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24 



The Florists' Review 



SSPTXMBBB 12, 1012. 



i^i.. .'. ., ,;l.;'^i.iiM 



162 North Wabash Avenue^ 



L. D. Piraiie 



: itendolpli {M81 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



AMERICAN BEAUTIES 



Per dos. 



60-inch Btenu 13.00 



48-inch stems 2.60 



36-inch items 2.00 



30-inch stems 1.60 



24-inch stems 1.26 



20-inch stems 1.00 



16-inch stems 76 



Short stems 60 



PINK iM WHITE KILLARNEY Per 100 



Extra special $7.00 



Selects 6.00 



Fancy 6.00 



Medium 4.00 



Good 3.00 



Short stems 2.00 



RICHMOND 



Extra special 7.00 



Selects 6.00 



Fancy 6.00 



Medium 4.00 



Good 3.00 



Short stems 2.00 



CURRENT PJRJCE LIST 



JARDINE 



Per 100 



Fancy I 6.00 



Good 4.00 



Short stems. 3.00 



MY MARYLAND 



Fancy 7.00 



Good 6.00 



Short stems 4.00 



CARNATIONS 



Extra special 



Fancy 



Good 



MISCELLANEOUS STOCK 



1.60 

 1.26 

 1.00 



Lilies, fancy per 100, $8.00 to 10.00 



Ferns, new per 1000, 1.60 



Smil»z per dozen, 2.00 



Adiantom per 100, $1.00 to 1.60 



Galax. per 1008, 1.00 



SprMfcri or AspinfM Spnys per bunch, .60 



ROSES, Good Stock, Our Selection, - $3.00 per 100 



Mention The Review when yon write. 



H" .' Send your orders for Summer Flowers to > 



CHAS. W. McKELLAR 



22 E. RANDOLPH ST., CHICAGO 



Everything: in seasonable 

 stocic, at lowest market 

 prices. Long distance Phone, 



Central 3598 



friend of the insecticide manufacturers. 

 This is one of the cases where an ounce 

 of prevention is worth a pound of cure, 

 for all the north end growers who have 

 had experience with this worm know 

 how difficult it is to clean it out after 

 it once has become at home. It has cost 

 the growers many thousands of dollars 

 and been the subject of a book pub- 

 lished by the state entomologist. 



Frank Ayres, who is C. W. McKel- 

 lar's right-hand man, stated early this 

 week that he leaves September 12 for 

 Paris. That does not necessarily mean 

 France; his family has interests at 

 Paris, Texas. 



John W. Poehlmaun is serving on the 

 September grand jury. It is generally 

 considered an honor, but it means work. 

 The jury has over 400 cases to act on. 



John Michelsen, of the E. C. Amling 

 Co., who has just returned from a trip 

 to the Hudson river violet country, says 

 he found conditions about the same as 

 last year. The violet growers have not 

 been making money so fast as they did 

 a few years ago, and there is no in- 

 crease in glass at Rhinebeck this year. 

 At Poughkeepsie there actually is a 

 small decrease, while at Rock City a 

 few new houses have been built. The 

 stock is a little late, but no one regrets 

 that shipments will be delayed a few 



Mention Tl-e Review when yon write. 



Advertising tliat Pays Big 



The weddingr booklet 



'Tliwen for the Bride" 



now ready. 



A Kcneral booklet calk'd 

 "Flowers" and a digmified 

 Brochure on "FanersI Flow- 

 ers" and our Fall Catalosue 

 , of Advertisimr Cuts, ready 

 «■ Sept. 15. 



Write us If interested 



PAYNE JENNINGS & CONPANY, 



Mention The Berlew when you write. 



626 Fodcral 8t. 

 CHICAGO 



(lays. September is the critical month 

 for the growers; after this month con- 

 ditions are more settled. 



Fred Liebermann, who has been in 

 the retail business for himself since 

 leaving A. L. Vaughan & Co., takes ad- 

 vantage of the summer period of slack 

 business to pitch semi-professional base- 

 ball. He has just returned from a two 

 months' trip to the Pacific coast as 

 pitcher for a team known as the 

 Bloomer Girls and principally composed 

 of women players. 



C. A. Samuelson, whose Michigan 

 avenue store is close to all the south 

 side street car lines, is using a hand- 

 some colored card in the advertising 

 racks in the trolleys. He features his 



PERCY 



Wholesalers of 



CUT FLOWERS and 

 FLORISTS' SUPPLIES 



Write for CatalOKUc- 



JONES 



S6 E. Randolph St, CHICAGO 



delivery facilities and his telephone 

 service. 



Nick Thinnes, of Rogers Park, has 

 heretofore grown lettuce, but this sea- 

 son has his entire plant, some eight or 

 ten houses, in carnations. He already 



