JvKV 2, 11)10. 



The Weekly Florists^ Review* 



23 



Jl^E WORK f*r CHOICE STOCK 



For Wediinft and Gtmmencementt notfting ihort of the best will be acceptable. 



Sweet Peas, Valley, Adiantum, Swalnsona, Lilies, Peonies 



and all other Cut Flowers in large supply. 



Fancy Beauties^ Roses and Carnations 



( Milwaukee it famous for the quality of its Beauties and Carnations.) 



The warmer the weather the better Milwaukee Flowers compare with those produced in less favored sections. 

 Plenty of Asparagus Striqgs and Sprengeri Bunches. We also have a big lot of Plants. Send for list. 



We can take good care of all orders at loweit market rates. Write* phone or wire us — we do the rest. 



HOLTON & HUNKEL CO. 



Without Doubt the Beat Equipped Wholesale House in the Country. 



462 Nilwauicee Street, MILWAUKEE, WIS. 



FOR JUNE WEDDIN6S AND COMMENCEMENTS 



Your trade calls for the nicest, cleanest stock obtainable. We have the stock you need and we both gain when 

 you order of us. 



BEAUTIES, ROSES, CARNATIONS and SWEET PEAS 



We are cutting the finest Beauties to be had anjrwhere. Big buds, splendid color, strong stem and clean foliage. 

 Also the choice summer rosee. 



KILLARi^EY, JARDINE, KAISERIN, MARYLAND, FIELD. 



Fancy Carnations in all colors. Sweet Peas, fine as can be, bound to make a hit, big showing for little money, 

 Butterfly varieties in white, pink, lavender and blue. 



Asparagus, Spren^eri', Ferns and all other stoek in season. 



Five 

 Ssmmer 



Roses 

 nari t» 



•eat 



J.H.BUDLONG 



37-39 Randolph Strest, CHICAGO. 



BofiKff and 

 Osmatlons 

 A Specialty. 



WHOLESALE 

 GROWER Of 



CUT FLOWERS 



thing and prices realized were satisfac- 

 tory. 



Monday, June 13, the New York Flo- 

 rists' Club will hold its final meeting 

 of the season. Its importance ought 

 to bring out a record crowd. Tuesday, 

 .fune 28, the club's annual outing at 

 Wetzel 's Grove, College Point, will take 

 place. 



The method of the Denver clergy- 

 man in New York, in giving a flower 

 to everyone attending the church serv- 

 ices, has had wide publicity, and sev- 

 eral other New York churches announce 

 a similar distribution. It beats Fa- 

 thers ' day, or any special day, for it 

 can be made a continuous performance. 



Kessler Bros, had one lone geranium 

 plant left unsold in their big store 

 Saturday night, a straw which shows 

 how the Memorial day wind was blow- 

 ing. This firm has purchased five acres 

 of land at Secaucus, N. J., near Emil 

 Savoy's, on which they will erect 

 greenhouses. For the month of June 

 they have secured a store on Sixth 

 avenue near Twenty-eighth street, prior 

 to locating permanently in the new 



wholesale district on West Twenty- 

 eighth street. 



It is A. Warendorff, of Broadway 

 and Twenty-eighth street, who is re- 

 cuperating this summer, and not Her- 

 man, of the Ansonia, as I said last 

 week. 



Decoration day weeK kept many 

 wholesalers away from the Boston or- 

 chid exhibition, who had counted ou 

 going, J. K. Allen among them. F. II. 

 Traendly and James McManus re- 

 mained only for a day. 



Wadley & Sraythe are planting ave- 

 nues of large shade trees in the grounds 

 of the public library on Fifth avenue 

 and Forty-second street. This firm has 

 done an enormous nursery business this 

 spring. Their nursery at Yonkers is 

 filled with choice importations pur- 

 chased by Mr. Smythe on his last visit 

 to Europe. They have made large 

 plantings at John D. Eockef eller 's es- 

 tate this year. Last week they had the 

 wedding decoration for E. H. Harri- 

 man's daughter. 



The Madison Square Garden Eeal 

 Estate Show last weeK gave oppor- 



tunity for enterprise to Hitchings & 

 Co., who exhibited a portable green- 

 house, valued at $250, and the Forster 

 Mansfield Co., which displayed rustic 

 work, bamboo conceptions, plant tubs, 

 pergolas, window boxes and other flo- 

 rists' requisites. 



Among the prominent members of 

 the New York and New Jersey Plant 

 Growers' Association, who sail for Eu- 

 rope in June, are John Miesem, of 

 Elmhurst, N. Y., and Herman Stein- 

 hoflf, of West Hoboken, N. J. 



Philip Kessler has removed his of- 

 fiee and wholesale store to the third 

 floor of the Coogan building, where the 

 Cut Flower Exchange is located, and 

 the wholesale stores of Bonnot Bros., 

 W. H. Siebrecht, A. Smith and Frank 

 Millang. 



A, J. Guttman is enthusiastic over the 

 success and prospects of his new enter- 

 prise, the Best Oil Co., of which he is 

 president and treasurer. "There's mil- 

 lions in it," he believes, and all his 

 friends hope there are. 



I. S. Hendrickson, the new president 

 of the Gladiolus Society, has returned 



