r,:; yfw^ ■'- \ .■•'r-!i?, 



JCLY 13, 1922 



The Florists^ Review 



43 



Mr. Retailer! 



We are cutting nice Summer Roses — heavy 

 new crop now on. No need to stop business for 

 lack of quality stock — just send your order to us. 



Do You Want a Good White Rose? 



If so, order our Double White Killamey, the only good white on the Chicago market. 



KUSSBLL 



COLUMBIA 



PREMIER 



BOLADY 



HEARST 



OPHELIA 



Summer Roses 



You will make no mistake in using 

 Nesbit Roses for your corsages 



SUNBURST 



BUTTERFLY 



DUNLOP 



MONTROSE 



NESBIT 



Valley, Gladioli, Calendulas, Easter Lilies, Stocks, Delphinium 

 Belladonna, Annual Larkspur, Candytuft, Feverfew, Cornflower, 

 Gypsophila and all other Seasonable Cut Flowers 



Headquarters for Boxwood, Ferns, Adiantmn, Plamosas, Sprengeri 



II yii wait |Nd itNk ud fud traataeit, hy •! Chicagi*i But ip-ti-dite ud kit-licated Whilenlc Cit Hiwer flran 



J. a. BODLONG ca 



WHOLESALE CUT FLOWERS AND QREENS 



Roses, Valley and Carnations our Specialties 

 184-186 North Wabash Ave. 



CHICAGO 



QUALITY 



SPEAKS 



LOUDEB 



THAN 



PRICES 



L. D. Phonat Central 3120 or L. D. Phone: Donrborn 5145 



PRICES 



AS 



LOW 



AS 



OTHERS 



We are in constant touch with market conditions and when a decline takes place you can rely upon orders sent us receiviag such benefit 



Herbert Holm, son of E. P. Holm, of 

 Holm & Olson, St. Paul, was a visitor 

 this week on his way homo from the 

 east, where he has spent a year and a 

 half in learning the business in such 

 well known retail stores as those of 

 Penn, of Boston; Gude, of Washington, 

 and Schling, of New York. Young 

 Mr. Holm now will join the forces of 

 his father. 



John B. Cuomo, treasurer of the Cali- 

 fornia Cut Flower Exchange, a new 

 wholesale house in Detroit, was a visitor 

 early this week, seeking sources of sup- 

 plv. 



T. P. McElroy and Mrs. McElroy. of 

 Grand Forks, N. D., were in Chicago for 



a few days last week on their way home 

 from New York, where they had been 

 to attend Max Schling's school of 

 "floristry, " an account of which oc- 

 cupied page 25 of last week's issue of 

 The Beview. 



Lincoln, 111.— C. E. Gullett is on a 

 business trip in the .southwest. He wa.s 

 in attendance at the meeting of the 

 Texas State Florists' Association, at 

 Dallas, last week. 



Sioux City, la. — The company operat- 

 ing here under the name of the Glass- 

 acres Garden Co. has been purchased 

 by Rocklin, Lehman & Co., one of the 

 leading florists in this city. 



Camden, S. C— William L. Goodale, 

 manager of the Laurens Street Green- 

 houses, has incorporated the Camden 

 Floral Co. to take over and conduct the 

 Laurens Street Greenhouses business on 

 a larger scale. Mr. Goodale is to be 

 jiresident of the new comjiany, which is 

 incorporated under South Carolina laws. 

 The business is to undergo many im- 

 provements; the capacity of the cstab- 

 lisliment is to be immediately increased 

 fifty per cent. The greenhouses have 

 been entirely restocked. Special atten- 

 tion will be paid to the growing of roses, 

 carnations and sweet jieas. The plans 

 of Mr. Goodale include both a retail and 

 wholesale business. 



