OCTOBEB 1, 1©14. 



The Rorists' Review 



29 



BEAUTIES 



We are justified in saying there are no better Beauties than 

 Randall's. The plants are making: splendid growth and the flow- 

 ers and stems get bigger and better every day. We have a fine 

 supply and shall have it regularly— so we are as glad to get your 

 orders as you will be to get our Beauties. 



FANCY GIGANTEUM LILIES Here by Thousands 



Tou will find it to your advantae^e in every way to use Randall*a Rosea. 

 Xxcellent quality, line, long^, strong^ atems. A full Hat of varietiea. 



RUSSELL 

 MILADY 

 WARD 



SHAWYER 

 KILLARNEY 

 SUNBURST 



KILLARNEY BRILLIANT 

 WHITE KILLARNEY 

 KILLARNEY QUEEN 



CARNATIONS 



HADLEY 

 RICHMOND 

 BULGARIE 



ORCHIDS 



CHRYSANTHCMUIV1S 



We can supply good stock in yellow and The supply increases every day and the We have a nice supply of fancy Cattleya 

 white but advise early orders. stemsare improving rapidly. Good flowers. Labiata; also Dendrobium Formosum. 



Headquarters for all Greens, including BRONZE GALAX, $6.00 per case of I0,000 



A. L. Randall Co. 



Everything for Horists, 



L. D. Phone Central 7720 



Private Exchange all 



Departments 



66 E. Randolph Stnet, Chicago 



Mention The Review when yog write. 



Only 11 weeks 

 Until Christmas 



TO REACH OUR gTORBt-Take a Chicago 

 Ave., Division St. Milwaukee Ave. or Armitace Ave. 



Tat State and Randolph Su. and get off at Huron St. 



le.cars stop right in front of our store. = 



!£, 



SPECIALISTS IN FLORISTS' BASKETS 



a 713-717 MILWAUKEE AVENUE c= 



When you will want all the baskets that 

 you can get. We have them now, as we 

 were fortunate in receiving our stock 

 from Germany before the war broke out. 

 At present our line is complete but orders 

 are coming fast. 



Have we your order? Better Hurry. 



RAEDLEIN BASKET CO., CHICAGO 



Mentton The Review wbea yea wiita 



tended for this display should be ad- 

 dresso.i to C. W. Johnson, Art Institute, 

 Uii(a;io, to 'arrive on the morning of 

 'Y^'i'iber 9, all express and other 

 chaitros prepaid. 



Variotis Notes. 



•^ firm of Schumann & Kohout has 



dissolved, Joseph Kohout having 



•liased the interest of J. G. Schu- 



"I. who has retired. Both gentlemen 



" for many years growers for Bassett 



^ Jishburn. A couple of years ago 



took over the establishment of 



ph Ziska, known as the Chicago 



Co., at Libertyville, 111., and are 



'Stood to have done well, growing 



'.recently sold in this market by 



' & Foerster. 



■' world's series and the city series 



'/>t interest us half as much as the 



/fzer cup series, the first of three 



games of which is to be played 



'•er 3 at Iowa street and Western 



T! 

 ben 



111 at 



\Vi> [■ 



k ■ 



thiM 



•To.: 



Ro- 

 ll 11 ; 

 ro-. 



.io 

 fill, 



0,M 



avenue, between the Eclipse and Loudin 

 clubs, with Fred Liebermann, of Zech & 

 Mann's, pitching for the latter. It is 

 for the amateur city championship. 



With the last day of September Lub- 

 liner & Trinz concluded their occupancy 

 of Orchestra hall. They ran moving 

 pictures there for three summer months, 

 while the flower business was dull. The 

 rent was $15,000. The closing show was 

 "The Fortune Hunter," which perhaps 

 would have been as appropriate for the 

 opening. 



Returning from Europe was not 

 nearly so easy as going there, in the 

 experience of E. F. Kurowski and wife. 

 To those who visit the offices of the 

 Moninger Co., the recently returned 

 traveler has many interesting stories to 

 tell. Mrs. Kurowski was in Bavaria 

 and Mr. Kurowski in Berlin when the 

 war broke out. After a wait of a month 

 she was able to rejoin her husband, but 

 forty hours were required for what is 



usually a ride of only eight hours. They 

 got to Rotterdam on a special train 

 arranged for Americans by their ambas- 

 sador. Going thence to London, they 

 found their steamer had been taken for 

 war use, but after another week 's delay 

 they got passage on a boat from Liver- 

 pool. 



T. E. Waters now is domiciled in aris- 

 tocratic Evanston. 



Michael Freres, with the Chicago Car- 

 nation Co., carries his hand heavily 

 bandaged because of blood poison re- 

 sulting from a thorn in his right thumb. 



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

 reports the arrival of Mexican ivy, the 

 quality being excellent considering that 

 there has been no frost. 



Out-of-town business is normal, ac- 

 cording to A. L. Vaughan, but city 

 business is sub-normal, especially the 

 sales to the cash buyers, of whom there 

 is a constantly increasing number. 



Poehlmann Bros. Co. is well pleased 



k 



