t ;tt,;t 



NOTDUBIB 24, 1910. 



The Weekly Florists* Review. 



^;;^>? «.^'^r ♦ 



sk 



We are specially strong on 



kICHMOND 



and all lengths of 



BEAUTIES 



But everything else is in full crop. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



AMERICAN BIAUTIIB Per Doe. 



Long stems $5.00 



36-inch stems 4.00 



30-inch stems 3.00 



24-iiich stems 2.00 



20-inch stems 1.50 



15-inch stems 1.25 



12-inch stems 1.00 



Short per 100, $4.00 to $6.00 



Per 100 

 Mrs. Marshall Field, select $6.00 to $8.00 



" medium 6.00 to 



Richmond, select 6.00 to 



" medium 6.00 to 



Killamey, select 6.00 to 



" medium 6.00 to 



6.00 

 8.00 

 6.00 

 8.00 

 6.00 



Per 100 

 White Killarney, select $6.00 to $8.00 



" " medium 5.00 to 6.00 



My Maryland, select 6.00 to 8.00 



" medium 5.00 to 6.00 



Bride, select 6.00 to 8.00 



" medium 5.00 to 6.00 



Ivory 5.00 to 8.00 



Perle, select 6.00 to 8.00 



" medium 5.00 to 6.00 



Sunrise 6.00 to 8.00 



ROSES, our selection 4.00 



" extra select 10.00 



CARNATIONS 2.00 to 4.00 



Easter Lilies per doz., $1.60 to $2.00 



Valley 3.00 to 4.00 



Asparagus Plumosus per buiich, .50 



Fancy Ferns per 1000, $2.00 



Order from us and g^et the freshest stock and of best keeping quality and have the assurance 

 of supplies such as can only come from 8,000,000 FEET OF MODERN GLASS. 



PETER REINBERG 



35 Randolph St., CHICAGO 



Mention The Review when you write. 



bourn avenue property, but will retain 

 the Halsted street store under the 

 management of his son-in-law. 



W. E. Lynch, of E. H. Hunt's, re- 

 ports the arrival of a carload of box- 

 wood. He says the Thanksgiving week 

 sales were twenty-five per cent ahead 

 of a year ago. 



The A. L. Eandall Co. has put up a 

 big blackboard in a conspicuous place 

 in the store, where it is proposed to 

 bulletin the things everybody should 

 know. Frank Johnson is in Michigan 

 this week. 



A. C. Kohlbrand, of the E. C. Amling 

 Co., spent Thanksgiving at Cincinnati. 



Lincoln Cojes, of Kokomo, Ind., is 

 shipping some fine Beauties to this mar- 

 ket. They are handled by J. A. Bud- 

 long. 



The estate of George Wittbold is go- 

 ing to erect ten or twelve dwellings 

 on its Park Ridge property and already 

 has four of the houses on the way to 

 completion. Thanksgiving trade with 



the George Wittbold Co. was good; in 

 fact, Louis "Wittbold said it was con- 

 siderably ahead of previous years. 



Eobert Northam says Richmond has 

 been George Reinberg's standby; it 

 has given a remarkably steady crop the 

 last two seasons. The heating appa- 

 ratus at the greenhouse has just un- 

 dergone extensive overhauling. 



Nic Zweifel, of North Milwaukee, 

 was in town November 29. He is dis- 

 seminating his new dark pink carna- 

 tion, Bright Spot, this season and says 

 he has booked about all the orders he 

 can promise January delivery on. He 

 says he is fixed to propagate 100,000 

 and thinks he will have no diflBculty 

 in selling them all. 



The morning papers November 28 

 had a story of J. L. Baske's capture of 

 a burglar in his store on Jackson boule- 

 vard. 



A, B. Scott and W. Atlee Burpee, of 

 Philadelphia, were here last week. The 



former is sending out two new roses 

 this season. 



One of the week's visitors was E. 

 Haentze, on his way home to Fond du 

 Lac with his bride. Mr. Haentze has 

 sold his business to his sons and is pre- 

 paring to build a new home and enjoy 

 his declining years. Other visitors were 

 H. M. Burt, Jackson, Mich.; B. O'Neil, 

 of Elgin, HI.; Sam Seligman, of Wert- 

 heimer Bros., New York; Wm. Feniger, 

 Toledo, O. 



ST. LOUIS. 



The Market. 



General reports indicate that both re- 

 tail and wholesale florists had a big 

 Thanksgiving trade. There were great 

 numbers of weddings, which used up 

 large quantities of flowers. The weather 

 was warm and springlike, which made 

 over-the-counter sales much larger than 

 usual on this day. The big football 

 game, too, helped the florists greatly 



