to 

 be disseminated next season by A. N. 

 Pierson, Inc. 



Cassimer Gouza, of the Randall cut 

 flower department, has been at home for 

 a week with a light attack of appendi- 

 citis. It is thought he vvdll get through 

 without an operation. 



C. J. Michelsen, of the E. C. Amling 

 Co., points with pride to G. Swenson's 

 Darwin tulips. There are few growers 

 of outdoor flowers for this market who 

 achieve the high quality that this vener- 

 able Elmhurst shipper gets. 



Arthur Weber has returned from Co- 

 blenz, where he guarded the bridge 

 across the Rhine with an American bat- 

 tery of heavy field artillery. He says he 

 is glad to get back to rose growing. 



Evansville, Ind., reports visits from 

 three representatives of Chicago whole- 

 salers last week. Eric Johnson, of the 

 A. L. Randall Co.. Edward Schultz, of 

 the E. C. Amling Co., and C. L. Sherer, 

 of the Chicago Flower Growers' Asso- 

 ciation, each investigated the damage 

 done to the crops. 



Bonvallet & Co., Wichert, 111., have 

 completed the planting of between six 

 and seven acres of gladioli for the local 

 cut flower market. 



Frank Schramm has ordered a new 200- 

 horsepower Freeman boiler to take the 

 place of one of the two lOO-horsepower 

 boilers heretofore used in heating his 

 Crystal Lake rose houses. He will sell 



ORDER NOW! 



ALL COLORS P p* Q N I E S ^^^ COLORS 



FOR MEMORIAL DAY 



— SELECT STOCk'^ONLY- 



MAGNOLIA 

 WREATHS 



AND 



LEAVES 



mnner 



.30 EA.ST RANDOLPH 8TREKT. 



CORSAGE 

 SHIELDS 



CHIFFONS 

 BOXES, ETC. 



SWEET PEAS-CARNATIONS 

 ROSES--VALLEY--ETC. 



FUL.L LINE OF GREENS 



one of the old boilers and keep the other 

 in reserve. 



Between showers the Lombard Floral 

 Co., Lombard, 111., is planting a new 

 house built this spring, which adds twen- 

 ty-five per cent to the glass area. Ophelia 

 plants which were taken out of an old 

 house ta make way for Premier are be- 

 ing used to plant the new house. 



George C. Weiland, of Evanaton, has 

 a prophetic vision. As far back as last 

 summer he saw good times ahead and 



he made every effort to make his facili- 

 ties produce to the utmost this season. 

 One of the things he planned was a crop 

 of Darwin tulips in frames. He has 

 been cutting them heavily the last few 

 days and they have added a tidy sum to 

 his income. 



Lieut. David C. Boyle, recently re- 

 turned from France, has joined the sales 

 force of the A. L. Randall Co. He was 

 with eastern supply houses before en- 

 tering the service of Uncle Sam. 



