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  2. Wisteria (catalog) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisteria_(catalog)

    Wisteria is an American-based retail company specializing in home and garden furnishings, clothing, jewelry, gifts as well as vintage and antique items from around the world. Privately owned by Andrew and Shannon Newsom, it began in 2000, placing ads in Veranda Magazine. In 2001, Wisteria sent out its first catalog.

  3. 10 Best Walgreens Items Dropping in Price Just in Time ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-best-walgreens-items-dropping...

    Walgreens shoppers pay the sale price of $10.49 throughout this summer. Each box contains 60 patches with instructions to apply for eight hours for pain relief. When we crunch the numbers, this ...

  4. Walgreens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walgreens

    Walgreens began in 1901, with a small food front store on the corner of Bowen and Cottage Grove Avenues in Chicago, owned by Dixon, Illinois native Charles R. Walgreen. [6] By 1913, Walgreens had grown to four stores on Chicago's South Side. It opened its fifth in 1915 and four more in 1916. By 1919, there were 20 stores in the chain.

  5. Sylvanian Families (1987 TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvanian_Families_(1987...

    In the Sylvanian world, he goes to the Founders' Day campout and hears a story about the first settlers of the Sylvanian Forest. Little Ms. Woodkeeper: 8-year-old Deborah wishes that she could be the next Woodkeeper and do something exciting. In the Sylvanian world, she helps destroy a makeshift dam that Packbat has built at the top of a waterfall.

  6. Charles Rudolph Walgreen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Rudolph_Walgreen

    Walgreens offered low-priced lunch counters, built its own ice cream factory, and introduced the malted milk shake in 1922. By 1927, Walgreen had established 110 stores. His son Charles Rudolph Walgreen Jr. (March 4, 1906 – February 10, 2007) and grandson Charles R. Walgreen III both shared his name and played prominent roles in the company ...

  7. Wisteria frutescens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisteria_frutescens

    Wisteria frutescens, commonly known as American wisteria, is a woody, deciduous, perennial climbing vine, one of various wisterias of the family Fabaceae.It is native to the wet forests and stream banks of the southeastern United States, with a range stretching from the states of Virginia to Texas (Northeast Texas Piney Woods) and extending southeast through Florida, also north to Iowa ...

  8. Wisteria brachybotrys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisteria_brachybotrys

    Wisteria brachybotrys, the silky wisteria, is a species of flowering plant in the pea family Fabaceae from Japan. Some older references believed it to be of garden origin. [ 1 ] It is certainly very widely cultivated in its native Japan, with the white flowered cultivars more widely grown than the pale violet cultivars .

  9. Wisterieae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisterieae

    The tribe was established in 1994 by X. Y. Zhu, [1] based on features of Wisteria pollen. [3] Most older genera that are now placed in Wisterieae were previously placed in the tribe Millettieae . As circumscribed in the 1980s, Millettieae was morphologically diverse and was later found to be polyphyletic .