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1124 



The Weekly Florists^ Review; 



UcroBisK 27, 1904. 



CHRYSANTHEMIMS! 



CURRENT PRICES, SUBJECT TO CHANGE. 



AMERICAN BEAUTY. Perdoz 



30— se-lnoh Htem 98 OO 



a4-liioli stem 8 00 



20-liioh stsm 1 50 



16-iiioli stem 1 86 



18-lnoh atem. 1 OO 



Sbort Btem par lOO, 93 00 to 4 CO 



ROSES* Per 100 



Brid«« and Kalfls (8 00 to $6 00 



Meteors and Oatos 8 OO to 6 00 



liberty 3 OO to 6 00 



Kaleerln 3 00 to 6 OO 



OABVATZOVS-Oood stock 1 OO to 160 



" Karg'e and fitnoy 8 00 to 3 OO 



WIETOR BROS. 



51 Wabash Avenue, ••• 



CHICAGO. 



^8 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



NEWPORT. R. L 



Trade has been fair the past week, a 

 few weddings, a few dinner decorations 

 and some funeral work. Carnations are 

 now coming quite good and plentiful, 

 and retail for 75 cents a dozen. Other 

 flowers show no especial change. No 

 heavy frost to kill outdoor stuflf as yet. 



Chrysanthemums are coming better 

 «very day, but there will be no glut. 

 Since we have had no chrysanthemum 

 show here the private places have to a 

 great extent stopped growing them, which 

 gives the entire field to the florists. 



Hitchings & Co. have about finished a 

 fern house for R. L. Beekman. John 

 Urquhart, the head gardener, will soon 

 have a nice range of houses. The palm 

 house built last spring was stocked by 

 Leikens, who will also furnish the ferns 

 needed. 



Oscar ?chultz has been doing an in- 

 creasing business and has recently ex- 

 tended three of his houses some fifty feet 

 each. 



Florist Schultz took two of the four 

 prizes at the recent show, for dinner 

 table decorations. 



A large quantity of hardy native rho- 

 dodendrons have arrived for Reginald C, 

 Vanderbilt's place. 



Joseph G. Leikens has rented the store 

 at 110 Bellevue avenue for the summer 

 season of 1905. 



The Newport Horticultural Society held 

 its regular meeting October 19. Presi- 

 dent James J. Sullivan was in the chair. 

 William J. Matson, gardener to Miss 

 Alice Keteltas, was elected a member. 

 It was voted to hold the annual ball 

 sometime previous to December 1. 



H. L. De Blois, the seedsman, has 

 just returned from a ten days' vacation 

 *rip through the south with his wife, go- 

 ing as far as Norfolk, Va. 



Bruce Butterton's new fern is being 

 watched with much interest. It would 

 seem to be excellent for large decorative 

 work, as the fronds are so very large 

 JLB compared with Adiantum cuneatum. 

 Zero. 



FiNDLAY, O. — N. R. Swan is busy in- 

 ?<talling the heating apparatus in his new 

 addition. 



Peter Reinberg 



51 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO. 



WHOLESALE 



Cut Flowers. 



LARGEST GROWER 

 IN THE WORIJ> 



A XllUon Feet of Modem Olaas. 



Current Price List. 



AlCBBZCAJr BEAUTIES- Per doz. 



30 to 86-inch Btemi $3.00 



24-lnch stems 2.00 



l^lnoh stems 1.60 



12incb stems 1.00 



Short stems per 100, 14.00 to 6.00 



Per 100 



LIBERTY $4.00 to $6.00 



CHATENAY 4.00tO 6 00 



seconds 2.00to 8.00 



MAIDS AND BRIDES 4.00 to 6.00 



seconds.. 2 00 to 8.00 



PERLE 2.00tO 4.(0 



GOLDEN GATES 2.00 to 4.00 



CABVATZOHS l.OOtO 1.60 



All flivtrs are Mrftcllr frtib tni praptrif psckstf. 

 Rt cbai(t for P. & D. on orders ovorSS.OO 



Mention The Review when yog write. 



Kindly discontinue my advertisement, 

 as I am entirely sold out of stock. — N. 

 ZwEiFEL, Milwaukee. 



O. — Albert Mathews has 

 range of fine new g^reen- 



KlNSMAN, 

 completed a 

 liou.sos, built on the most modern lines 



