.'.• > . • • .' ::■ >.,•■.•, ■■T.- —n'-fi .f"^'.- J.IJVj rr,;- 



30 



The Florists^ Review 



April 7, 1921 



;'t'A j:\. 





i^X<: 



■ BuDLONG's Blue 



,**i? *;•>...• *• 9- 



BBQN 



I 



TRY OUR VALLEY FOR YOUR WEDDING WORK 



ONCE TRIED YOU WILL USE NO OTHER 



RUSSELL 



COLUMBIA 



PREMIER 



MILADY 



HEARST 



OPHELIA 



Elxcellent Roses 



SUNBURST 



BUTTERFLY 



DOUBLE WHITE KILLARNEY 



CRUSADER 



CARNATIONS 



White, Light Pink, 

 Deep Plnlc, Bed 



GOOD CROP 



Including the finest Mrs. C. W. Ward on this market, bar none 



Jonquils^ Tulips^ Darwins^ Freesia 



Sweet Peas, Daisies, Calendulas, Valley, 

 Gladioli, Easter Lilies, Callas, Pansies 



and all other seasonable Cut Flowers. 



Ferns, Adiantum, Mexican Ivy, Plumosus, Sprens^eri 



QUALITY 



SPEAKS 



LOUDER 



THAN 



PRICES 



II jH wut (Md itick ud tMd tieatRent, biy il Cluci(e*i Rut ip-ti-date ud Wtt-licated Wktlenle Cit Fliwer Htiie 



J. a. BUDLONG CO. 



WHOLESALE CUT FLOWERS AND GREENS 



Roses; Valley and Carnations our Specialties 



184-186 North Wabash Ave. 

 CHICAGO 



Wl ARI CLOSKD AUL DAY SUNDAY 



SHIPPING ORDERS GIVEN CAREFUL ATTENTION 



PRICES 



AS 



LOW 



AS 



OTHERS 



We arc in constaat toHch with muM conditions and when a dedine taites place you can rdy apon orders seal us reccivias such benefit 



catching the best market, suffered se- 

 verely because of the falling prices. 



Boses rarely have been finer than 

 they were last week, or than they arc 

 this week. Weather conditions have 

 been ideal for the production of a big 

 spring crop of splendid quality and bet- 

 ter values never were offered. If you 



ask a grower or wholesaler he will tell 

 you that business has been "punk," or 

 "bum," or "rotten," or that there has 

 been no business, which leads to the 

 question as to what has become of the 

 stock? Of course average prices were 

 extremely low, but some portion of the 

 public must have bought a good many 



roses in the last ten days, as the re- 

 tailers carried away huge quantities. 



Nearly all other flowers were increas- 

 ingly abundant last week, but roses sa 

 dominated the market that other stock 

 was eclipsed and suffered accordingly. 

 Bulbous flowers perhaps furnish an ex- 

 ception. The early tulips were nearly 



