40 



The Florists' Review 



Mat 26, 1921 



OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY, Nay 29 



TELEGRAPH OR TELEPHONE YOUR ORDERS 



For Memorial Day 



Best Quality PEONIES AU Colors 



A Choice and Heavy Supply of 



Woo-Hoo! 

 Myrtle 



35c 



per bunch 



Roses 



Carnations 



Beauties Orchids 



Valley Gardenias 



Calendulas Sweet Peas 



Snapdragons Gladioli 



Peonies Mignonette 



Giganteums Callas 



Stocks Daisies Pansies 



Ferns 



Adiantum 

 Plumosus 

 Sprengeri 

 Smilax 

 Galax 

 Mexican Ivy 

 Leucothoe 



F RNE ^ ft OMPANY 



30 E. Randolph St. 



raOUMALX FIjORMTS 



Li.nMMRMiMpb«578 



CHICAGO 



CHOICE ROSES 



Fancy Carnations, Fine Sweet Peas, Valley 

 and Other Flowers for buyers whose trade 

 demands the best. 



JOSEPH FOERSTER CO. 



Wholesale Dealers in Cut Flowers 



160 North Wabash Ave. 



CHICAGO 



Ask the maD wh« 

 Buys from us. 



preaching Armour wedding and several 

 other large orders of the same character 

 are on file for June. 



E. C. Amling, who is here from Cali- 

 fornia, where he now makes his home, 

 spends a part of each day at the store 

 of his company and the rest of his time 

 visiting friends. 



I. Eosnosky came home last week to 

 remain until after Memorial day. He 

 expects many visitors will be in the 

 market this week. 



Eric Johnson looks on Memorial day 



as a great day, the greatest for him if 

 not for all florists. It chances Mr. 

 Johnson was born Mav 30. It was in 

 1888. 



Bert Cole, of George Wienhoeber's 

 staff, is enjoying a new car, but instead 

 of buying one with his own name on the 

 radiator he bought a Nash. 



Arno P. Schramm and Mrs. Schramm 

 have sent out cards announcing the ar- 

 rival of Kenneth James Schramm, May 3, 



The McRee Flower Farm, at Gulfport, 

 Miss., has been shipping gladioli to this 



market for several weeks, the first hav- 

 ing been received about April 15. About 

 four commission houses have handled 

 them. When the stock arrived in good 

 shape it sold well, at about half the 

 price of forced local gladioli. Fre- 

 quently, however, the spikes have suf- 

 fered in transit and have not been easy 

 to sell. 



At Morton Grove, Poehlmann Bios. 

 Co., having obtained an early start, is 

 well along with replanting. Letting 

 others switch from Bussell to Premier 



