. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. IQIO. The American Florist. 12S7 FOREST TREE Seedlings We Ha\ c- Millions nf Seeilliiigs BLACK LOCUST, CATALPA SPECIOSA. Kcd Bud. Swet-t Gum, Poplar. Ash. Elm and various other serdlings at very low prir.'s, A larer stock of transplantid 2 to (. It. Hama- mells Vlrginlana; shrub. >. in. to3 fi Spirea Van Houttel, 2 to2v^ ft. Fine Stock. Send for Ivist. FOREST NURSERY & SEED CO. McMinnville, Tenn. LARGE TREES OAKS and NfAPLfS Pines and Hemlocka ANDORRA NURSERIES. Wm. Warner Har


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. IQIO. The American Florist. 12S7 FOREST TREE Seedlings We Ha\ c- Millions nf Seeilliiigs BLACK LOCUST, CATALPA SPECIOSA. Kcd Bud. Swet-t Gum, Poplar. Ash. Elm and various other serdlings at very low prir.'s, A larer stock of transplantid 2 to (. It. Hama- mells Vlrginlana; shrub. >. in. to3 fi Spirea Van Houttel, 2 to2v^ ft. Fine Stock. Send for Ivist. FOREST NURSERY & SEED CO. McMinnville, Tenn. LARGE TREES OAKS and NfAPLfS Pines and Hemlocka ANDORRA NURSERIES. Wm. Warner Harper. Prop. Cbestnnt HUl, PHILA., PA. semi-tropical fruit plants imported for propagation. From the testimony we gather that Citrus trifoliata is a kind of wild orange tree, which is .grown from the seed and which produces a small inedible orange; that the plants are sometimes used for hedges; but the principal purpose for which they are imported is to use as a stock upon which to graft an edible variety of orange. Such seedlings are described in the Japanese catalogue in evidence as 'useful hedge plants with thorny branches, much valued as stock for grafting orange families.' We think these plants should be considered of a semi-tropical nature. They are im- ported for growth and cultivation in the southern part of Texas. The board in. G. 4255 (T. D. 20009) held seed- ling orange trees of the Mandarin variety, imported for cultivation in Louisiana, to be free of duty under paragraph 560 as semi-tropical fruit plants. The Citrus trifoliata plants are shown by the testimony to be fruit plants, though their natural fruit is not considered edible; but as the plants are used as stocks upon which to graft the edible varieties of oranges, and grafting is merely one method of propagating plants, we are of the opinion that they come within the terms of paragraph 560, and are entitled to free entry ; Wood-Rottlng Fungi. While studying wood-rotting fungi, the author ha


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea