. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 662 The American Florist. Oct. 5, The Nursery Trade I American Association of Nurserymen. Thomas B. Meehan. Dresher. Pa., Presi dent: J. B. PilkinBton. Portland. Vice- President; Jolin Hall. Rochester, N. Sec'y. Thirty-eighth annual convention to be held at Portland. Ore., June, 1913. AccOBDiNG to a decision of the Board of General Appraisers, evergreen seed- lings are to be admitted free of duty and not assessed as nursery stock. THE Agricultural Bureau (of Mex- ico) has extended for two months the time
. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 662 The American Florist. Oct. 5, The Nursery Trade I American Association of Nurserymen. Thomas B. Meehan. Dresher. Pa., Presi dent: J. B. PilkinBton. Portland. Vice- President; Jolin Hall. Rochester, N. Sec'y. Thirty-eighth annual convention to be held at Portland. Ore., June, 1913. AccOBDiNG to a decision of the Board of General Appraisers, evergreen seed- lings are to be admitted free of duty and not assessed as nursery stock. THE Agricultural Bureau (of Mex- ico) has extended for two months the time in which growers can make ap- plication for fruit trees which will be imported from the United States, France, and Japan, and sold at half price.—Daily Consular and Trade Re- ports. Acting on the protest of H. Bayers- dorfer & Co. of Philadelphia, Pa., the Board of General Appraisers on August 9 held that pieces of branches of trees tied in bundles, assessed as unenu- merated manufactured articles under paragraph 4S0, tariff act of 1909, should be free of duty as vegetable sub- stances, crude or unmanufactured. Declaring that the white pine blis- ter rust, articles on which have ap- peared in recent issues of our paper, exists in Great Britain, France, Bel- gium, Holland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Russia, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy, the Depart- ment of Agriculture has, under author- ity conferred by the recent "Plant Quarantine Act," prohibited the impor- tation of the following species from those countries until further notice: white pine (Pinus stroubus D.), west- ern white pine (Pinus monticola Dougl.), sugar pine (Pinus lamberti- ana Dougl.), and stone or cembrian pine fPinus cembra L.). WANTED. 10,000 Al Amoor River Privet Cuttings. Audreylea Nursery, LOMBARD, ILL. First-Class Fruit Trees. Propagatetl froiii selected bearing trees of merit. Grown in the Genesee Valley. No scale. SAMUEL FRAZER, Box 0, GENESEO, N. Y. I^w, on Canina, extra strong,
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea