May 7, 1914. 



The Florists' Review 



33 



Cape Jessaainc Gardeaia (Graodiflora) 



The Largest Cape Jessamine Farm in the U. S. 



BUDS FOR DECORATION DAY 



ALSO rOR DELIVERY DURINQ JUNE. 



Our bushes are all young and in prime condition. Crop late; shall 

 begin shipping about May 18. Prompt attention to all orders. A-1 buds 

 guaranteed. Our policy: — First come, first served. Send order at once. 



We know how to pack. See testimonial: 



Ellsworth, Maine, Feb. 23, 1914. 

 It gives me pleasure to say the Cape Jessamine buds you sent me last May 

 arrived in perfect condition and just in time for Memorial Day. They were in every 

 way satisfactory. M. A. CLARK. 



Class X— 12 to 18-inch stems $1.50 per 100; $13.00 per 1000 



Class A— 8 to 12-inch stems 1.00 per 100; 8.50 per 1000 



4 to 8-inch stems 6.00 per 1000 



WRITE, PHONE OR WIRE YOUR WANT« 

 Tarms F. O. B. Alvln Cash or C. O. D. 



Alvin Cape Jessamine & Floral Co. 



WhoUtaU Florists ALVIN, TEXAS 



Reference: Alvin Citizens State Bank 



MenttoD The Review when yon write. 



VERSES 

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 OCCASIONS 

 WRITE FOR 

 SAMPLES and 

 PRICES 



GRADUATION 



"POSIE SENTIMENT" 

 CARDS 



CARDS IN 



DELICATE 



TINTS AND 



WHITE 



to BLEND with 



FLOWERS 



726 2D AVE. SOUTH RUDE8ILL & COMPANY FORT DODGE, IOWA 



Mention The Review when you write. 



CYCAS LEAVES 



100 Prepared Cycas, best quality leaves, 

 sizes 20 to 40-inch, for $6.00. 



Other Supplies at equally low prices. 

 Get our list. 



GEO. H. ANGERNUELLER, Wkilesale Tkmt 



1324 Pine Street. ST. LOUIS, MO . 



block of each other on Sixty-third 

 street, Arthur F. Keenan is doing a 

 nice business in each. He purposes to 

 keep both stores going indefinitely, 

 after having had the two considerably 

 over a year. 



It sometimes is said that the work- 

 ing man has no chance — but he has: 

 Mons Olson is the proof. Everybody 

 in the market knew Olson ten years 

 ago; he worked for E. H. Hunt, J. A. 

 Budlong, Bassett & Washburn and oth- 

 ers. He saved his money and invested 

 it in real estate. For a while he ran 

 a small retail store, but some good 

 trades put him in possession of a 

 twelve-flat building at the corner of 

 Woodlawn avenue and Fifty-fourth 

 street that enables him to live com- 

 fortably off the net income. 



The old Grossman-Weber place at 

 5048 Lincoln avenue, now operated by 

 Krowka Bros., will be planted largely 

 to carnations for next season. There 

 are six houses. They were all in lilies 

 for Easter, two houses in pots and 



ARNLEDER FLORIST WAGONS 



have for 33 years represented the highest 

 type of wagon construction. No better 

 wagons made. 



PRICES RIGHT -QUAUTY HIGHEST -TERNS CONVENID^ 



Write today for our free 100-page Catalogue with prices and terms. 



THE O. ARMLEDER CO., Cincinnati, O. 



four houses in which the bulbs were 

 benched in old chrysanthemum soil. 

 John Kruchten is this week cleaning 

 up the last of the crop. 



The store in the University Club 

 building has been closed and the in- 

 terests of the Bohannon Floral Co., lo- 

 cated there for several years, now are 

 concentrated in the new store at 57 

 East Monroe street. 



It develops that prior to the deals 

 recently reported in The Review, Lub- 

 liner & Trinz had sold out all their 

 moving picture interests; the two new 

 theaters being built and the summer 

 lease on Orchestra hall constitute a 

 fresh start in that field. 



Perhaps you did not realize it, but 



there were seven hours and eighteen 

 minutes of sun, on the average, each 

 day in April, being only fifty-five per 

 cent of the possible. The normal is 

 sixty-one per cent. 



This is a busy week for the carna- 

 tion growers; although a few plants 

 were moved into the fields late in 

 April, most growers prefer to wait un- 

 til several days of May have passed. 



A large shipment of spring-picked 

 ferns was cleaned up in short order 

 last week, according to the E. F. Win- 

 terson Co. The seed store is in the 

 height of the rush on plants. 



May 4 brought so good a run of busi- 

 ness that A. L. Vaughan figured that 

 the retailers, in town and out, all must 



