28 



The Florists^ Review 



Mat 27. 1015. 



We Offer a Large 

 Supply of Fine 



ROSES 





AOENT8 FOR 

 TO-BAK-INE 



If you get your stock of us, you will be able to give your customers excellent value for their money 

 and at the same time make a g^ood profit for yourself. We please others— let us please you. 



Tou will tind us always a reliable source of supply 



E rne A Klingel 



30 E. Randolph St. 



Li. D. Phone 



Randolph 6578 



Auto. 41-718 



CHICAGO 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



176 RNicl\^8J\ Ave. 



CKic^^o 



Per too 



Valley $3.00 @ $4.00 



Peas 35 @ 1.50 



Peonies 4.00 @ 8.00 



Per 100 



Carnations $2.00 @ $4 00 



Eillarneys. pink and white, 3.00 @ 8.00 

 Easter Lilies 8.00 @ 12.50 



SEK C. r. GEE FOR SAFETT 



Beauties, doz $0.75 @ $4.00 



Cattieyas, each 60 @ .60 



Mentlun The ReTlew when yon write. 



ket. Sunburst now is of excellent, deep 

 color and has practically displaced 

 Ward on this market. 



A." E. Hunt will add another house 

 of Foley construction, 24x130 feet, to 

 his range in Evanston. It will be de- 

 voted to the growing of sweet peas and 

 novelties. 



If this market is willing to pay for 

 a rose-pink gladiolus, C. S. Clausen is 

 willing to meet the demand. He has 



Planted 15,000 bulbs of the variety 

 anama, probably the largest planting 

 thus far made of this novelty for cut 

 flower purposes. He also has planted 

 a "mailer lot of Mrs. Frank Pendleton, 

 Jr., a flaked yellow. 



John Schoepfle, 933 Belmont avenue, 

 is devoting his spare time to the pleas- 

 ure to be derived from a new touring 

 car. 



Weiland & Eisch are quite enthusi- 

 astic over their newly registered rose, 

 Champ Weiland. After considering a 

 number of descriptive names, Mr. Risch 

 dropped them all at the last moment 

 and chose that of his associate, Mr. 

 Weiland. 



After the interior decorators and 

 painters get through with the store of 

 Charles Moraveck, 3226 Ogden avenue, 

 it will be scarcely recognizable as the 

 same place. 

 • H. B. Kennicott, of Kennicott Bros. 



ir^ntloB Thi* R»t1>w wh«B yon write. 



Co., went to Cleveland May 21 and, 

 dropping back to Detroit May 22, 

 spent three days in that city, returning 

 to Chicago the morning of May 25'. 



The pleasures of travel appeal to 

 Joseph Ziska, Jr., as a proper relaxa- 

 tion after several months of most 

 strenuous and uninterrupted toil, and 

 so he is quietly planning a June trip to 

 several eastern centers, including New 

 York city, Washington, D. C, Atlantic 

 City and Philadelphia. The trip will 

 be partly in the interest of the firm. 



William Wichtendahl, of Maywood, 

 has added one house, 24x118 feet, to 

 his range, to be devoted to sweet pe^. 



It is of Dietsch construction and 

 equipped with a Kroeschell threaded 

 tube heating system. 



According to Fred Lautenschlager, 

 of the Kroeschell Bros. Co., there is no 

 such thing as Blue Monday, and to 

 prove it he showed orders brought in 

 by the first mail May 24 for boilers 

 to heat 115,600 square feet of glass. 



Thomas Conlon, the new superintend- 

 ent of the plant department of the 

 Poehlmann Bros. Co., Morton Grove, 

 has a fine lot of crotons, caladiums and 

 pandanus coming on for the fall trade. 

 He says the call for geraniums has been 

 unusually heavy. Tony Gabel, who has 



