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60 



The Florists^ Review 



Deckmbeb 11, 1919. 



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Everybody at Our Place 



Wishes Everybody at Your Place 



A Merry Christmas and 



A Happy New Year 



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9S 



C. A. KUEHN WHOLESALE FLORIST 



ST. LOUIS 



Ronninioiiiuiiini 



Mention The Review when you write. 



of baskets has been started. Mr. Mil- 

 ler, well known in the basket-making 

 community at Burlington, la., went to 

 Traverse City a few weeks ago and is 

 teaching the art to the workers there 

 with gratifying success. 



W. J. Keimel, president, and Paul 

 Weiss, secretary and treasurer, of the 

 Bichmond Greenhouse Co., were at Kich- 

 mond, Ind., December 5, to look over 

 their newly acquired property. C. J. 

 Michelsen, who was in Cleveland De- 

 cember 4, joined them at Richmond. 



Cleaning the glass with the regular 

 greenhouse force usually results in burns 

 from the muriatic acid and other acci- 

 dents or injuries. So H. N. Bruns last 

 week had the work done by a concern 

 which makes a specialty of such clean- 

 ing. 



"William A. Hansen, of the E. C. Am- 

 ling Co., is swinging around the circle 

 of the company's customers in Kansas 

 City, Louisville, Pittsburgh and inter- 

 mediate cities. He will be away ten 

 days. 



That the season of 1920 will break 

 all previous records in greenhouse build- 

 ing is the belief of M. C. Wright, west- 

 ern sales manager for the Lord & Burn- 

 ham Co. Mr. Wright further believes 

 that the next few years will see a change 

 from the narrow, ridge-and-furrow type 

 of house heretofore ubiquitous to the 

 detached, wide iron-frame houses re- 

 cently built in numbers in the east. 



This will be Ed. Enders' thirty-second 

 Christmas with C. A. Samuelson. 



A. T. Pyfer & Co., to fool the storage 

 box in their store, have for some months 

 operated a one-ton McClellan refriger- 

 ating machine. It is the only one of 

 its kind in the market. It operates on 

 the ammonia principle, is simplicity it- 

 self and is giving good satisfaction. 



John PoehMann shortened his work- 

 ing hours last week, not because of the 

 fuel restrictions, but because of trouble 

 with his teeth which took him to the 

 dentist daily. 



B. Zalinger, who formerly ran the 

 flower store in the rotunda of the In- 

 surance Exchange building, now covers 

 three states for the A. L. Randall Co. 



C. L. Washburn is an advocate of 

 high wages. He says high wages in other 

 lines make it possible for people to buy 



Strength of 



"We do as 

 WE SAY" 



Years 



i 



Greeting! 



This design 



associates our name 



as the FIRST HOUSE in the Chicago 

 Cut Flower Market. It not only suggests 

 the 0LDB:ST house, but also a most 

 reUable source to trust with your CUT 

 FLOWER orders. 



BEGIN THIS CHRISTMAS to connect 

 up with this institution, whose inception 

 was the BEGINNING of the CHICAGO 

 CUT FLOWER MARKET. 



You will like our ways of doing business. 



KENNICOTT BROS. CO. 

 Wholesale Cut Flowers 



174 N. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO 



