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Janoaby 11, 1012. 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



35 



BEAUTIES 



A Big Cut 



Fine Quality- 



-Mostly Long Stems 



ROSES AND CARNATIONS 



also in good crop. Fine stock in all varieties. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



Per doz. Richmond 



AMERICAN BEAUTIES 



Extra long $6.00 



36-inch stem 4.00 



30-inch stem 3. CO 



24-inch stem 2.50 



2'»inch stem 2.00 



15-inch stem 1 . 50 



12-inch stem 1 . 25 



Short stem $0.75 @ 1.00 



Perle Per 100 



Special $8.00 



8ele-t 6.00 



Medium 5.00 



Short 4.00 



Special 



Sele(;t 



Medium 



Short $4.00 



Klllarney i Special 



White Klllarney. . . . ( Select 



Mrs. Field f Medium 



Maryland ' Short 4.00 



Sunrise 



Special . r 



Select 



Medium 



Short 



Per 100 

 $10.00 

 8.00 

 6.00 

 5.00 

 10.00 

 8.00 

 6.00 

 5.00 



8.00 

 6.00 

 5.00 

 4.00 



ROSES, our selection, $4.00 per 100. 



CARNATIONS Per 100 



Select $3.00 



Fancy 4.00 



Harrisii per doz., $1.50 @ $2.00 



Sweet Peas $1.00 @ 1.25 



Paper Whites 3.00 @ 4.00 



Romans 3.00 @ 4.00 



Stevia 2.00 



Valley 3.00 @ 4.00 



Violets 1.00 @ 1.25 



Per 100 



Adiantum $ 1 .00 @ 



Asparagus, sprays 



" strings 60.00 @ 



" Sprengeri 



Smilax per doz., $1.50 



Ferns per 1000, 2.00 



Mexican Ivy 



Galax, green or bronze, .per 1000, 1.00 



Leucothoe 



Boxwood bunch, 25c 



$ 1.50 



2.00 



75.00 



2.00 



.75 



.75 



Subject to obance 'wltbout notice. 



Order from us and get the freshest stuck and of besi keeping quality and have the assurance of 



supplies such as can only come from 2,000,000 FkET OP MODERN GLASS. 



PETER REINBERG 



35 £• Randolph Street, 



L. D. Phone Central 2840. 



CHICAGO 



Mention The Review when you write. 



of $90,000, includes also 2,000 square 

 feet of basement space. Mr. Muir has 

 stores and greenhouses at Thirty-sixth 

 street and Michigan boulevard, and at 

 Forty-seventh street and Grand boule- 

 vard. 



The annual meeting of the Horticul- 

 tural Society of Chicago, which was 

 scheduled to be held at the Art Insti- 

 tute January 9, was postponed to Tues- 

 day, April 9. 



John Mangel has been sued for $10,- 

 000 damages by a woman who claims to 

 have been injured when the awning fell 

 in front of Mr. Mangel's store some 

 months ago. 



Poehlmann Bros. Co. has joined the 

 ranks of those who are introducing 

 Double White Killameys. They de- 

 scribe theirs as the Poehlmann strain, 



J. F. Bernard has given up the lease 

 on the N. P. Miller greenhouses at Wil- 

 mette and is again with Fischer Bros., 

 Evanston. 



Peter Eeinberg is propagating 100,000 

 American Beauties for his own replant- 

 ing needs this season. 



N. J. Wietor has recovered from an 

 exceedingly severe cold. 



Emil Buettner, C. L. Washburn, E. B. 

 Washburn and Andrew Benson went to 

 Detroit on the Michigan Central's flyer 

 Tuesday afternoon. 



George Eeinberg has placed an order 

 for 10,000 My Maryland for early 

 spring planting. 



E. H. Hunt and Bassett & Washburn 

 have renewed their leases at 131 North 

 Wabash avenue. 



August Grossman is offering his es- 

 tablishment for sale or rent. 



B. J. Blameuser says that with one 

 possible exception the Niles Center car- 

 nation growers have cut more flowers 

 per plant than they had at this date 

 last season. 



Charles Zapfe has been doing right 

 nicely since his start at Sixty-first 

 street and South Park avenue. Over- 

 head expenses are small and business 

 exceeded expectations up to the time 

 the cold wave struck. 



Frank Johnson, of the A. L. Randall 

 Co., started January 7 for one of his 

 periodical two weeks' trips with a line 

 of samples of florists' supplies. Per- 

 haps it was because of weather condi- 

 tions that he headed south. 



E. E. Pieser and wife went to West 

 Baden January 8, expecting to meet 

 H. R. Fisher and wife, of Kalamazoo. 



Kyle & Foerster say that the princi- 

 pal trouble during the zero weather has 

 been to clean up on violets. 



C. W. McKellar lost a big shipment 

 of fine eastern valley January 6, frozen 

 in transit. 



The Chicago Carnation Co. says the 

 rooted cuttings business has started off 

 heavy this season. 



At Winterson's Seed Store everybody 

 is busy. Editor Degnan is writing the 

 spring catalogue, a force of girls is 

 papering seeds and everyone else is 

 working on inventory. 



Two large bungalows, on lots adjoin- 

 ing, have been purchased in Birchwood 

 by Messrs. Baumann and Gelderman, 

 of L. Baumann & Co. David Chambers, 

 formerly a salesman for Sanger Bros., 

 of Dallas, Tex., is now Texas represent- 

 ative for Baumann & Co. 



P. L. McKee, of J. C. Moninger Co., 

 was on the sick list early this week. 



The E. C. Amling Co. reports the prac- 

 tical completion of the new range of 

 Wendland & Keiniel, probably the larg- 



