

November 9, 1911. 



The Weekly Florists' Review* 



27 



Beauties. Roses 



9 



QUALITY of all OUR stock is fine, but we want to call special attention to 



Our Cut of RICHMOND 



It is specially heavy and extra good quality. Also cut- 

 ting fair quantities of Melody and Mrs. Ward. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



AMBRICAN BEAUTIES PerDoi. 



Extra long $4.00 



SO-inch Btem 3.00 



9(Kinch item 2.60 



84-iiich Item 2.00 



90-inch item 1.60 



16-ineh item 1.00 



12-inch Item 76 



Skortitem 60 



Richmond 



Killamey 



White Killamey. 



Field 



My Maryland* ..• 



Uncle John 



Ivoi^ 



Bonriie 



Perle 



SELECT, 

 $6.00 to $8.00 



PER 100 



$4.00 to $5.00 



PER 100 



MRS. WARD and MELODY, medium, $6.00; short, $4.00 per 100. 



GOOD SHORT ROSES, OUR SELECTION, $3.00 per 100 



Carnations • 



Mums, pink, white and yellow— 



Per doz $1.50 to $3.00 



Easter Lilies per doz., 1.26 to 1.60 



VXOLKTS. 750. 



P«rlOO 

 $2.00 to $3.00 



PerlM 



VaUey $3.00 to $4.00 



Adiantom 1>00 



AsparagOB per bunch, $0.60 



Perm per 1000, 1.60 



■nbjeot to ehance wtihoatnotloe. 



Order from na and g9t the Ireaheat stock and of beat keeping; qoalitj and haTe the ae—raaee 

 of snppUea anek as can only eome from 8,000,000 FEET OF MODERN GLASS. 



PETER REINBERG 



WHOLESALE GROWER OF CUT FLOWERS 



30 E. Randolph St., CHICAGO, ILL. 



Mention The Berlew when you -write. 



Ealph Keefe, formerly with Vaughan 

 & Sperry, has gone with the Batavia 

 Oreenhouse Co., taking the place of 

 Wm. Johnson, who joined the force of 

 Keefe 's old firm. Trading jobs, as it 

 were. 



Bassett & Washburn have a double 

 sport of White Killamey on which they 

 are working up stock. 



C. M. Dickinson says the crop of To- 

 bak-ine, which has been short, will soon 

 increase, as the manufacturer now occu- 

 pies a new and larger building. 



George Baer, Toledo, has begun his 

 annual shipments of Bonnaffon mums 

 to Kennicott Bros. Co. 



J. C. Meier, of Meier Bros., Niles Cen- 

 ter, recently was elected a member of 

 the board of directors of the Chicago 

 Flower Growers ' Association. He had 



previously been acting with the board. 



The building in which John Mangel's 

 store is located, corner of Wabash ave- 

 nue and Monroe street, is to be torn 

 down in the spring to make way for a 

 skyscraper. It is reported that Mr. 

 Mangel has made arrangement with 

 Harry Rowe, whose store is in the same 

 block, which protects him against being 

 without a home when moving day 

 comes. 



George Eeinberg is cutting Eich- 

 monds from the section that was hit 

 by the cyclone. 



The Star Floral Co., Wilmette, is 

 sending Kyle & Foerster a large cut of 

 Killamey s and Marylands. 



F. M. Smith, formerly of the Smith & 

 Fetters Co., Cleveland, but now a resi- 

 dent of California, passed through town 



this week on his way to Cleveland to 

 do a couple of big wedding jobs. 



' John Kruchten says buyers are nu- 

 merous enough, but that the tickets 

 might be larger, 



C. W. McKellar has word from the 

 east that the orchid market has 

 changed, crops going off. 



H. Van Gelder says a canvass of 

 the growers shows that not so many 

 mums were planted this year as last. 



Visitors: J. G. Layton, Louisiana, 

 Mo.; A. C. Eott, Joliet. 



Somerville, N. J. — Anson V. Norton 

 reports business as steadily increasing 

 since he built here eleven years ago, but 

 he says it requires time and patience t* 

 build up an entirely new business. 



.S^2£^^i. 



