

JULT 11, 1907. 



The Weekly Florists* Review. 



15 





POEHLMANN BROS. CO. 



Wholesale Growers and Shippers of Cut Flowers 



33-35-37 Randolph St. CHICAGO 



. ' '" You can be sure of getting the 



B^t Ros|s the Market Affords 



in summer as well as at any other season, if you call on us for 



Fancy Long Beauties, Killarney, Chatenay, Kaiserin and Richmond 



Also choice Maid, Bride, Morton Grove, Sunrise, Gate, Uncle John, 

 Perle; fine flowers, all lengths of stem. 



POEHLMSNN'S FANCY VALLEY 

 EXTRA FINE HARRISII LILIES 



We make these a Specialty. 

 Cai supply them all the year. 

 Once tried you will have no other. 



PLENTY OF CARNATIONS AND ALL OTHER SEASONABLE STOCK 



PRICE LIST 



AMERICAN BEAUTIES 



Per dos. 



Extra Special! I8.M 



Extra 36 inch 2 60 



Extra 30-inch 2M 



Extra 24-inch IM 



Extra 18 Inch 1.36 



EjL|r» Iplnch 1.00 



Extra 10 to 12-inch 75 



Shorts , $4.00 per ItO 



Write (or Special Prlcea on large lots. 



SnbJ«ot to oliang* withont notio*. 



ROSES Per 100 



Oood Ohoic* Boaea $4.00 



Oood Bhort KoBCS 920.00 per lOiO 



ROSES 



Per 100 



Klll»ni«y, extra special $15 00 



extra loDK llO.OOto 12.00 



" medium e.OOto 8.00 



Bztra ■p«otal— Chatenay and Kaiserin 100'>to 12.00 



Bztn Special- KlchmoDd. 36 to 40-lDch stems 10.00 to 12.00 



Bztra Bp«ol»l— Maid, Bride, Gate. Uncle John 8.00 



nrat Quality-Maid, Bride. Gate, Chatenay, Uncle 



John, Sunrise, Perle, Richmond, and Kaiserin 6.00 



CARNATIONS 



Fancy 



Good 



Karrlaii 



▲nratnina 



▼all«7f fancy 



Daisies, white 



Sweet Peas 



Feoniea 



Adianttun. 



.per dos. 



Per 100 



$2.00 



1.00 



$10(0 to 12.50 



lOOOto 12.60 



4.00 



50to 1.00 



26 to .76 



25o to 75c 



1.00 to 



Fliunosas, extra lonfr per stiing, 60c 



■preng'eri and Flamasns, Sprays 3.00 to 



■milaz per doz., $2.00 to $2 ro 



Terns per 1000. $..0" to $1.50 



Oalaz per 1000, $l.-J6 



1.50 

 4.00 



Mention The Eevlew when yon write. 



mud sat w-ith his back to the approaching 

 car, and next to the rail. He had no 

 warning, and when his friend pulled him 

 out of the wreckage his left arm was 

 badly cut and bruised. He is Hot yet 

 able to use it, but thinks he escaped for- 

 tunately. 



O. W. Frese, of the staff of the Poehl- 

 mann Bros. Co. city store, is away on his 

 annual two w«^s' vacation. 



The Budlong family has built two cot- 

 tages at Lake Geneva. One is occupied 

 by Mrs. J. A. Budlong and Mrs. Philip 

 Schupp and daughter, the other by Mrs. 

 A. H. Budlong and family. Mr. Schupp 

 is with them this week. 



C. W. McKellar is receiving a good 

 crop of Cattleya Gaskelliana, but reports 

 the demand only a fraction of what it 

 was in June, when the weddings were on. 



Frederick Sperry has returned from a 

 trip to Ohio to spend the Fourth with 

 his parents. 



Tim Waters is busily engaged in pre- 



paring for the Florists' Club's picnic, 

 July 21, at Morton Grove. The commit- 

 tee has appropriated something like 

 $300 for prizes, refreshments and ent^r- 

 tainjtjuents. .As soon as the picnic plans 

 are finished Mr. Waters and John Bruck- 

 ner will go to the woods for ferns for 

 Vaughan & Sperry. 



J. F. Kidwell announces that he will 

 dispose of his Wentworth avenue estab- 

 lishment. 



A. Anthes, at Milwaukee and Addison 

 avenues, says that the season is about 

 four weeks late with the growers in that 

 vicinity. 



John Michaelson,. who for nine years 

 has been with C. Frauenfelder, most of 

 the time as buyer, is now trying the other 

 end as salesman for E. C. Amling. With 

 this addition to the staff, Mr. Amling 

 felt at liberty to take his new gasoline 

 wagon to Lake Marie Tuesday to spend 

 a c6uple of days. 



Winterson's Seed Store is handling 



some especially fine 4-inch Asparagus 

 plumosus and doing a nice trade on Bos- 

 ton ferns. 



The A. L. Randall Co. reports shipping 

 rubber hose to the suburbs of New York 

 city and Philadelphia as a result of a 

 recent advertisement in the Review. 



E. C. Amling says that one eastern 

 wholesaler, about as far east as you can 

 get, asks a quotation on 250,000 galax 

 and that the reported shortage appears 

 to be the real thing. 



(". M. Dickinson, at E. H. Hunt's, says 

 that their line of Japanese novelties has 

 sold so well that they are increasing it 

 for next fall. v t. 



Philadelphia, Pa.— Mr. and Mrs. Rob- 

 ert Craig are enjoying a few days ' outing 

 at Atlantic City, N. J. 



KENDAI.LVILLE, Ind. — A. E. Kundred 

 is a loser through the recent heavy rains 

 and a consequent overflow on his land. 

 Thousands of gladioli were lost. 



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