. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 974 The American Florist. June i6, The Seed Trade. ] American Seed Trade Association, W. H. Grenell, Pierrepont Manor, N Y., Pms.; h. L. May, St. Paul, Minn., First Vice-Pres.; C. E. Kendell, Cleveland, O , .Seo'y and Treas. Twenty-fourth annual convention at Toledo, O., June 28-28, 1906. V^isiTED New York: Carl Cropp, of Vaughan's Seed Store, Chicago. New York.—Stumpp & Walters have given up their Thirty-fourth street store. Red Top seed reports from the center of southern Illinois indicate improve- ment by r


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 974 The American Florist. June i6, The Seed Trade. ] American Seed Trade Association, W. H. Grenell, Pierrepont Manor, N Y., Pms.; h. L. May, St. Paul, Minn., First Vice-Pres.; C. E. Kendell, Cleveland, O , .Seo'y and Treas. Twenty-fourth annual convention at Toledo, O., June 28-28, 1906. V^isiTED New York: Carl Cropp, of Vaughan's Seed Store, Chicago. New York.—Stumpp & Walters have given up their Thirty-fourth street store. Red Top seed reports from the center of southern Illinois indicate improve- ment by recent rains. New York.—B. Suzuki, of the Yoko- hama Nursery Co., arrived from his European trip June 6, and is now pre- paring to return to Japan. Some good information may be found in the "Preparation of Vegetables for the Table," by Maria Parloa, a recent bul- letin of the Department of Agriculture. S.\NTA Clara, Cal.—C. C. Morse & Co. report that, while the onion seed crop shows some blight in the stalks, other crops are looking very well, sweet peas having especially improved with the recent rain. At a meeting of the Wholesale Seeds- men's League, held in New York, June 13, there were present Messrs. Brug- gerhof, Burpee, Willard, Wood, Don and Landreth. Only routine business was transacted and the president and three retiring directors were re-elected. Deposit, N. Y.—C. H. Putnam, of C. M. Putnam & Sons, has purchased a large interest in the seed business of J. J. Bell, and about July i the stock will be moved from the present location on Dean street to the block occupied by the dry goods store of C. M. Putnam & Sons. Kentucky growers report that the rains of the last week of May helped grass seeds and onion sets to some ex- tent. The latter, however, have not come up very well and are likely to make rather large sets. Of the grasses, blue grass is thought to have suffered most. Orchard grass is likely to be a fair crop and prices reasonable.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea