May 19, 1921 



The Florists' Review 



45 



YOU WILL LIKE ALL THE STOCK 

 YOU GET OF ZECH & MANN 



For Memorial Day 



Roses you will like 



A full assortment— all varieties — all lengths — all good 



Carnations you will like 



We shall have a large supply of good stock 



Sweet Peas you will like 



There are no better Peas and our supply is large 



Peonies you will like 



The supply will not be large but the quality will be right 



And you will like our 



Lilies Gladioli Snapdragons Pansies 



Calendulas Callas Valley White and Yellow Daisies 



Asparagus Adiantum Boxwood Ferns 



ZECH & MANN 



Wholesale Cut Flowers 



30 East Randolph Street 



CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 



was held May 12. Mr. Healy will con- 

 tinue the business alone. 



E. C. Amling and wife arrived from 

 California May 15, for a long visit. 

 They are at the home of Mrs. Amling 's 

 mother in Oak Park. Both Mr. and 

 Mrs. Amling have recovered their 

 health in California and their many 

 friends are delighted to see them look- 

 ing so well. 



Clifford Pruner is at home from a trip 

 of several months' duration, in the mid- 

 dle west. He says florists in the grain 

 states have had a good season in spite 

 of the fact that many farmers have 

 held their grain oS the market because 

 of the low prices. 



Webster W. Randall celebrated his 

 fifty-sixth birthday this week. He was 

 born May 18, 1865. 



William Abrahamson, manager of the 

 store fixture department of the A. L. 

 Randall Co., spent a day at Cleveland 

 last week and sold three large display 

 refrigerators and four work benches, 

 showing that the trade still is develop- 

 ing in that town. 



Fred Bonsley moved into his new 

 store, 322 South Wabash avenue, the 

 middle of last week, and has been ex- 

 ceedingly busy. While getting settled 

 in the new quarters he has had a volume 

 of business which has made him thor- 

 oughly satisfied witL the move. There 



never has been a fully equipped, per- 

 manent flower store in that block be- 

 fore. 



Edward Meuret says that if he does 

 not find the kind of place he wants 

 to buy, when autumn approaches he will 

 go back to California for the winter. 



A. J. Pruyser, of the National Bulb 

 Farms, Benton Harbor, Mich., was in 

 town May 13. Specializing on gladioli 

 and dahlias, he says the season now clos- 

 ing has been the best the concern has 

 had. Additional acreage is being 

 planted and several kinds of Holland 

 bulbs are being tried out. 



The A. B. C. reports that last week's 

 mail was the heaviest in the history of 



