. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. igoT. The American Florist. 697 Fleischman was stimulating trade on State street by offeringbargainsales last Saturday. He had his window full of boxes at $1 each, most of them contain- ing a dozen roses, six carnations, a bunch of violets and some adiantum. No one could dispute that such a package was worth the money. Miss Clara Amling and Charles Belling were married at Oak Park last Saturday evening. The bride is a sister of E. C. Amling and of Albert F. Amling, the May wood grower. She is the last of a family


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. igoT. The American Florist. 697 Fleischman was stimulating trade on State street by offeringbargainsales last Saturday. He had his window full of boxes at $1 each, most of them contain- ing a dozen roses, six carnations, a bunch of violets and some adiantum. No one could dispute that such a package was worth the money. Miss Clara Amling and Charles Belling were married at Oak Park last Saturday evening. The bride is a sister of E. C. Amling and of Albert F. Amling, the May wood grower. She is the last of a family of nine children who have been married at the family residence at Oak Park. Wietor Brothers are cutting a few Prosperity carnation and report that they are selling them at higher prices than ever before obtained for carnations in this market. They say that their only fault with the variety is that it seems to be a shy bloomer. E C. Amling advises growers to market their white flowers, particularly carna- tions, fiom day to day as they are ready next week instead of trying to hold part of them back for Christmas. He says the inquiries for Cdristmas are largely for colored material. Joseph Whipple, who has had charge of D. E. Richardson's place at Riverside, left Wednesday night for Santa Barbara, Cal,, to begin the work of improving a thirty acre place which Mr. Richardson recently bought there as a winter home. There was one pleasant day this vreek, Wednesday, which gave renewed hope of good Christmas crops, but Friday was as dirty a day as the season usually affords, and the weather man perdicts zero cold following the snow. Jos. Klimmer, while crossing the rail- road track at Western Springs last week, tripped on a signal wire and dislocated his shoulder. He is now progressing favorably. George Reinberg reports something already doing in the cutting line and expects business in this department to boom as soon as the holiday rush is over. Albert F. Amling, at Maywood, has foun


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea