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36 



The Florists^ Review 



NoraMUB 4. 1920 



Mums ^ Pom 



• If 



ns 



You will like our Mums— grown by specialists and handled with utmost care. 



SELECT ROSES 



II yoa will try oar Roses, any color, yoa will find they 

 compare favorably with any others you have used— 

 all varieties, well Krown— any length stem you need. 



Sweet Peas Single Violets Pansies 



Lilies ^uAUTY Carnations all°oISSs 



I and all other /lowers in season. 

 I Ferns and all other Greens. 



ZECH & MANN 



Wholesale Cut Flowers 



30 East Randolph Street 



CHICAGO, ILUNOIS 



JOSEPH ZISKA & SONS 



169-175 North Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO, ILL. 



MOSS isR^EN CHIFFON, 6-inch, 10c per yard. Subject to prior sale. 



IB TOOTHPICKS, 100 boxes to case, $6.00 per case. GREENING PINS, 10-lb. boxes, SPECIAL, $3.00 per box. 



GENUINE HOLLAND AIR FERN, $1.50 per dozen bunches, $11.60 per 100 bunches. 

 GOLD LETTERS, No. 1, 60c per 100, $5.50 per 1000; No. 4, 45c per 100, $4.00 per 1000. 

 SILKALINE thread, Meyer's, FF or FFF, $2.25 per pound. SMILAX thread, Meyer's, $2.00 per pound. 



YAZOO Florists' Green Thread on tubes, $1.25 per pound. 

 WHITE WOODEN EASELS, write for special prices. 



Wire Design Specialists. Complete Line of Florists' Supplies. 



Service and Prices. A Trial Order (send it by mail if you can't come) will Convince You. 



Pappas Bros., Inc., is larger than any 

 other there. 



Charles Paulsen, of Arlington Heights, 

 has attracted attention for his skill in 

 handling Bonnaffon this season. The 

 E. C. Amling Co. reports that last week 

 his flowers sold for as much as 50 cents 

 each, sometimes entire shipments bring- 

 ing that price. 



To give an idea of the volume single 

 items now represent, i^ic Johnson says 

 the Bandall sales of boxwood approxi- 

 mate thirty tons A jfiv — 1,200 eases or 

 bags of fifty pounds each. 



J. F. Noll, credit manager of the A. L. 

 Bandall Co., took his third degree in 

 Composite lodge, A^ Ti & A.. M., in the 

 evening of October 30. F..M. Johnson 

 and several of the. Bandall staff who 

 are Masons were gi^sta. 



H. Van Oelder, whose real estate 



CUT TUBEROSES 



FOR IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT 



Write, wire or phone 



IMPERIAL GARDENS, Sugar Land, Texas 



dealings have given him a reason for 

 studying the subject of building costs 

 more seriously than most of us do, says 

 he believes ah investment in productive 

 property, which includes greenhouses, is 

 safe at present prices. He says that 

 buildings of all kinds still sell consider- 

 ably below a reproduction value and 



there must be a considerable reduction 

 in construction costs before selling 

 prices are affected. Mr. Van Gelder 

 believes there eventually will be a 

 building boom, but that it is not near. 

 Mrs. C. A. Samuelson returned from 

 Idaho last week, having spent the sum- 

 mer on the farm with her husband. Mr. 



