. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. G2G The American Florist. Nov. 22^ The ^eeei T^aEiB. AMERICAN SEED TRADE ASSOCIATION. Walter P. Stokes, Pres.; C. N. Page. First Vice-Pres.; S. F. Willabd, Wethersfleld. Coun., Sec'y and Treas. Visited Boston: J. B. Kidd, of Seed Co., San Francisco. Alaska peas are being offered rattier freely at about $ per bushel. Visited Chicago: Max Wilhelmi, of F. Barteldes & Co., Lawrence, Kans.; Henr3' Nungesser, New York; Jesse E. Northrup, Minneapolis. Alex. Rodgers, until lately with S. G. Courteen, Milwa


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. G2G The American Florist. Nov. 22^ The ^eeei T^aEiB. AMERICAN SEED TRADE ASSOCIATION. Walter P. Stokes, Pres.; C. N. Page. First Vice-Pres.; S. F. Willabd, Wethersfleld. Coun., Sec'y and Treas. Visited Boston: J. B. Kidd, of Seed Co., San Francisco. Alaska peas are being offered rattier freely at about $ per bushel. Visited Chicago: Max Wilhelmi, of F. Barteldes & Co., Lawrence, Kans.; Henr3' Nungesser, New York; Jesse E. Northrup, Minneapolis. Alex. Rodgers, until lately with S. G. Courteen, Milwaukee, is now with J. Charles McCullough, Cincinnati. Louis Valere Lefebvre, the dean of French seedsmen, died October 17. For details of his career see page 621. Vaughan's Seed Store, Chicago, received a carload of Japanese lily bulbs this week by way of San F'rancisco. Visited St. Paul:—C. K. Kimberh-, Lester Morse and W. J. Fosgate, of California, and Henrv Nungesser, of New York. Queens, N. Y.—V. H. Hallock was thrown irom his buggy in a runaway while driving November 13, breaking his collar bone. He is reported doing well. Lester L. Morse, of Santa Clara, Calif, after short trips to Rockford, Mil- waukee, Minneapolis and St. Paul, left Chicago for the east November 18. He will return to California by the southern route in about a month. Waterloo, Neb.—One of our corre- spondents at this point reports that the wet weather has caused delay in drying the corn and if continued may damage some crops seriously. He considers late corn, both field and sweet varieties, in a precarious condition. The continued warm, mild weather and lack of frosts is unfavorable for ripening holly foliage into first-class shipping condition. Freezing weather is desirable as holly foliage that has not been sharply frosted is very likely to heat and discolor when packed closely incases. The Seed Situation. Northrup, King & Company, of Minne- apolis, write their customers under date of Novembe


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea