48 



The Florists^ Review 



Mabch 2. 1922 



Good Stock in Large Supply 



May we have the pleasure of filling your order? 



Our Prices Never Are Higher Than Others Ask for an Equally Good Grade of Stock 



F RNE ^ ft OMPANY 



30 E. Randolph St. 



WHOLKSAU FLORISTS 



LD.PhoMliudolpli6578 



CHICAGO 



FINE FLOWERS 



Roses, Carnations, Sweet Peas, Freesias, Lilies, Jonquils, 

 Tulips, Calendulas, Valley and other Flowers for buyers 

 whose trade demands the best. 



JOSEPH FOERSTER CO. 



Wholesale Dealers in Cut Flowers 



160 North Wabash Ave. 



CHICAGO 



growers get better prices, but he at- 

 tributes the large turnover to the fact 

 that the buyers are getting good values. 



William Eeid was in Minneapolis last 

 week. 



The death of Luke Collins, proprietor 

 of the Parkside Greenhouses, is recorded 

 in this week's obituary column. 



When last heard from, Guy French 

 was snowbound at Duluth. It took eight 

 hours for six engines to haul his train 

 the last eighteen miles into that city 

 and he decided to stay there a while. 



M. C. Wright, western manager of the 

 Lord & Burnham Co., was at St. Louis 

 last week and brought home two orders 

 for new greenhouses, one for John Stei- 

 dle, who is disseminating the new Valen- 

 tine carnation, and one for A. Jablon- 

 sky, who is disseminating the Betty 

 .lano carnation and who is building a 

 propagating house 16x220. 



Fred Lautenschlager, manager of the 

 greenhouse department of Kroeschell 

 Bros. Co., visited Cincinnati recently 

 and met with unusual success by selling 

 boilers for new ranges aggregating more 



OUR SPECIALTY 



CUT FLOWERS 



WM. C SMITH WHOLESALE FLORAL CO. 



Wholesale Florists 

 1316 Pine Street ST. LOUIS, MO. 



Both Long Distance Phones 



EVERYTHING IN SEASONABLE CUT FLOWERS 



than one-third of a million square feet 

 of glass. 



Stielow Bros. Co., of Niles Center, 

 which is doubling its glass area by build- 

 ing seven Agmco houses, has placed an 

 order with Kroeschell Bros. Co. for a 

 250-horsepower water tube steam boiler 

 for high-pressure service. 



Joseph Kohout, of Libertyville, presi- 



dent of the Chicago Florists' Club, has 

 placed an order with Kroeschell Bros. 

 Co. for two 150-horsepower high-pressure 

 horizontal return tubular steam boilers 

 for his new L. & B. house. 



This week George Lawler, of Tacoma, 

 Wash., stopped here on his way home 

 from New York apd Washington. Mr. 

 liawler has planted over 1,000,000 nar- 



