. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 56 The Florists^ Review July 4, 1912. PRIMULA ^ Oh^ TTnrlTaled for bIec of flower, pnrttr of color and hl(heat deyelopment. They represent the beat ?peclaUste hare so far produced. Seeds and plants. J. L. SCHILLER, Toledo, O. Mention The Review when yon write. mw CBOP Dsparagus lEDiimosus BShnus Wlaeonstn Grcenheiu* Grown Seed Not to be compared with the inferior California and Florida outdoor rrown seed. 1000 aeedi. $: 6000. $; G. H. HUNKL C0.« Seednei, Nilwiikee. Wl Mention The Rerlcw when yon write. former president has been


. Florists' review [microform]. Floriculture. 56 The Florists^ Review July 4, 1912. PRIMULA ^ Oh^ TTnrlTaled for bIec of flower, pnrttr of color and hl(heat deyelopment. They represent the beat ?peclaUste hare so far produced. Seeds and plants. J. L. SCHILLER, Toledo, O. Mention The Review when yon write. mw CBOP Dsparagus lEDiimosus BShnus Wlaeonstn Grcenheiu* Grown Seed Not to be compared with the inferior California and Florida outdoor rrown seed. 1000 aeedi. $: 6000. $; G. H. HUNKL C0.« Seednei, Nilwiikee. Wl Mention The Rerlcw when yon write. former president has been brought back to the chair: Albert McCullough was elected president at Saratoga in 1890 and again at Chicago in 1900. The location of the next convention rests with the executive committee and will be decided at the annual meeting of that body in January, 1913. There were nearly a dozen invitations, mostly from convention-getting bodies. As President-elect Page relieved President L. H. Vaughan the outgoing official was presented with a splendid mahogany clock with a suitable inscrip- tion, as an evidence of the high regard in which he is held by the members and as a memento of his presidency. Fifteen new members elected at one convention sets a new record for recent years. Thirteen whose names were given in The Review last week were voted in the first day, and later W. E. Marshall & Co., of New York, and O. S. Jones Seed Co., of Sioux Falls, were elected. The paper of Lester L. Morse, on the subject of costs of doing business in the seed trade, brought out the liveliest dis- cussion of the meeting. While a good many had something to say, it was noticed that individuals showed an in- clination to go into executive session on the actual facts—those who know what it is costing them to grow a bushel of peas, for instance, or to sell a bushel of peas, do not manifest any great haste to tell anybody else. The overhead ex- penses are important and interesting, but better to lis


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