»>:-■ . v'<,^.».,vi5Fii"T'7^?;> i7«."'- i- • 



JCNE 18, 1914. 



The FIcMists^ Review 



23 



Guaranteed 

 ire^nhouse Hose 



y>^;5iv;>>> 



RANDO HOSE 



Standard size, 3ii<'-iDcb. Is the 

 very best hose for this purpose 

 on the market. 



I Regular price, per foot 18c 



Guaranteed 

 tjreenhouse Hose 





\v 



SPECIAL, Per Foot, 

 if you mention this 



Ailt 



See pag^e 27 of last creek's Review for our special money- saving^ offer of Paints and Putties 



REMEMBER RANDALL HAS A COMPLETE LINE OF FLORISTS' SUPPLIES 



A. L. Randall Co 



rerything for Florists, 



L. B. Pkoae Ceatral 7780 



RrlTAte KxehAHfe «ll 



ItalftrtaieBtt 



66 L Randolph Stmt, Chicago 



Mention The Review when you write. 



Money Makers for the Summer Trade 



Stock number :5.S2 as shown in the cut. 



Raw $2.50 per dozen 



Stained 2.75 per dozen 



Anti(iue $.3.00 per dozen 



Two-tone Effect :>.60 per dozen 



Liners extra, 35c per dozen 



This and others ran{.'ing in price from $1.20 to $().00 per dozen will keep up a live 



interest throughout the hot months. 



SEND FOR OUR NEW CATALOGUE 



RAEDLEIN BASKET CO., CHICAGO 



3 713-717 MILWAUKEE AVENUE C 



Mention Tbe ReTltw when you write. 



Co., which also cuts into the sidewalk 

 a matter of four or five feet. 



The landlords have been hanging back 

 on these changes, but the city authori- 

 ties now are pressing for speedy action. 



The News at Smyth's. 



Eeturning to the store June 15, W. J. 

 Smyth completed a six days' automobile 

 tour which included a trip to Madison, 

 Wis., to get Miss Smyth, who last week 

 completed her first year at the Uni- 

 versity of Wisconsin; thence to Anti- 

 och, 111., where Sunday was spent at 

 the Smyth summer home at Lake Marie. 



Business for the season shows up all 

 right by comparison with other years, 

 but it has been the holiday weeks that 

 are responsible, as the good gains then 

 offset quiet times between and espe- 

 cially since Memorial day. Last week, 

 however, brought a good run of busi- 



ness, with some large funeral pieces 

 for June 14 and a good wedding at 

 Madison, Wis., June 15, for which a 

 staff outfit was used. 



William McCormick, dean of the 

 Smyth staff, was called to his old home 

 at Slingerlands, N. Y., last week by 

 news of the serious illness of his mother, 

 who is 90 years old. 



The frequency with which one or the 

 other of the big show windows is 

 broken from without has become some- 

 thing of a joke, except to the insurance 

 company. The big pane on the Michi- 

 gan avenue side was replaced last week 

 because of a bad crack that came in a 

 gale. 



Various Notes. 



One of W. F. Schofield's hopes for a 

 seat in the city council went glimmer- 

 ing June 13, with the decision of the 



Supreme court affirming the constitu- 

 tionality of the woman's suffrage act. 

 At the aldermanic election in April the 

 North State street florist was beaten by 

 the women's vote. He not only peti- 

 tioned for a recount but filed a contest 

 attacking the legality of the woman 

 vote. 



On its second sailing from New York, 

 June 16, the world's largest steamship 

 carried Albert F. Amling, Mrs. Amling 

 and Clarence Amling, bound for a sum- 

 mer in Germany. Their address until 

 September 1 will be care Rev. H. G. 

 Amling, Tell street 61, Newkolin, Berlin, 

 Germany. Mr. Amling intends to see 

 most of the points of trade interest in 

 the northern part of Europe before he 

 returns. 



Matthew Kostka, who for seven years 

 has conducted a store at 1736 West 

 Forty-seventh street, has purchased two 



