. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 92 The Florists^ Review Mat IB, 1910. PEONIES THE SEASON IS OPEN WE ALWAYS ARE HEADQUARTERS JOSEPH FOERSTER CO. (Wholesale Dealers in Cut Flowers 160 North Wabash Avenue CHICAGO urea. The credit to be given Mr. Bohan- non and his workers will be realized when one stops to think that the com- mittees were organized in the midst of the Easter rush and that the drive closed the night before Mothers' day. Could there ever be a more difficult time to take florists away from their business? It is reported that J. B. Deamud is in a sanitarium at Traverse


. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 92 The Florists^ Review Mat IB, 1910. PEONIES THE SEASON IS OPEN WE ALWAYS ARE HEADQUARTERS JOSEPH FOERSTER CO. (Wholesale Dealers in Cut Flowers 160 North Wabash Avenue CHICAGO urea. The credit to be given Mr. Bohan- non and his workers will be realized when one stops to think that the com- mittees were organized in the midst of the Easter rush and that the drive closed the night before Mothers' day. Could there ever be a more difficult time to take florists away from their business? It is reported that J. B. Deamud is in a sanitarium at Traverse City, Mich. Frank M. Johnson and Henry Niebuhr, of the A. L. Eandall Co., left May 12 for a trip to New York. Paul Klingsporn says last week's sales of the Chicago Flower Growers' Associa- tion were considerably more than dou- ble those of the same week last year. John Ziska was 35 years of age May 13. Not content with Jiaving reliable rep- resentation in Japan and having bought and paid for a large quantity of lily bulbs in advance of the digging, A. Mil- ler has started for Japan to look over the situation there. The American Bulb Co. believes there will be a great scram- ble for this year's small crop of bulbs and intends to be in on the ground floor. Mr. Miller left Chicago May 10 and will sail May 20 from San Francisco, on the Korea Mam, for Yokohama. He ex- pects to be away for two or three months. George A. Kuhl, of Pekin, 111., who has been on the Pacific coast for several months, is back at the Presbyterian hospital, but he is improving steadily and hopes soon to be able to go home and resume active business. John Poehlmann, of Poehlmann Bros. Co., left May 12 on a two weeks' busi- ness trip through the south. A. G. Pruyser, of the Michigan Bulb Farm, who has made his home here for some time, has removed to Benton Har- bor, to be at the scene of active opera-. tions. At Crystal Lake Frank Schramm has given one-fourth his s^ace to Bose Premier. Five thousand plants have


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1912