ZA 



The Rorists^ Review 



^i" 



• •■r-i: 



JCKE 29. 1922 



] 



Fancy Peonies 



Finest of the season, stock sure to djo ^mJ <J1 A 



GIGANTEUM LIUES 



Another fine crop just ready to -cut 



QMP 



$ 



2 per 

 doz. 



$ 



IS 



per 

 100 



please you and your trade .... 



ANNUAL LARKSPUR 



All colors, 35c to 50c bunch 



DELPHINIUM 



Blue, large, 50c to $1.00 bunch 



FERNS, $3.00 per 1000 



Don 't tnisB Males — wire or phone to u« for anything you need 



A. L. Randall Company 



180 N. Wabash Avenue CHICAGO 



"^^^mmi 



represented associates in the companies, 

 of both of which he is secretary. 



J. J. Budlong likes to do things dif- 

 ferently, as has been observed before, 

 but frequently follows eastern methods 

 not generally used here. As western 

 growers almost universally use raised 

 benches for roses, Mr. Budlong tried 

 solid beds at Budlong Gardens. At 

 present he is having much success, the 

 roses cut from them being, for quality, 

 second to none in the market and, for 

 quantity, in heavy crop at a time when 

 good roses are in request. 



George Weiland has just placed an 

 order with the American Greenhouse 

 Mfg. Co. for a pipe-frame house 36x400, 

 to be added to his range at Niles Center. 

 The new house will have seven benches 

 4x200 and five ground beds 4x200. 



Fritz Bahr has done some fine bedding 

 work at Ravinia park again this year, 

 where the season of summer opera 

 opened June 24. The big circular bed 

 of Pink Beauty petunias is especially 

 admired and no doubt will do more than 

 a little lb increase the already large 



best in the world 

 John C.Meyer Threrd Co 



' 1.ow£ll,Mass. 



Meyer Green Silkaline 



will Ko twice as far as any common, ordi- 

 nary thread, 



You have 2 ounces of thread on each 

 spool, 16 ounces to the pound. 



Send for samples and quotations to 



JOHN C IMEYER THREAD CO. 



LOWELL, BIASSn U. & A. 

 Dept. ZTZ. 



use of petunias for beds and boxes on 

 the north shore. 



E. C. Amling has planned to return to 

 California June 29. He is making rapid 

 progress in developing his new horticul- 

 tural establishment in the Sawtelle sec- 

 tion of Los Angeles. He has built a 

 neat store on one of his corners on 

 Santa Monica boulevard and while here 

 made application for membership in the 

 F. T. D. 



.Johnson & Jensen, out in Bryn Mawr, 

 completed the bedding out season last 

 week, filling the last of tlicir accumu- 



lated window box orders June 24. They 

 say the season was a good though not 

 a record one, and that they cleaned out 

 of stock almost to the last plant. 



Miss Nettie L. Parker, secretary and 

 treasurer of A. T. Pyfer & Co., has been 

 in a hospital for several days for fur- 

 ther treatment as the result of the Yel- 

 low cab accident in which she was, 

 unfortunately, caught last winter. 



C. L. Washburn reports that when 

 the federal horticultural board was in- 

 vestigating conditions around Los An- 

 geles a couple of weeks ago, they spent 



