M.,cHe,i9n The Weekly Florists' Review. 



21 



We Can Supply You with 



ROSES, BEAUTIES 



The best the market affords, in any quantity and any length of stem 



Quality of all our stock is fine 



PRICE LIST 



Richmoud 



1 



Select . . . 

 >• Medium. 



AMERICAN BEAUTIES Per Doe. 



Extra long $5.00 



36-inch stem 4.00 



30-inch stem 3.60 



24-inch Btem. 3.00 



20-inch stem 2.50 



18-inch stem 2.00 



16-inch stem ., . . 1.50 



12-inch stem 1.26 



Short stem 75c to 1.00 



ROSES, OUR SELECTION, $4.00 per 100 



CARNATIONS Per lOO 



Good $1.50 to $2.00 



gele(>^ ■ 3 00 



Whitt^ for St. Patrick's bay...*."..".'.. 4.00 to 6^00 



Harrisii per doz., $1.50 



Valley 3.00 to 4.00 



Violets 76to 1.00 



Sweet Peas 76 to 1.25 



Killamey | Special . 



White Killamey J- °?lec* • • 



Field , I Medimn 



My Maryland. '..'.....*. J Short. . . 



Uncle John 



Bride. 



Ivory 



Sunrise 



Gate I Short 



Perle J 



Per 100 



$10.00 

 S.OO 

 6.00 

 4.00 



8.00 

 6.00 

 4.00 



Per 100 

 $3.00 



Subject to ohanee witbout notice. 



Jonquils 



Daflfodila $3.00 to 4.00 



Tulips 3.00 to 4.00 



Adiantiun i.oo 



Asparagus. per bunch, $0.60 



Ferns per 1000, 3.00 



Order from ua and get 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 



WHOLESALE GROWER OF CUT FLOWERS 



35 Randolph Street, 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



Mieiicioti I mh Keview wtieo vou wnie 



The exhibits of the evening consisted 

 of vases of White Wonder and Gloriosa 

 carnations from F. Dorner & Sons Co., 

 Lafayette, Ind. A committee consisting 

 of C. W. Johnson, P. Olsem and H. N. 

 Yepsen scored Gloriosa eighty-six 

 points, entitling it to the club's certifi- 

 cate. White Wonder had suffered so 

 that it did not show its true form, so 

 was not scored. 



J. G. Schuman, of Bassett & Wash- 

 burn's, Hinsdale, brought two blooms of 

 Killamey that each had nearly thirty 

 petals, and stated that he had a plant 

 in charge that had produced blooms 

 with thirty-six petals. 



Joseph Kohout reported on the trip 

 of the club members to the meeting of 

 the Illinois State Florists' Association. 

 The session closed with a discussion of 

 matters concerning express shipments, 

 in which the representatives of the ex- 

 press companies paid good natured com- 

 pliments to each other. The shippers 

 present agreed that the practice of the 



companies that solicit routing orders 

 from the out of towrt buyers should be 

 discouraged. 



Eeinberg's Planting 



Peter Reinberg is planning to bench 

 the quite considerable number of 220,- 

 000 ciarnation plants for the season of 

 1911-12. Here is his list of varieties 

 and number of each: 



White Enchantress 25,000 



White Perfection 36,000 



White Lawson 6,000 



Enchantress .'^S.OOO 



Wlnsor 30,000 



Rnee-pink Enchantress 30,000 



Mrs. Lawson 30,000 



Beacon 25,000 



Total 220,000 



February Weather. 



Tlie month was exceptionally warm 

 for February, the mean temperature be- 

 ing 32.4 degrees. It equaled the aver- 

 age of February, 1890 and 1909, and 

 has not been exceeded since 1882. The 



percentage of possible sunshine was 

 forty-four, as compared with the normal 

 of fifty, and the total precipitation, rain 

 and melted snow. 2.27 inches, was close 

 to the average. 



Various Notes. 



Peterson Nursery has just put up a 

 propagating house 22x50. 



Allie Zech was on the sick list 

 March 7. 



The Kenwood Co., of which George 

 Wagner is one of the stockholders, in 

 its articles of incorporation declares the 

 florists' business to be one of the lines 

 in which it will engage. 



O. W. Frese, of Poehlmann Bros. Co., 

 says that White Perfection takes the 

 St. Patrick's dye better than any other 

 carnation. 



W. W. Randall is again at St. Louis 

 on business for the A. L. Randall Co. 

 A. L. Randall himself is at West Baden. 



Harry Rowe, in the Palmer Hous» 



