. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 870 The American Florist. July /}., The pEEt) TRaEiE. AMERICAN SEED TRADE ASSOCIATION. S. F. Willard, Pres ; J. Charles McCullough, First Vice-Pres.; C. E. Kendel, Cleveland, 0., Sec'y and Treas. Twenty-eecond annual convention St. Louis, Mo., June, 1904. Visited New York: J. H. Tilton, Cleveland, Ohio; L. H. Archias, Sedalia, Mo. The New York San of June 22 prints a bitter criticism of the government seed :shop. Philadelphia, Pa.—G. ,C. Watson has moved, his new address being Juniper and Locust streets. Carl Crop


. The American florist : a weekly journal for the trade. Floriculture; Florists. 870 The American Florist. July /}., The pEEt) TRaEiE. AMERICAN SEED TRADE ASSOCIATION. S. F. Willard, Pres ; J. Charles McCullough, First Vice-Pres.; C. E. Kendel, Cleveland, 0., Sec'y and Treas. Twenty-eecond annual convention St. Louis, Mo., June, 1904. Visited New York: J. H. Tilton, Cleveland, Ohio; L. H. Archias, Sedalia, Mo. The New York San of June 22 prints a bitter criticism of the government seed :shop. Philadelphia, Pa.—G. ,C. Watson has moved, his new address being Juniper and Locust streets. Carl Cropp, of Vaughan's Seed Store, ?Chicago, sailed on the S. S. Statendam, with family, for Rotterdam July 1. Beginning July 1 the weight ot mer- chantable matter permissible in the par- 'cels post mail to Germany will be reduced Ifr-om eleven pounds to four pounds six ounces. Canners' Outlook. E. P. Sills, of the J. K. Armsby Com- pany, is reported to have made the fol- lowing comments early in the week with regard to crop conditions: Conn., in 1851, and is therefore in his fifty-second year. Mr. Willard has always lived in his native town and is president of Comstock, Ferre & Com- pany, with which company he has been connected since 1871, over thirty years. During the first years of his service he drove the old-time seed wagon, distrib- uting commission seed boxes through the states of New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine. Mr. Willard attended the first meeting of the association at New York in 1883 and has attended most conventions since. He has served as secretary and treasurer of the association since 1897. He was a member of the Connecticut general assembly in 1901 and of the con- stitutional convention of 1902. Mr. Willard enjoys a wide acquaintance among the seedsmen and growers ol America and the association has acted wisely in choosing him for its head. Secretary Kendel. C. B. Kendel, elected secretary-treasurer ol the American Seed Trade Association, at t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyea