1466 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



March 28, 1907. 



\W 



KENNICOTT BROS. CO. 



40-42-44 E. Randolph St. 



CHICAGO 



EASTER PRICE LIST subject to oUanr* without notice. 



BEAUTIES Per doz. 



30to36-lnch $6.00 to $7.00 



24to28-lnch 4.00to 5.00 



15to20-lncb 8.00 to 8.60 



8 to 12-inch 1.50 to 2.00 



CARNATIONS Per lOO 



Common Splits 12.00 to $2.50 



Select 8.00 to 8.50 



Fancy 4.00 to 5.00 



Special Fancy 6.00 



Violets, double 75to 1.25 



single 76to 1.00 



HameUIJUes, Callas. 



12.60 to 18 00 



Valley 8.00 to 4.00 



Tullpe, einKle 8.00 



double 4.00to 5.00 



Dutch Hyaolntlis 400to 600 



Daffodils 3.00 



Varclssus, yellow 200 



Marflruerltes 1.00 to 1.60 



Sweet Peas 76to l.oo 



ROSES (Teas) per loo 



Brtdes and Maids $5.00 to $12.00 



Richmond 7.00to 15.00 



Liberty 7.00to 16.00 



Perle 4.00 to 10.00 



Roses, our selection 5.0O 



GREENS 



Smllax, Strintrs per doz., 



▲sparaarus. Strings each 



Asparaanis, Bunches 



Bprencerl, Bunches " 



Boxwood per bunch, 



Adlantum per 100, .60 to 



Ferns , common per 10( 0, 



Vems, common .' per 100, 



Green Galax per 1000, 



Bronze Galax per 1000, 



Leuoothoe Sprays per lOOO, 



Leuoothoe Sprays per 100, 



Wild Smllax per case. 



$2.00 to $8.00 



.40 to .50 



.86 to 1.00 



.60 to .75 



.35 



1.00 



2.50 



.30 



1.00 



1.50 



8.00 



1.00 



5.00 



Wire or Phone Central 466 and your late orders will be shipped in time. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



i 



!C.W.McKELLAR 



CHICAGO 51 Wabash Ave. 



I have many 

 Novelties in 



Ribbons 



and 



Chiffons 



EARLY ORDERS ADVISABLE ^^' faster 



Send for Complete List of Easter Supplies, Etc. 



■ASTKR PRICK LIST 



ORCHIDS, a specialty. Per «os. 



Dendrobiums 18.00 to 18.00 



OatUeyas 6.00 to 9.00 



Assorted, box, $6.00 to $36. 



Beantlea, Extra Fancy. . 6.00 



24 to 80-lnch stems 4.00 to 6.00 



12 to 20-hich stems 1.50 to 3.00 



Short stems per 100, 8.U0 to 10.01 



Per 100 

 Bride, Maid, Ivory, Gate .. 6.00 to 12.00 



Liberty, Bichmond 6.00 to 16.00 



Chatenay, Sunrise, Perle. . 6.00 to 10.00 



Boses, my selection 6.00 



Carnations, largre fancy... 6.00 to 6.00 



rood stock .... 3.00 to 4.00 



Violets, double or single.. .75 to 1.00 



Harrisll 15.00 to 18.00 



Callas 12.00 to 16.00 



Valley 2.00to 4.00 



Paper Whites, Bomana.... 8.00 to 4.00 

 Tulips, Jonquils, Daffodils 3.00 to 4.00 



Mirnonette 4.00to 8.00 



Dutch Hyacinths 6.00 to 6.00 



Smllax per doz., 2.00 to 2.60 



Aspararus Strings... each, .36 to .60 

 Asp. Plu.,Sprenreri, bunch, .36 to .76 



Adlantum per 100, 1.00 



Ferns per 1000, 3.60 



Galax " 1.00 



Boxwood Sprays, per bunch .86 



Subject to change without notice. 



Mention The Review when you write. 



of the fair sex is a certainty and spe- 

 cial attractions are promised by both 

 the culinary and entertainment depart- 

 ments. The outing committee will meet 

 at the oflSee of V. H. Traendly at 5 

 o'clock the afternoon of the club meet- 

 ing. This will be the last ladies' night 

 of the season. 



Henry A. Siebrecht lectured March 27 

 on "Flowers for Easter and for Spring 

 Gardens" at the American Institute. 



A. LeMoult, the veteran florist of the 

 Bowery, is spending the Easter holidays 

 with his family at Atlantic City and 

 putting the responsibilities of the busy 

 time upon the shoulders of Adolph, Jr., 

 on whom the mantle will later fall, and 

 through whom the reputation of nearly 

 half a century will be perpetuated. 



Coles & Co., of 109 Warren street. 

 New York, are finding the demand for 

 their verbena baskets greater this spring 

 than in all their twenty-three years' ex- 

 perience, a healthful sign as to the 

 prospective suburban demands upon the 

 big seed houses of this center. Day and 

 night all the garden supply establish- 

 ments are busy with increased forces. 



Jefferson Doremus, of ^Madison, was 



in the city March 23, philosophizing as 

 to Easter needs in Beauties, Maids and 

 Brides, of which he grows an abun- 

 dance. A. J. (jiuttman uandles this fine 

 stock, as well as the Lawson and En- 

 chantress grown by John Joyce, of Con- 

 gers. 



Myer Othile, with Mr. Guttman, has 

 the sympathy of all in the loss of his 

 mother, who died at 357 West Forty- 

 fourth street March 20. The burial was 

 on Friday at Washington cemetery. The 

 floral offerings were many and beautiful. 



Mr. Peth, for many years proprietor 

 of Bridgeman's Seed Warehouse, and 

 later a retail florist in Harlem, is now 

 with William Elliott & Sons. 



James Weir & Sons, Brooklyn, have 

 assumed the management of the cut 

 flower and plant department in the big 

 store of Abram & Straus of that city. 



At another large department store in 

 Brooklyn C. C. Trepel has built up a 

 tremendous retail business, its cut flower 

 department presided over by Mrs. Tre- 

 pel, and the sales in plants and flowers 

 aggregating daily more than a month 's 

 receipts in an ordinary store. 



F. Mellstroni, representing Sander & 



Son, of St. Albans, England, has ar- 

 rived for his regular American trip. 



The sympathy of the trade is ex- 

 tended to A, Moltz in the loss of his 

 mother. 



M. A. Bowe recovered from a severe 

 illness just in time for the Easter busi- 

 ness. This store of his in the heart of 

 the city is a busy transient center. 



This is James McManus ' first Easter 

 in his enlarged and central headquarters 

 on West Twenty-eighth street, now none 

 too large for the big trade persistent 

 attention to business has evolved. 



Traendly & Schenek have a flower show 

 every day on their three floors. Among 

 the important developments of the year 

 was the translation of the junior member 

 of the firm into the reliable ranks of the 

 benedicts. Now everything moves along 

 without any friction and the wheels of 

 progress are seemingly well oiled. 



J. K. Allen is celebrating this year his 

 twentieth Easter and six o'clock in the 

 morning is the record he holds without 

 a break during nearly a quarter of a 

 century. There isn 't anything in cut 

 flowers worth mentioning that he does 

 not offer for the holiday, and he draws 



:»ixj^^,^.^. 



