June 4, 1914. 



The Florists' Review 



27 



Here Is the Stock you Need In Quantity for Your 

 Weddings and School Closing Work. 



VALLEY 



You can count on Randall at all times to furnish fancy 

 Valley. Have arranged for a specially large supply for June. 

 Wire your orders if time is short. 



ORCHIDS 



Our Cattleyas are the fresh, home-grown stock, large, 

 dark colored, the kind that every retailer shows with pride. 

 A large cut this month. 



PEONIES 



There are few flowers so useful as the Peony when it is in good condition. You will find our stock the best to use for 

 decorations— biggest show for the money— and also fine for graduation bouquets, funeral sprays, etc'., etc. We can furnish 

 fine, fresh, fancy Peonies in any quantity and at very reasonable prices. 



BEAUTIES 



Plenty of good Beauties, all lengths— stock that is ex- 

 cellent for the season. 



LILIES 



We make a specialty of furnishing Easter Lilies every 

 day in the year. Useful for wedding decorations. 



SWEET PEAS 



We still can supply fancy ButterlJy Peas in quantity. If yon order of us jou will be drawing on tlie 



larg^est supply in the west. 



ROSES CARNATIONS 



All the Roses you want— all varieties and all lengths. You can get all the Carnations you want if you order 



Prices reasonable. here. Quality excellent. 



GLADIOLI, SNAPDRAGON, WHITE AND YELLOW DAISIES, CORNFLOWER 



AND XVKRYTHING KLSK IN SKASON 



REMEMBER RANDALL HAS A COMPLETE LINE OF FLORISTS' SUPPLIES 



A. L. Randall Co. 



Everythinj for Florists, 



L. 9. rhM* G«a«ral 7710 



PriTSi* bekuifl* M 



••fartaiMto 



66 E. Randolph Stmt, Qkmt 



Mention Thf R^rlew when yon write. 



members present. Those not bearing 

 cards of membership are excluded. Sam 

 Seligman, of Wertheimer Bros., exhib- 

 ited his line of samples. Mrs. Frank 

 Williams was the first lady florist to be 

 present at a meeting of this associa- 

 tion. The association has begun the 

 publication of a periodical pamphlet 

 and copies of the first issue were dis- 

 tributed at the meeting. It is nicely 

 gotten up, with signed articles by Wal- 

 ter W. Adams, George Stollery, H. R. 

 Hughes and Louis Wittbold, as well as 

 much other interesting matter con- 

 tributed by members whose modesty 

 prevented the use of their names. The 

 plan is to distribute the pamphlet to 

 advance the interests of the association. 

 The organization already has done 

 much for the general good. 



Various Notes. 



The cemetery editor of the esteemed 

 Tribune has been treating Mount Green- 

 wood much more kindly than Rose Hill. 

 His June bug story on W. N. Rudd 's 

 institution, printed May 29, was just 

 as good reading ae previous articles i 



|9VERY now and then a well- 

 >9 pleased reader speaks the word 

 which i» the means of bringing a 

 new advertiser to 



Such friendly assistance is thoroughly 

 appreciated. 



Give us the name of anyone from 

 whom you are buying, not an adver- 

 tiser. 'We especially wish to interest 

 those selling articles of florist's use 

 not at present advertised. 



FLORISTS' PUBLISHING CO. 

 530^ Gaston Bldg. Chicago 



dealing with the financial side of ceme- 

 tery management as it is said to be 

 practiced on the north side. 



Five acres were added to the peony 

 fields at Klehm's Nurseries, Arlington 

 Heights, last autumn, without a word 

 being said about it at the time. 



As the result of the report in last 

 week's issue of The Review that June 

 1 would be his fiftieth birthday anni- 

 versary, A. L. Vaughan received many 

 felicitations Monday, several by mail 

 and wire from out-of-town customers. 



At least one Chicago supply house 

 will make a display at the Boston con- 

 vention in August. T. E. Waters is 

 preparing an exhibit for his depart- 

 ment of Poehlmann Bros. Co. Boston 

 is the home town of Mr. Waters, but 

 this will be his first visit in ten years. 



The O. J. Friedman store in the Con- 

 gress hotel, now under the management 

 of Victor Bergman, is building up a 

 good trade. The business from the 

 hotel itself is a considerable item and 

 the list of regular accounts is growing. 

 This is the only flower store with a 

 window on downtown Michigan avenue. 



