. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 1114 The American Florist. July 2, ?* The Nursery Trade American Aasoclatlon of Narserymen. , Louisiana. Mo., President: , Shenandoah, Vice-Presi- dent: John Hall. Rochester. N. Se>c'y. Thirty-sixth annual convention to beheld at St. Louis. Mo-. June, I'Ul. The eighteenth national irrigation congress meets at Pueblo, Colo., Sep- tember 26-30. 1910. VISITED Chicago: Chas. J. Maloy, of Ellwanger & Barry, Rochester. N. Y., returning from the Pacific coast. The Mac Rorie Maclaren Co.,


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 1114 The American Florist. July 2, ?* The Nursery Trade American Aasoclatlon of Narserymen. , Louisiana. Mo., President: , Shenandoah, Vice-Presi- dent: John Hall. Rochester. N. Se>c'y. Thirty-sixth annual convention to beheld at St. Louis. Mo-. June, I'Ul. The eighteenth national irrigation congress meets at Pueblo, Colo., Sep- tember 26-30. 1910. VISITED Chicago: Chas. J. Maloy, of Ellwanger & Barry, Rochester. N. Y., returning from the Pacific coast. The Mac Rorie Maclaren Co., San Francisco, has been awarded the con- tract for laying out San Carlos park. Over 600 acres are included. Two million fruit trees, occupying between and 30,000 acres, most- ly irrigated land, are being planted in the various districts of eastern Wash- ington and Oregon, Idaho and western Montana. , Va.—The Arrowfleld Nursery Co. has been incorporated with capital stock of $2,500 to $25,000 to do a general florist business. W. N. Roper is president, Edith M. Hutt vice-president and W. N. Hutt secre- tary-treasurer. W. J. Dean, superintendent of the Aboretum, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London, England, expects to visit the Arnold Aboretum. Boston, Mass., this season and will doubtless call at other establishments of like interest during his stay in this coun- try. The second largest apple orchard in Kansas, late the property of Well- house, comprising 800 acres with 000 trees has been abandoned for this crop, burned over and will be tried for other crops. Mr. Wellhouse said the orchard was never satisfactory, the subsoil not being suitable. The business and nursery of the Tyler Xursery Co., Kimberly, Idaho, has been sold to a company composed of John Hardin, John Ken- ning, Wm. Durkee and C. E. Wright, ?who are reorganizing the business as a stock company, to be known as the Kimberly Xursery and Orchard Co. Batxes Lake. B. C.—Wm. William- son


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea