JOLX 1, 1915. 



The Florists^ Review 



23 



EASTER LILIES 



7Sc per doz., w if ordered in lets of SO or mire, at the rite of $S.OO per 100 



SUMMER ROSES. We make a specialty 

 ^^^=^===^^^= of growin/;: roses best 

 adapted to hot weather, and recommend the 

 Rhea Reid, Ophelia, Sunbm-st, Russell and new 

 Beauties. 



CURRENT PRICE LIST 



AMKRICAN BKAUTIKB- 



Specials, extra long stems 



Extra long steins, seconds 



80-inch stems. 



18 to 24-inch stems. New Beauties ll.OO @ 



Shorter stems Per 100, 8.00 & 



RUSSKLL.- 



Extra long 



Oood me^iium 76 ^ 



Good short 50 



Per doz. 

 13.00 

 1.00 

 2.00 

 1.50 

 6.10 



1.50 



1.00 



.60 



OPHELIA, RHKA RKID, BULGARIK and 



8HAWTBR— Per 100 



Extra long $6.00 @ $8.00 



Medium 4.00 @ 6.00 



Short 3 . 00 



CKCILK BRUNNKR Der bunch, 25c 



FAMCT KA8TKR LILIES per doz., 7&c; per 100, $5.00 



TELLOW ROSES- 

 BUNBUR8T- 



■HILUNGDON and 



Per 100 



Long $6.00 @ 



Medium 4.00@ 



Short „' 



WHITE and PINK KILLARMEY and 

 RICHMUND- 



Long 



Medium 4.00@ 



Short 



CARNATIONS- 



Red, White and Pink; extra fancy 



Uly of the VaUay 3.00 @ 



Asparaarus Sprays and Spranserl 



Ferns, New Wis per 1000, $1.60 



Adlantum 



Gaiaz, bronze and green per 1000, |1,00 



$8.00 

 5.00 

 3.00 



6.00 

 5.00 

 3.00 



2.00 

 4.00 

 3.00 



1.00 



Roses in lots of 500 or more at the rate of $20.00 per 1000 



We grow all the stock we sell and wish to remind all buyers of the advantages of buying direct of the grower 



ALL OTHER SEASONABLE FLOWERS AT LOWEST MARKET PRICES 



No mail is delivered, except special delivery letters, by the Chicago postoffice 

 during June, July and August, from Saturday noon until Monday morning. 



Bassett & Washburn 



Offle* and Stor*, 



ISS N. WabMh Avann* 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



greenhouses: HINSDALE and GREGGS, ILL. 



Long Distanc* Phonaa 



C0ITRAL 1457; AUTO.. 47-314 



Mention The ReTlew when yon write. 



176 R.Micl\^eJ^ Ave. "^ CKice^^o 



Per 100 Per 100 



Valley $2.00 @ $4.00 Carnations $1 ,00 @ $.3.00 Beauties, doz $0.75 @ $3.00 



Peas 36 @ 1.50 Killarneys. piak and while. 2.00 @ 8.00 Cattleyas, doz 4.00 @ 5.00 



Peonies 4.00 @ 6.00 Easter Lilies 8.00 @ 12.00 



SAFKTT riRST— SEE US. 



Mrs. Mathilda Klingenmeyer were mar- 

 ried at Crown Point, Ind., June 28, 

 without notifying their friends. 



Fritz Demond, an employee of 

 Nicholas Meyers, at Evanston, was 

 drowned while swimming in the drain- 

 age canal June 27. 



The Prince d'Arenberg rose is sing- 

 ing its swan song in the greenhouses of 

 the Poehlmann Bros. Co., Morton 

 'irove. The objection urged is that it 

 is too single and opens too quickly to 

 make really good shipping stock. Had- 

 ley, on the contrary, is gaining favor 

 •'tt this establishment and the space 

 'levoted to it has been enlarged by half 

 ii house. Among the visitors to Morton 

 Orove last week were Philip J. Foley, 

 "f the Foley Greenhouse Mfg. Co.; 

 W. J. Keijme) and George Schuman, of 



Elmhurst; "William Currie, of Mil- 

 waukee; Roy F. Millis, of the Alpha 

 Floral Co., Kansas City, Mo., and 

 Samuel Pearce. 



Having an extra icebox on their 

 hands, and having formed an attach- 

 ment for it that precludes any desire 

 to ■ sell it, Sullivan Bros., 863 East 

 Sixty-third street, see only one way 

 out of the dilemma — that is, to open a 

 branch store. With this object in view, 

 they are busily scanning the likely 

 spots in Hyde Park. 



Frank M. Johnson and Edward Gal- 

 avan are again at their places in the 

 store of the A. L. Randall Co., after 

 an automobile trip to New York, Phila- 

 delphia and Washington with their 

 wives, during which they made a num- 

 ber of trade calls. They were gone 



twenty-two days and drove 2,500 miles 

 without the slightest mishap. 



W. A. Peterson, of the Peterson 

 Nursery, says he has cut more peonies 

 this year than ever before. What is 

 much more, he has made more money 

 out of them than ever before. 



Ernst Amling, at Maywood, has been 

 cutting a large crop of Mrs. Russell 

 with stems two to three feet long and 

 flowers large in proportion. They have 

 sold well when the price obtainable for 

 other roses is considered. 



Among the excursionists on the 

 Florists' Special train to San Fran- 

 cisco, leaving August 12, will be Miss 

 Marguerite K. McNulty, who will em- 

 ploy her annual vacation from duty 

 in Peter Reinberg's office to visit a 

 I sister on the Pacific coast. It is re- 



