Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting |
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Page 22
... soil taken from under his trees in April . In this I found the insect still in the grub stage in little earthen cells . I soon discovered that no matter how many times one disturbed the grubs , they would again burrow into the soil and ...
... soil taken from under his trees in April . In this I found the insect still in the grub stage in little earthen cells . I soon discovered that no matter how many times one disturbed the grubs , they would again burrow into the soil and ...
Page 28
... soils , and without the addition and incorporation of peat thereto . The following is the new experience , as related by Mr. Lewis : Last spring I purchased fifty small imported plants and resolved 28 WESTERN NEW YORK.
... soils , and without the addition and incorporation of peat thereto . The following is the new experience , as related by Mr. Lewis : Last spring I purchased fifty small imported plants and resolved 28 WESTERN NEW YORK.
Page 31
... soil suitable for the production of nearly all kinds of vegetables . There is also a large amount of money invested in glass structures for forcing lettuce , radishes , and cucumbers for the early markets . Some are at the present time ...
... soil suitable for the production of nearly all kinds of vegetables . There is also a large amount of money invested in glass structures for forcing lettuce , radishes , and cucumbers for the early markets . Some are at the present time ...
Page 34
... soil being remark- ably fertile , the land rolling and well wooded , it can readily be observed that a good many of the trees and shrubs found growing in the temperate regions of the globe may be reasonably expected to thrive in ...
... soil being remark- ably fertile , the land rolling and well wooded , it can readily be observed that a good many of the trees and shrubs found growing in the temperate regions of the globe may be reasonably expected to thrive in ...
Page 35
... soil and a wide feeding range . The tulip tree has the most dignified habit of any of our forest trees and requires special care in transplanting . Given favorable conditions it grows rapidly . The American beech , with its spreading ...
... soil and a wide feeding range . The tulip tree has the most dignified habit of any of our forest trees and requires special care in transplanting . Given favorable conditions it grows rapidly . The American beech , with its spreading ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant acres Agriculture Albert Wood annual appearance apple orchards apple trees ashes average Baldwin barrel Barry beautiful birds bloom Bordeaux mixture borer buds bushels canker worms Cayuga cent certificate cherries clover codling moth committee condition Cornell cultivation curculio destruction disease Ellwanger emulsion Experiment Station fact fertilizer flowers foliage fruit trees fruit-growers fungus garden Geneva grapes grower growing grown growth hardy hundred infested injury insect interest John kerosene large crop legislation Lockport ment moth nitrogen nursery stock nurserymen orchard ornamental Paris green peach Pear blight Penn Yan pest phosphoric acid plant-food plants plums potash pounds premises present Prof profitable pruning psyllas Ques question quince raspberries ripening Rochester San José scale scab shrubs SLINGERLAND small fruits soil South Byron spray spread spring tion treated untreated varieties vegetables vines Western New York WILLARD winter wood yellow York Horticultural Society
Popular passages
Page 60 - And I had done a hellish thing. And it would work 'em woe: For all averred. I had killed the bird That made the breeze to blow.
Page 129 - The carrying or transporting of any such freight, express, baggage, goods, or chattels from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia into another State or Territory or the District of Columbia...
Page 129 - ... be punished by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars or imprisonment not exceeding one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment...
Page 128 - That the Secretary of Agriculture be, and is hereby, authorized, at the expense of the owner, to place and retain in quarantine all neat cattle, sheep, and other ruminants, and all swine, imported into the United States, at such ports as he may designate for such purpose, and under such conditions as he may by regulation prescribe, respectively, for the several classes of animals above described...
Page 130 - That the sum of fifty thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated, out of any moneys in the Treasury of the United States not otherwise appropriated, to carry into effect the provisions of this act. SEC.
Page 129 - Territory, or the District of Columbia into any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or from the United States into any foreign country, or from any foreign country into the United States.
Page 129 - Columbia, or for any person, persons, or corporation, to deliver to any other person, persons, or corporation, or to the postal service of the United States, except for scientific purposes...
Page 127 - by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of Agriculture be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to collect and publish statistics of the quantity of leaf tobacco in all forms in the United States, in the possession of dealers, manufacturers, growers' cooperative associations, warehousemen, brokers, holders, or owners, other than the original growers of tobacco.
Page 128 - Any person who shall forge, counterfeit, or knowingly and wrongfully alter, deface, or destroy any of the marks, stamps, or other devices provided for in this section on any package of any such meats, or who shall forge, counterfeit...