NOVEMBER 21. 1907. The Weekly Florists' Review. 



23 



Heavy Cuts On 



QUALITY A NO. 1 



Send alongf your orders for 



—i— THANKSGIVING^^ 



and you will be pleased with our quality, our prices and our promptness. No order too larg^e for 

 us to fill; BO order too small to receive our careful attention. ALL STOCK IN SEASON. We have 



a full line. 



J. A. BUDLONG 



WHOLESALE CUT FLOWERS 



37-39 RANDOLPH ST., CHICAGO 



Mention The BeTlew when you write. 



WE WON 



First 

 Prize 



on 



CUT 

 ORCHIDS 



a( the 



CHICAGO SHOW 



last week 



Chas. W. McKellar 



WHOLESALE FLORIST 



51 Wabash Ave. 

 Chicago 



ORCHIDS 



A Specialty 



A fine assortment of 

 Cattley as and other 

 Orchids always on 

 hand. 



L. D. Pbone CentriU 8508. 'HBSH KVKRT DAY 

 riNCT STOCK IN TALLKT, BE1UTII8. B08E8. GABNATI0N8 

 AND GREINS Of ALL KINDS 



Can always supply the best Kooda the season affords. 

 A complete line of all Wire Work constantly on hand 



00 to 

 00 to 



THANKSGITlNe PBICB LIST 



ORCHIDS, a apecialty. Per doz. 



Cattleyas W.OO to 17.60 



Dendroblum f ormoBum.. 4.00 to 6.0O 



Vaada caerulea 8 00 to 4.00 



Oncldtum per 100, 8.00 to 4.00 



AM. BBAUTIES— 



Extra long 6 



StemB, 24 to 36 inches. ... 3.1 



Stems, 20 inches 



Stems, 15 inches....... 



Stems, 12 inches 



ROSES 

 Kaiserln and Richmond. ..14 

 Bride, Maid and Q. Gate.. . 4 



Liberty and Chatenay 4, 



Rosea, our selection 



Carnations, sel. com'n.. 3, 

 larre and fancy. 4 

 MI8CEI.LANEOUS 

 Chrysanthemums- 

 Fancy, doz., 13 00 to 14.00 

 Medium, " 2.00 to 2 60 

 Small, " 1.00 to 1.60 



Violets l.OOto 1.60 



Lonsrlflorum doz., t2.00 16.00 



Valley 8.00 to 6.00 



DECORATITi: 



Asp. PlumoBUs string:, .36 to .60 



" " bunch, .86 to .60 



" Sprengeri . . . .per 100, 3.00 to 6.00 



Galax per 100, 20c; 1000, 1.60 



Ferna....perlOO, 20c; 1000, 1.60 



Adlantum per 100, 1.00 



Smllax..perdoz., t2.00; 100, 16.00 



Wild Smllax. .50-lb. cases 6.00 



SUBJECT TO CHANOK WITHOUT NOTICl 



6.00 

 4.00 

 2.00 

 1.60 

 I.OO 

 Per 100 

 OO to $8.00 

 .00 to 8.00 

 00 to 8.00 

 40O 

 4.00 

 6.00 



00 to 

 .00 to 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



interest with which it was viewed by 

 the visitors to the Chicago show. It took 

 first in the "any other variety" class. 



John Tait, foreman for Weiland & 

 Risch, was run down by an automobile 

 while crossing Bidge avenue in Evans- 

 ton Sunday evening. He was thrown 

 ten feet and appeared badly injured, but 

 the automobile did not stop. He will 

 be around again in a few days. 



E. E. Pieser, of Kennicott Bros. Co., 

 says he has' been figuring on how the 

 growers are coming out this month and 

 finds that they are producing about fif- 

 teen per cent greater quantity than at 

 this date last year, and receiving at 

 present nearly twenty per cent less 

 money; but he looks for a radical change 

 in the market when winter days strike in. 



George Reinberg is cutting lightly dur- 

 ing the glut and Joseph Forester con- 

 gratulates himself that they likely will 

 get their heaviest crop when the market 

 is least well supplied. 



J. A. Budlong's people report that 

 it is the first time this season when busi- 



ness has not been running well ahead 

 of last year. 



John J. Kruehten says he has no fault 

 to find with market conditions. While 

 prices are low, he steadily is increasing 

 his business. He did not cater to the 

 shipping trade last winter. 



Wietor Bros, say that not only will 

 they have chrysanthemums in plenty for 

 Thanksgiving, but that some of the" late 

 sorts will be holding on until well towards 

 Christmas. They are this year again 

 buying all the new sorts in sight. 



John Zech, of Zech & Mann, says they 

 have been particularly favored this week, 

 in that the shipping demand has kept 

 them well cleaned out each night. 



W. W. Barnard Co. says there is enough 

 bouquet green so that no florist need 

 lose any sales because of inability to 

 get the goods. 



Julius A. Peterson, Jr., of Cincinnati, 

 son of the well-known plantsman, is 

 taking a course in cut-flower growing at 

 Morton Grove with the Poehlmann Bros. 

 Co. Later he intends to see how grow- 



ing is done in the east and then join 

 his father and brother in the business at 

 Cincinnati. 



A. Lange has taken up the burdens of 

 the "Wilson avenue passengers of the 

 Northwestern elevated, who think the 

 Ravenswood people are favored, and vrill 

 see what he can do to reform the serv- 

 ice. He was left to cool his heels on 

 the platform the other evening, and got 

 hotter and hotter as the Ravenswood 

 trains went by. 



Among the week's visitors were 

 Thomas Joy, of Joy & Son, Nashville, 

 Tenn. ; W. T. League, of Hannibal, Mo.; 

 A. B. Silliman, of Boone, la., the mis- 

 tletoe man; Edward FuUe, of Fulle 

 Bros., Richmond, Ind., who reports they 

 have bought the old Gift place and are 

 moving the houses to add to their own 

 range. 



We would not think of giving up the 

 Review if we had to borrow the money 

 to pay the subscription. — K. Heitger & 

 Son, Bedford, Ind. 



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