AconsT 12, 1915. 



The Florists^ Review 



27 



THE FLORISTS' fUPPLY HOUSE OF AMERICA 



CONV EN TlbN NOTES 



Are you going west? We are at Convention Hall, away out in San 

 Francisco, California, ready to offer the glad hand to all our friends 

 who attend the S. A. F. and O. H. meeting August I7th to 21st. 



Our Mr. Sydney H. Bayersdorfer and Mr. Martin Reukauf will welcome 

 you on your arrival at our reservation in Convention Hall. Our 

 exhibit will be of even greater interest than in the past— we have made 

 a special effort to show visitors to the Panama-Pacific Exposition a 



WONDERFUL DISPLAY OF NOVELTIES 



together with all the best standard supplies. We ask as a particu- 

 lar favor that you take time to look carefully over our exhibit. 



Yours fraternally, 



H. BAYERSDORFER & CO. '''^»'iC^^zt^S^^7p>^. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



176 R.Micl\^8J\ Ave 



CNjce^jgo 



Per 100 



Valley $ 4.00 



Milady $3.00 @ 8.00 



Russell 4.00 @ 10.00 



Eillameys, pink and white, 2.00 @ 6.00 



Per 100 



Carnations $1,00 @ $2.00 



Gladioli 1.00 @ 1.50 



Easter Lilies 6.00 @ 8.00 



PLAT SAFE-SEB US. 



Beauties, doz $1.00 @ $2.50 



Ophelia, per 100 3.00 @ 8.00 



Asters, per 100 1.00 @ 2.00 



Mention Tb«» Revlfw wh»n yon wTit». 



little difficulty in the erection of his 

 new chimney, which is to be forty-one 

 feet in height. The rains made it im- 

 possible for the masons to work. 



Joe Emmick, of Bassett & Wash- 

 burn, has returned from his visit to 

 the California expositions and spends 

 all of his spare time urging his friends 

 to go. 



The salesroom and office of the John 

 Kruchten Co. are looking bright and 

 fresh as the decorators progress in 

 their work. 



Erich Paselk, bookkeeper in the 

 Morton Grove office of Poehlmann 

 Bros. Co., has taken his family on an 

 automobile trip to the Dells, Wis. He 

 expects to be gone two or three weeks. 



Dominick Freres, Atlas block, is tak- 



ing advantage of the summer lull to 

 repaint his quarters. 



John Ziska, of Joseph Ziska & Sons, 

 was confined to his home August 10 

 as the result of a badly ulcerated 

 tooth. 



Weiland & Eisch will drop Ophelia, 

 Killarney and Killarney Brilliant as 

 soon as possible and turn all of their 

 attention to the growing of distinctive 

 roses. Mrs. Taft will have to make 

 room for Mrs. Moorfield Storey and 

 Champ Weiland. 



Fred Dinger, of the Garfield Floral 

 Shop, 211 East Garfield boulevard, has 

 returned from a three weeks' outing 

 in northern Michigan. Mr. Black and 

 his wife have gone to his old home 

 in Indiana for a three weeks' rest. 



John Fischer, of Fischer Bros., Evan- 

 ston, and Miss Annie Halstrom, also 

 of Evanston, were married July 31. 

 They are now enjoying a trip to va- 

 rious points of interest in the east. 



A. E. Kunderd, of Goshen, Ind., has 

 been sending the E. C. Amling Co. 

 large shipments of gladiolus blooms, 

 many of which were unnamed seed- 

 lings of the ruffled varieties. 



Fritz Bahr, of Highland Park, quiet- 

 ly gathered his family together, Au- 

 gust 6, and left for the Panama-Pa- 

 cific exposition and the S. A. F. con- 

 vention. 



An especially good year for the sale 

 of young stock of pompon chrysanthe- 

 mums is reported by Wietor Bros., 

 who, now that it has stopped raining 



