•^.vy^rj: ■Y'^-rv' '•V (y.-?^r •• • "• ■ ?• 



40 



The Florists' Review 



July 2<). 1*22 



GLADIOLI 



Plenty of fine, fresh cut, locally grown flowers of the 

 best colors and varieties. We solicit your orders. 





Pi^ 





$3.00 and $5.00 



per 

 100 



$20.00 and $30.00 per lOOO 



500 AT THE 1000 RATE 



Gganteum and Regale Lilies 



*15 to *20 



per 

 100 



VALLEY 



$6.00 per 100 



ANNUAL LARKSPUR 



All colors, 35c to 50c bunch 



GYPSOPHILA 



Excellent, 25c to 50c bunch 



FERNS, $2.00 per 1000 



Don 't mis$ aalet — wire or phone to u« for anything you need 



A. L. Randall Company 



180 N. Wabash Avenue CHICAGO 



PMower (jlrowor.s' Associatidii licld tlicir 

 annual meeting July !•"), following the 

 close of the elcvenlh year of tlie or 

 gani/ation, -which ended July 1. The 

 annual report was considered so satis- 

 factory that the directors whose 2-ycar 

 terms expired were unanimously re- 

 elected. Tliey are George ('. ^V'ei!and, 

 Kudol]di Kllsworth, f'harles McCauley, 

 Edward Meuret and I'anl K. Klingsporii. 

 The holdover directors are Josejih 

 Schoos, Fred Stielow, Frank Rchrainin 

 and Fred Schramm. 



A meeting of directors was held im- 

 mediately after the stockholders ad- 

 journed, ofticers being rei'decteil, as ffil- 

 lows: President, George C. Weiland: 

 vice-jircsident, Fred Schramm; sccro- 

 tary, Rudolph Ellsworth; treasurer, 

 <'harles 'NIcGauley; manager, Paul K. 

 Klingsporn. 



Various Notes. 



At last week's stockholders' meeting 

 of the Premier Rose Gardens Frank 

 Flascli, tlic well known chimney Imildir, 

 took the j)lacc on the board of directors 



BEST IN THE WORLD ' 



John C.Meyer ThreaDjCo 



Lowell, Mass., 



' ' /////////A'///,/''//#////'//W/^Ai 



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. MEYER THREAD CO. 



LOWELL. MASS.. U. & A. 



Dept. XTZ. 



ni.'ide \-aeant by the retirement of H. G. 

 Wendl.-uul, who recently sold his stock. 

 The diiei'tors (irg;ini/ed by eleeting 

 I'aiii Weiss as president. He formerly 

 was secretary. H. .\. liriins became 

 seeretary ;ind G. S. G|;iiissen was elected 

 treasurer. 



"J'rosperity," says li. F. Ellis, "is 

 the sum of our intlividual successes." 

 I'r.actically everybody in the trade in 

 Chicago .added something to the com- 

 munity's ])rosperity last season and 

 nearly all are confident thev will be 



able to do even bettei' in the >e,isiin of 



The Ghicago Hose (iardens tried an 

 unusual move last week, advertising 

 Maryland, Montrose and r)unlop roses 

 in a Ktii-line sp.'ice in the Daily News, 

 telling the public "there is no need for 

 your florist to substitute, as he can get 

 all he wants at" — with the n.ame of 

 the commission house. J. J. Budlong, 

 who now uses Chicago Rose Gardens as 

 the name of his florists' departm(>nt, is 

 o)ie of the class making for '.irogress, 



