. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 1182 The American Florist. Dec. 25> \ Ainerlofta Aasoctallon of Nuraerymen. Stannard. Ottawa. Kans., President; W. , Louisiana. Mo., Vice-President; Jotin Hall. Rochester. N. Sec'y. Thirty-fifth annual convention to be held at Denver. June 8-10. 1910. The woodchuck or ground hog is re- ported as doing much damage to or- chard trees in Pennsylvania, and car- bon-bisulphide is recommended as a means of destruction, pushing rags with a teaspoonful of this chemical poured on them into the bur
. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 1182 The American Florist. Dec. 25> \ Ainerlofta Aasoctallon of Nuraerymen. Stannard. Ottawa. Kans., President; W. , Louisiana. Mo., Vice-President; Jotin Hall. Rochester. N. Sec'y. Thirty-fifth annual convention to be held at Denver. June 8-10. 1910. The woodchuck or ground hog is re- ported as doing much damage to or- chard trees in Pennsylvania, and car- bon-bisulphide is recommended as a means of destruction, pushing rags with a teaspoonful of this chemical poured on them into the burrows. The 1910 meeting of the American Peony Society will be held June next at Horticultural Hall, Boston, Mass. The exhibition will be held in con- nection with the regular peony show of the Massachusetts Horticultural So- ciety; the exact date will be announced later. Muskogee, Okla.—Chas. A. Butter- field, formerly of Kansas City, and Wm. F. Manlove, recently a resident of Cleveland, O., have formed a part- nership under the firm name of But- terfield & Manlove, with offices in the postoffice building. They will devote themselves to general landscape archi- tecture and landscape engineering. The firm will make a specialty of laying out parks, boulevards, private grounds and city additions, and will not confine their work to any one limited field. Hardy Vines and Trailins: Plants. The demand for vines hardy enough to stand the winter and make a good showing during the summer is con- stantly growing. Too many houses, bungalows and cottages in suburban towns and in country districts, small homes of working men and even the more pretentious homes of the wealthy are built on lines the reverse of beautiful and it becomes necessary to do something to soften the hard angles or break up the flatness that often prevails and here the hardy vines fit in. But it is not enough to plant the vines in the ordinary soil, often as the builder leaves it, and pay no attention to providing
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea