■■'If^:'!r~< ■!" ftt.: i 



JAHUABT 28, 191S. 



The Florists' Review 



35 



Cmdnnati Headquarters for Carnation Blooms, $3.00 and $4.00 1'oo 

 Single Violets and Sweet Peas for St Valentine's Day, 7Sc and $1.00 



PER 

 100 



All Other Cut Flowers ift^Season 



Fancy Eastern Cut Ferns, - $2.00 per 1000 

 Green Leucothoe Sprays, - 4.00 per 1000 



Plumosus and Sprengeri Sprays, 2.00 per 100 



Wire Hanging Baskets: write for prices 



1 bale, 



Burlap Sphaflrnum Moss 

 $1.00 10 bales. 



Green Sheet Moss 



1 bundle, 

 5 bundles, 

 10 bundles. 



$9.00 



$ 1.00 

 4.75 

 9.00 



Carnation Cuttin^rs — Feb. delivery 

 Enchantress, \ 



White Enchantress, 1 $2.50 per 100 



Rose-pink Enchantress, f ^^/x ^«, ^^^^ 



White Wonder, $20.00 per lOOO 



Herald, ( 500 at 1000 



Beacon, \ rates 

 White Perfection, 



25 bundles, .21.00 



Magnolia Leaves — Bronze, Green, Red — $1.25 per carton. 

 EVERYTHING IN FLORISTS* SUPPLIES 



Ufll I lAil UIIDDUV WHOLESALE COMMISSION FLORIST 

 fflLLIAm MUlfrni 329 Main Street, CINCINNATI, OHIO 



Mention The ReTtew when -yon write. 



VIOLETS 



We are the Kansas City head- 

 quarters for California Violets; 

 they are coming in fine. 



Dozen bunches, $1.75. 



Rosea, pink and white, 4c to 8c; 

 red and yellow, 8c to 12c. 



Carnations, 3c to 4c. 



LiUes, $10.50 per 100. 



NarciasuB, $2.00 per 100. 



All kinds of greens. 



T. J. NOLL & CO. 



no* CnW Afi, UNSAS CRY, NO. 



vTT Awa / Home Mftin 6487 



houses, 29x209, to be heated by two 

 Moninger cast-iron hot water boilers. 

 The company will also build a new 

 range of vegetable houses for the D. F. 

 Harrison Co., at Kankakee, 111. 



According to BL N. Cooper, manager 

 of the Auburndale Qoldflsh Co., retail 

 florists are taking greater interest in 

 handling commodities other than flow- 

 ers. Goldfish and kindred lines seem 

 to be attractive and to judge from the 

 orders received business is good. 



It is reported in the lumber trade 

 that Poehlmann Bros. Co., Morton 

 Grove, has placed an order for seven 

 cars of pecky cypress for delivery in 

 time for spring bench building. 



The W. W. Barnard Co. had an ex- 

 hibit at the Greater Chicago Poultry 

 and Pet Stock Show, held in the In- 

 ternational Amphitheater at the Union 

 Stock Yards last week. 



For several years Alfred Dietsch, 

 treasurer of the A. Dietsch Co., has 

 been trying to find an opportunity dur- 



Mention The RcTlew when yon write. 



ing the winter months to overhaul the 

 power plant and shafting in the mill 

 on Sheffield avenue, but orders kept all 

 hands busy so that the time never came 

 until this year. A new Corliss engine 

 with an excess of power has already 

 been installed, also new boilers and 

 shafting, increasing the capacity of 

 the plant almost 100 per cent. 



Visitors. 



Visitors have been more than usually 

 numerous this week. Among them: 

 Henry Kahaley, of the Michigan Cut 

 Flower Exchange, Detroit, studying ac- 



counting systems; C. Loveridge, of 

 Peoiya, on his way home from an east- 

 ern trip; Roy Wilcox, of Council 

 Bluffs, and B. H. Kemble and W. E. 

 Kemble, of Oskaloosa, attending the 

 automobile show on their way to 

 Buffalo; Charles Frueh, of Saginaw, 

 Mich., buying stock; E. E. Stew- 

 art, Brooklyn, Mich., selling gladi- 

 olus bulbs; Edward Amerpohl, Janes- 

 ville. Wis., a periodical; Charles 

 Schwake, of Schwake & Co., New 

 York; J. J. Karins, representing Henry 

 A. Dreer, Philadelphia; Frank Farney, 

 of the M. Rice Co., Philadelphia; 



