470 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



Jblt 12, 1906. 



The Sabin Adjustable Plant Stand 



Cut Flowers and Designs 



can be delivered by us to any point in 

 Northern Ohio at Wholesale Prices to 

 the trade, saving you the express 

 charges and insuring the delivery of 

 fresh flowers on time. 



AMERICAN BEAUTY 



88 to 40-lncta stem perdoi.. 98.00 



24 to 80-lnch stem " 2.60 



20-lnchitem " 2.00 



IWnchBtem " 1.60 



12-lnch8tem " 1.00 



ShortBtem " .76 



Brides, Bridesmaids per 100, $3.00 to 6.00 



Ohatenay " S.OOto 6.00 



Meteor " 8.00to 6.00 



Oarnatioiis " 1.60to S.OO 



Pansles " .50 



SweetPeas " .90to .60 



VaUey " 8.00to 4.00 



Asparagus per string, .26to .60 



Sprengerl per 100, 2.00 to 4.00 



Galax, green per 1000, $1.50; per 100. .25 



Adiantum " 1.00 



Smilaz per doz., $2.60 " 20.00 



Dagger Ferns per 1000, 1.60 " .20 



Subject to change without notice. 



The Cleveland Cut Flower Co. 



Long Distance Phones CLEVELAND, OHIO I 



Mention The Review when you write. 



L. Baumann has returned from Eu- 

 rope and gone on the road to sell the 

 supplies he bought while aoroad. 



Wietor Bros, are doing a big business 

 in chrysanthemum plants and ship daily 

 to New England and the far west. 



The bowlers meet every Tuesday 

 evening at Benainger's, 114 Monroe 

 street. All are invited. 



Splendid irises have been a feature 

 in Mangel's show window for several 

 weeks. 



Ernest Eober, formerly with Andrew 

 McAdams, is now grower for the Au- 

 rora Greenhouse Co., Aurora, 111. 



George Eeinberg is cutting some very 

 good Bride roses and reports demand 

 fully up to the supply. 



Peter Eeinberg, Adam Zender and 

 J^ohn Muno, accompanied by their 

 wives, are planning' a trip to Denver 

 and Colorado Springs. They are sched- 

 uled to leave July 18. 



E. C. Amling and family have been 

 spending a week with relatives at Mil- 

 w^aukee. 



A. L. Vaughan and family started on 

 Tuesday for a fishing excursion to 

 Spirit Lake, Wis. 



N. J. Wietor and John Sinner re- 

 turned Sunday from their Wisconsin 

 trip. Each was well tanned and re- 

 ported the fish biting so well that the 

 return was with reluctance. 



C. M. Dickinson, manager of E. H. 

 Hunt's, is in Wisconsin for a fortnight. 

 W. E. Lynch, of the same firm, is a sum- 

 mer bachelor, his family being at the oM 

 home at Northampton, Mass. 



A. L. Eandall Co. has heard from Miss 

 Tonner, who is buying supplies in Italy. 

 She writes that she is not so well pleased 



with the spaghetti bill of fare as with 

 the quality of the Italian wheat for 

 sheaves. 



George Wienhoeber has returned to 

 Boston after spending a few days here. 



Leonard Kill and wife leave Thursday 

 for Cincinnati to spend Sunday with 

 their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Weim- 

 er. Mr. Weimer pitches for the Cincin- 

 nati National League baseball team. 



Kruchten & Johnson have about 

 reached the end of 5,000 dozen peonies 

 stored the first part of June. 



Weiland & Eisch have their new house 

 up and planted. They are now prepar- 

 ing to bench about 50,000 carnation 

 plants. Several Evanston growers who 

 had vegetables last year will grow car- 

 nations to consign to Weiland & Eisch 

 this season. 



Poehlmann Bros. Co. is cutting some 

 superfine valley. 



At J. A. Budlong's plant they have a 

 new house up and planted. Six houses 

 are given to Beauty, three times as much 

 space as laat year. 



Visitors have been numerous this week. 

 Among them were E. G. Hill, Eichmond, 

 Ind. ; J. G. Crozier, Cedar Eapids, la.; 

 A. S. Halstead and Henry Emunds, 

 Belleville, 111.; J. W. Young, Aurora. 

 111.; Ed Calvert. Lake Forest; F. H. 

 Howard, of Howard & Smith, Los An- 

 geles, Cal. 



KANSAS QTY. 



The Market. 



Junction City, Kan. — W. P. Eanson 

 is building an addition 21x40. 



JoLiET, III. — Fred H. Eowe has re- 

 signed his position with the Chicago Car- 

 nation Co. to take charge of a store at 

 Bloomington. 



Good roses are scarce, as the last week 

 has been quite a busy one. A large num- 

 ber of weddings having taken place, we 

 had to look to Chicago to help out. 

 Sweet peas are scarce and short in stem 

 on account of the dry weather that we 

 had in May and pan of June. But the 

 recent rains are bringing sweet peas out 

 in fine shape. A large per cent were de- 

 stroyed by greenfly during the dry spell. 

 We find that sweet peas shipped in from 

 Chicago don't keep well and will not do 

 for use the next day, and most of the 

 florists have quit ordering from there. 

 Carnations are also scarce and small, and 

 prices are up. Some of the customers 

 are grumbling because they can't buy 

 them for 25 cents a dozen as they could 

 last winter when they were plentiful. 

 Snapdragons are in fine shape and are 

 being used more than ever before. 



Variottc Notes. 



Jacob Tobler, of Westport, is highly 

 pleased with the spring trade and says 

 his range of houses is too small. He 

 recently bought 4,000 feet of glass and 

 will at once build larger houses. Tobler 

 has quite a large bedding trade. 



A. Blankenfelt, one of the leading 

 florists in Westport, has purchased five 

 acres of land two miles out of town, 

 where he will have more room to grow 

 his flowers. He intends to grow vege- 

 tables in addition to his flowers. He is 

 now located near the main line of 

 natural gas from the Kansas fields to 

 supply Kansas City, and he will tap the 



