. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 164 The American Florist. Aug. 20, O'Mara of the silver tongue was there to say, as usual, a word for the men be- hind the guns. Wm. R. Smith will visit Scotland next year. A party of Chicago scientists discovered some enormous footprints in an inner court section of the St. Nicholas hotel site. Prot. Phil Foley, whose travels have given his opinions weight in track Strange Foot Prints, (Reduced 1000 times ) making believes these relics indicate the presence of the genus homo probably of the wooden age, at any rat

. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 164 The American Florist. Aug. 20, O'Mara of the silver tongue was there to say, as usual, a word for the men be- hind the guns. Wm. R. Smith will visit Scotland next year. A party of Chicago scientists discovered some enormous footprints in an inner court section of the St. Nicholas hotel site. Prot. Phil Foley, whose travels have given his opinions weight in track Strange Foot Prints, (Reduced 1000 times ) making believes these relics indicate the presence of the genus homo probably of the wooden age, at any rat Stock Photo
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. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 164 The American Florist. Aug. 20, O'Mara of the silver tongue was there to say, as usual, a word for the men be- hind the guns. Wm. R. Smith will visit Scotland next year. A party of Chicago scientists discovered some enormous footprints in an inner court section of the St. Nicholas hotel site. Prot. Phil Foley, whose travels have given his opinions weight in track Strange Foot Prints, (Reduced 1000 times ) making believes these relics indicate the presence of the genus homo probably of the wooden age, at any rate he is confi- dent that it walked on its hind legs and may have been related to the amphibians. Coming Florists at Convention. The florists of the future were well represented at the convention in the per- sons of Chas. D. Ball, Jr., Philadelphia; Ralph Cushman, Svlvania, O.; Geo. Wil- lis, Danville, 111.; J. D. Imley, Jr., and brother, Zanesville, O.; Clarence Peter- son, Cincinnati, O.; Harry Pillsbury and Walter Pillsbury, Galesburg, 111.; C. A. Warnecke, Jr., Detroit, Mich.; Paul O'Ouinn, Raleigh, N. C.;J. W. Wilson, Jr., Western Springs, 111.; Ray Wilcox, Council Bluffs, la.; Norman Sullivan, Detroit, Mich.; — Schroeter, Detroit, Mich.; — Gaethje, Rock Island, 111.; T. S. Wilson, Jr., Western Springs, 111.; Ned Washburn, Chicago. Development of American Type of Roses. BY E. G. HILL, RICHMOND, IND. By the question implied in the topic assigned me by the executive com- mittee of this society, we may infer that there is need of largely supple- menting our present list of roses as grown in this country; nothing can be truer than that the general rose grower feels this need, and it is to the careful hybridist, and the persevering raiser of seedling roses, suited to our climate that we must look for this supplemental list. We need roses that will bloom in our grounds and gardens during the summer and autumn; climatic conditions vary so greatly in our country that it would s