■:i'-'-i%'^^-: :-'Ai 'S-;[-:-^/. 7:^" ■■■<:' ".'■,;- ' 



July 25, 1907. 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



\7 



V 



Bros. Co. 



WHOLESALE GROWERS AND SHIPPERS OF CUT FLOWERS 



33-35-37 Randolph St. CHICAGO 



You can be sure of getting the 



Best Roses in Chicago 



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



Long Beauties, Killaroey, Kaiserio, Richmond and Chatenay 



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

 Perle; good flowers, all lengths of stem. 



POEHLNXNN'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 

 AMERICAN BEAUTIES Perdo< 



Extra Specials $3.00 



Extra 36 inch 2 50 



Extra 80-incb 2.00 



Extra 24-iDch 1.60 



Extra ISlDch 1.26 



Extra 16-lDch 1.00 



Extra 10 to 12-inch 75 



ShortB $4.00 per 100 



Write for Special Price* on large lota. 



ROSES Per 100 



Klllamey, extra special $12.00 



'' extra long $8.00to lO.OO 



medium 5.00 to 6.00 



Bztra Bpcoial— Chatenay and Kaiserin 8 00 to 10.00 



Bxtra •p«ol»l— Richmond 10 00 



aztra 0p«olal-Maid, Bride, Gate. Uncle John 600 



rirst QaaUty-Maid. Bride. Gate, Chatenay, Uncle 



John, SunrlBe, Perle, Richmond, and Kaiserin 5.00 



LIST Subject to oliangr* wlthont notice. 



ROSES Per 100 



Oood Choice Boees $3.00 to $4.00 



Good Short Boeee $20.00 per 1000 



CARNATIONS Penoo 



Fancy $2.00 



Good 1.00 



Harrlsil $8.00 to 12.50 



▲nratnms 8.00 to 12.50 



Bnbrum Iiiliee 6.00 



Valley, fancy S.OOto 4.00 



Daisies, white 50to .75 



Sweet Peas 26 to .75 



Peonies per doz. , 35c to 76c 



Adiantnm 1.00 



Plnmosns, extra long per string, 60c 



Sprenfferl and Flamosns, Sprays S.OOto 4.00 



Smilax per doz., $2.00 



Perns per 1000. $1.00 to $1.50 



aalaz perlOOO, $1.60 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



Sunday afternoon one of the demonstra- 

 tors took Mr. and Mrs. Reinberg and 

 Mr. and Mrs. Kill to Salem, Wis., and 

 back. It is a trip of 152 miles. They 

 say they are well pleased with the ma- 

 chine, but that the driver is too strenu- 

 ous for their taste. 



F. W. Timme starts on Sunday eve- 

 ning, July 28, to spend ten weeks on a 

 trip to England and Scotland. 



Daniel Brandi says he still has on 

 hand quite a quantity of geraniums 

 which found no sale in the belated 

 spring season. 



W. H. Edwards is building two green- 

 houses at Hinsdale, 111., to grow carna- 

 tions and miscellaneous stock. Matt 

 Fleming, formerly with Henry Payne, is 

 his grower. 



Notice of the death of Miss Frances 

 Calvert, of Lake Forest, will be found 

 in the obituary column of this issue. 



Davis Bros., of Morrison, 111., are 

 shipping cut fronds of Elegantissima 



fern to the A. L. Randall Co. It is a 

 fine thing for use in bouquets and for 

 decorating the cloth around dinner cen- 

 terpieces, etc., but at the present season 

 there is no great demand for such ma- 

 terial. 



E. B. Washburn made a week end trip 

 up the lake on the Manitou, leaving Fri- 

 day evening and returning Monday 

 morning. C. L. Washburn had no picnic 

 Sunday; he is nursing a choice collec- 

 tion of carbuncles. Bassett & Washburn 

 are cutting heavily from their houses of 

 summer roses. 



Harry Manheim, of J. A. Budlong's 

 city store, spent Sunday with A. H. Bud- 

 long at Lake Geneva. 



L. Coatsworth went to New Castle 

 Monday evening to spend a few days at 

 the establishment of the Benthey-Coats- 

 worth Co. He is a golf enthusiast and 

 can not stay long that far from the 

 links. 



E. C. Amling received his first Mon- 



rovia chrysanthemums of the season July 

 22. This is several weeks earlier than 

 last year and apparently too early for 

 the buyers. When the first chrysanthe- 

 mums arrive in the same box with the 

 early asters, seasons are becoming some- 

 what mixed. 



Herman A. Dreiske, of Ravinia, 111., 

 has leased space in the Flower Growers' 

 lUarket, where he will begin selling his 

 own stock August 1. 



C. W. McKellar reports continued 

 large receipts of Cattleya Gaskclliana, 

 but says the demand has been steadily 

 diminishing and that now there is little 

 call for them except for an occasional 

 good funeral piece. 



Frederick Sperry and Mrs. Sperry 

 have returned from a Fourth of July 

 trip to the home of Mr. Sperry 's parents 

 at Conneaut, O. They also visited Buf- 

 falo and Niagara Falls. 



A. L. Vaughan is entertaining R. M. 

 Parsons and wife, of Roswell, N. M., at 



