July 18, 1907. 



The Weekly Florists' Review. 



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POEHLMANN BROS. CO. 



Wholesale Growers and Shippers of Cut Flowers 



33-35-37 Rtandofph St. CHICAGO 



You can be sure of getting the 



Best Roses the Market Affords 



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



Fancy Loag Beauties, KiUarney, Chatenay, Kaiserin and Richmond 



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

 Perle; fine floWers, all lengths of stem. 



POEHLMXNN*S FANCY VALLEY 

 EXTRA FINE HARRISII LILIES 



We make these a Specialty. 

 Can 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 doz. 



Extra Specials $3.06 



Extra 36 Inch 2.60 



Extra 30-lnch 2.00 



Extra 24-lnch 1.60 



Extra 18 inch 1.26 



Extra 16-lnch 1.00 



Extra 10tol2-lnch 76 



Shorts $4.00per 100 



Wrife for Special Prices on lar^e lots. 



8nbJ«ot to ohanff* without notlo*. 



ROSES Per 100 



Good Choice Boaes $3.00 to $4.00 



Oood Short BoBoa $20.00 per 1000 



ROSES 



CARNATIONS 



Fancy 



Good 



Hanisii 



Anratiuns 



Valloy, fancy 



I 



Per 100 



Killamey, extraspecial $12.00 



extra long $8.00to 10.00 



medium 6.00to 6.00 



Sztra Bpeoial— Chatenay and Kalaerin 8.00 to 10.00 



Bxtxa Bpeoial— Richmond lo.OO 



Bxtrk Spoolal— Maid, Bride, Gate, Uncle John 6.00 



First Quality-Maid, Bride, Gate, Chatenay, Uncle 



John, Sunrise, Perle, Richmond, and Kaiserin 5.00 



Per 100 



$2.00 



1.00 



$8 00 to 12.50 



S.OOto 12.50 



4.00 



Daisies, white 50to .76 



Sweet Peas 25 to .75 



Peonies perdos., 35c to 75c 



Adiantum i.oo 



Plumosus, extra long per string, 60c 



Sprenfferl and Plumosus, Sprays 3.00 to 4.00 



Smilax per doz., $2.00 



Perns ., per 1000, $1.00 to $1.50 



Qalax per 1000. $1.60 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



the Flower Growers' Market for a 

 month or so, consigning what little stock 

 they cut to one of the other salesmen 

 on the floor. This will enable John Sin- 

 ner to put in his full time at the green- 

 houses during the busy season of rebuild- 

 ing benches and replanting. 



Louis Gresenz has bought the retail 

 store of Mrs. A. Hertel, at 150 Cly- 

 bourn avenue, and took possession Mon- 

 day morning, duly 15. Mr. Gresenz was 

 with Bassett & Washburn for fourteen 

 years, having continued with that firm 

 when it succeeded J. B. Deamud & Co., 

 who originally put him on the job. He 

 is equipped to do well in the retail line. 



Vaughan & Sperry say that they are 

 holding back on their peonies in cold 

 storage, believing that as the stock is in 

 excellent shape, apparently in condition 

 to keep indefinitely, peonies will be worth 

 considerably more money during the lat- 

 ter part of the month, when practically 

 all other peonies will be cleaned up. 



John Poehlmann calls attention to the 



fact that the Killarney rose is outselling 

 Richmond, although Richmond is cut 

 with considerably longer stems. He has 

 become one of the most enthusiastic 

 of Killarney 's friends. He says that 

 Morton Grove, the pinker sport of Chat- 

 enay, is doing splendidly from a money 

 standpoint. While it brings no higher 

 prices than Bridesmaid, he says it pro- 

 duces at least six to one. They are just 

 beginning to cut on their second crop of 

 Kaiserin. 



Bassett & Washburn are cutting some 

 splendid auratum lilies from bulbs plant- 

 ed outdoors last November. There were 

 4,000 of these eleven to thirteen centi- 

 meter bulbfe and they now are cutting 

 stalks with from six to nine fine flowers 

 each. Mr. Washburn says 2,000 more 

 bulbs will be planted this fall. 



Peter Reinberg has finished all re- 

 planting operations at the Summerdale 

 place. The houses which are being rebuilt 

 are nearly finished. They were not re- 

 planted, the roses in them being dried 



off for a second season. The carnations 

 at the Summerdale place are consider- 

 ably reduced in quantity to make room 

 for another house of asparagus, one of 

 Kate Moulton rose and increased plantings 

 of Mrs. Field and Killarney. The re- 

 building will be finished this week and 

 then the new carnation range on the 

 farm will be put up in short order. 



One of the week's visitors was Byron 

 H. Ives, of Albuquerque, N. M. 



Traverse City, Mich. — The stork re- 

 cently left a 9-pound daughter at the 

 home of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Tobler. 



Shkldon, Ia. — John CIiriBtiana ifi re- 

 modeling and enlarging his glass area. 

 He started in the bu^ness at Sanborn 

 about twenty-five years ago, but shortly 

 removed to Sheldon on account of its 

 better shipping facilities and has built 

 up a nice trade covering northwestern 

 Iowa. 



