Jolt 27, lOll. 



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The Weekly Rorists^ Review^ 



<:| We have a good crop of 



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from houses run to give a summer crop. 



Also cutting heavily of 



^ : t .mB 



Kll 



I 



rney, White Klllarney and Other Summer Roses 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



Richmond 



Killamey 



White Killamey. 



Field 



My Maryland •••• 



Uncle John 



Bride 



Ivory 



Sunrise 



Perle 



SELECT, 

 $6.00 to $8.00 



PER 100 



AMXRmiV BEAUTIBS Per Dot. 



364aeh and up stem $3.00 



90-inli Item 2.60 



M-indi stem 2.00 



90-inch item.. 1.60 



16-inch Item 1.00 



12-inch Item 76 



Short Item 60 



GOOD SHORT ROSES, OUR SELECTION, $3.00 per 100 



CARNATIONS Perioo Perioo 



Common 11.50 to f2.00 Valley $3.00 to $4.00 



Select 2.60 



Easter lilies per doz., $1.60 



$4.00 to $5.00 



PER 100 



Adiantum. 



Asparagus per bnnch, $0.60 



Ferns per 1000, 1.60 



1.00 



Bnbjeot to ohance wltboat notice. 



Order from na and g9t the freshest etock and of best keeplnir qoAlltj and hav^o the aasuraaee 

 •f snppUes such as ean onlj come from ]|,000,000 FSXT OF MODSBN GLASS. 



PETER REINBERG 



WHOLESALE GROWER OF CUT FLOWERS 



30 E. Randolph Street, 



CHICAGO, ILL. 





Mention The Review when yoa write. 



handle each of the details. That they 

 did their work well is shown by the 

 large attendance and the fact that there 

 was no financial loss in spite of the 

 rain. 



Various Notes. 



John Enders, of Poehlmann Bros. Co., 

 says the out-ot-town buyers are in need 

 of frequent reminder that there is no 

 mail delivery in Chicago Sundays, ex- 

 cept special delivery letters. He says 

 every Monday morning brings them 

 orders intended for Sunday shipment. 



Sunday 's rain, while it was disastrous 

 for the picnic, was a boon to the car- 

 nation growers, many of whom have 

 been waiting for a break in the weather 

 to start benching their young stock. 



Weiland & Risch are busy redecorat- 

 ing their store. 



John Kruchten says there has been 

 a good market for cat-tails, consider- 

 able quantities having been sold in the 

 last few weeks at from $1 per dozen to 

 50 cents per dozen. 



Both G. H. Pieser and E. E. Pieser, 

 of Kennicott Bros. Co., were at the 



WANTED 



Consigrnments of early and late 



Good prices for A No. 1 stock. 



Michigan Cut Flower Exchange, 



Br^way. Dctroit, FGch. 



Mention The Review when '^ou write. 



store July 24. E. E. Pieser is planning 

 a northern trip. 



Max Ringier, of Vaughan & Sperry, is 

 vacationing for a fortnight. 



Henry Van Gelder came to the Percy 

 Jones store July 24, the first day he was 

 out of bed in a fortnight. He still 

 lacks strength. 



A. I. Simmons is busy this week. He 

 is in charge of the commissary depart- 

 ment of the lake front army. 



John Michelsen, of the E. C. Amling 

 Co., has made three trips to McHenry, 

 HI., in the last ten days. His family 

 are vacationing there. 



Emil Buettner, at Park Kidge, has 

 finished tearing down and replacing 

 with a larger structure the last of his 



old houses. Boses are planted and car- 

 nation planting is going ahead rapidly 

 this week. He is trying only one new 

 rose this year, Pierson's Dark Pink 

 Killamey. 



Frank A. Benthey, son of F. F. Benthey, 

 who formerly was foreman for Hoerber 

 Bros, and later for Crabb & Hunter, at 

 Eeeds Lake, Mich., has gone into busi- 

 ness for himself at Tipton, Ind., the 

 firm name being Briscoe & Benthey. 



The new store of the Chicago Flower 

 Growers' Association is an exceedingly 

 busy place this week. The big new ice- 

 box, forty-five feet long and eight feet 

 deep, with ice space entirely overhead, 

 has been completed. Manager Otto W. 

 Frese says everything, to the last de- 



