54 



The Florists^ Review 



May 25, 1922 



GuUett's Flowers 



NO ADVANCE IN PRICES FOR MEMORIAL DAT 



PREMIER 



COLUMBIA 



MILADY 



BUTTERFLY 



OPHELIA 



WHITE KILLARNEY 



ROSES 



Per 100 



Select $15.00 to $18.00 



15.00 



12.00 



10.00 



8.00 



Firsts 12.00 to 



Seconds 10.00 to 



Thirds 8.00 to 



Short 6.00 to 



Boses, our selection, good, short stem, $4.00 to $5.00 per ICO 



CARNATIONS 



Per 100 



Select $6.00 to $8.00 



Good 5.00 



Split, all colors 3.00 



MISCELLANEOUS STOCK 



Per 100 



PEONIES $4.00, $() 00 and $8.00 



SWEET PEAS l.UO to 2.00 



EASTER LILIES 15,00 



GLADIOLI 12.60 



CALLAS 10.00 to 12.00 



DAISIES 1.50 



CALENDULAS 2.00 to 3.00 



DECORATIVE GREENS 



FERNS per 1000, $4.50 



ASPARAGUS PLUMOSUS per 100. 4.00 



ASPARAGUS SPRENGERI per ICO. 3.00 



ASPARAGUS SPRENGERI, select 4.00 



SMILAX per dozen, 3.00 



Open 7 a. m. to 6 p. m., standard time. 

 Open all day Sunday, May 28th, and Decoration Day. 



GULLETT & SONS, Uncoln, Illinois 



It Pays to Order Cut Flowers Direct of the Grower 



^ aM flowers ''at their best" m^ From Grower Direct ^m 



WEIIAND-ltlSCII Cot 



fd!li!te. H0WER CROWERS chcagc 



ding season. L.arge quantities of bed- 

 ding stock are in evidence and the out- 

 door staff is busy filling window boxes 

 throughout the Jackson Park high- 

 lands. 



R. H. Fraket, formerly with the J. C. 

 Rennison Co., at Sioux City, la., as 

 store man, is in Chicago and plans to 

 locate here. 



George J. Ball expects to leave next 

 week for the Pacific coast, where he 

 will spend two weeks inspecting the 

 extensive acreages of sweet peas grown 

 for seed in California. He will have a 

 look at his giant calendulas, which are 

 being grown for seed for him by the 

 L. D. Waller Seed Co., at Guadaloupe, 

 Cal. 



F. S. Webb returned last week from 

 Excelsior Springs, Mo., where he has 

 been recuperating for several weeks, 

 and is leaving in a few days for Balti- 

 more, where he will take radium treat- 

 ment. 



The Carl W. Beu Floral Co. is the 

 name under which the Frank Beu busi- 

 ness now is conducted at 4445 North 

 Crawford avenue. 



The Briggs Floral Co., which closed 



JASMINES 



We have to offer a fair, medium lale crop, and ask that your orders for 

 Memorial Day be for shipment as late as possible. 



Perioo 



B Grade, 4 to 8 inches $1.00 



A Grade, 8 to 12 inches 1.50 



X Grade, 12 to 18 inches 2.00 



Per lOro 



$ 9.00 

 12.00 

 18.00 



Prompt, careful attention to your order and shipment. 



CARLISLE & SON, Growers, ALVIN, TEXAS 



its store at 228 West Madison street 

 May 1, is outfitting its new pL-ice at 

 1505 East Fift.y-third street and expects 

 to open for business about Memorial 

 day. 



During the week preceding Mothers' 

 day the Premier Rose Gardens out l(i7,- 

 000 blooms for market, against 56,000 

 in the siinie week a year ago. 



Poehlmann Bros. Co. has announced 

 that its wholesale cut flower store will 



he open continuously, night and day, 

 from the morning of May 26 to noon of 

 May 30. 



The obituary column this week con- 

 tiiins record of the passing of four 

 well known Chicagoans. 



The big Lord & Burnham greenhouse, 

 4(1x500, just built for Joseph Kohout, 

 at Libertyville, is now being planted, 

 largely with Premier. 



The jilants of Columbia purchased in 



