Mabch 24. 1921. 



The Florists^ Review 



35 



Look at all of th^ other ads first 



— then look at our prices 



Imported Waterproof Crepe Paper, 



15 beautiful floral shades to select from 



Per dozen, $4.50 



s Per lOO, $35.00 

 Moss, per bale $ 1 .35 



Chiffon 



^^ Windier Smiling Service 



Thrce-«trip«, white, pink, violet. 



Scinch, per yard, 6Hc. 



Bolt of 46 yards, fS.OO. 



Three-stripe, white, pink, violet, 



4-lach, per yard. 5c 



Bolt of 45 yards, $2.25 



Dr. Dux Saperiora Magnolia Leaves, brown and 



green, per carton, $l.oO'; 



10 cartons, $ 1 3.SO. 



Write for our new price list 



WINDIER WHOLESALE FLORAL CO., 1310 Pine St., 



All 

 Phones 



ST. LOUIS, NO. 



'^Buy of the Grower" 



OR BR05 



30 East 



Randolph Street 1^011^ A.C1O 



Wholesale Growers of 



and Carnations 



season. No action, however, was taken 

 in this matter. 



Various Notes. 



Bassett & Washburn have counted the 

 panes of glass broken by hail in the 

 storm of March 7 and find that it figures 

 out just a little over 106,000 square feet 

 of glass. The hail insurance is at the 

 rate of 7 cents per square foot, so that 

 the Hail Association will have a bill of 

 just a little more than $7,040. It con- 

 stitutes the second largest loss in the 

 history of the organization, that of C. P. 

 Mueller, Wichita, Kan., holding the 

 record. Bassett & Washburn's loss on 

 stock has been slight. The plants were 

 not badly cut by the falling glass and 

 the weather following the storm was 

 mild. The holes in the glass were closed 

 by cutting pieces of muslin just a little 

 larger than the broken panes and tack- 

 ing it from sashbar to sashbar with a 

 cleat of thin wood to hold it in place. 

 More than 50,000 of these pieces of mus- 

 lin were put on in ten days. Reglazing 



Tnnn 



Wholesale 

 Cot Flowers 

 and Supplies 



30 E. RaaJolph St 



Chicago 



PkoaeCcatralSZSt 



began at once. It will be a long and 

 expensive job. Because of the scattered 

 character of the breakage and the neces- 

 sity for removing the glass with care to 

 avoid damage to the plants below, the 

 glaziers are charging 13 cents per pane 

 for replacing the glass. The labor bill 



alone, therefore, will approximate the 

 amount of the hail insurance. 



F. M. Johnson and Eric Johnson, with 

 their wives, have returned from a 

 month's trip which was as near a vaca- 

 tion as these gentlemen ever take. They 

 went first to New York, thence by 



