Annual Report of the New Jersey State Agricultural Experiment Station and the ... Annual Report of the New Jersey Agricultural College Experiment Station ..., Volume 17 |
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Page xi
... Blight ........ 410 An Ampelopsis Blight .. 410 The Chestnut Blight 412 The Blight of the Linden ........ 413 Experiments with Peach Root Galls ........ 413 Siftings from Other Sources .......... 415 Soil Irrigation .......... 415 Soil ...
... Blight ........ 410 An Ampelopsis Blight .. 410 The Chestnut Blight 412 The Blight of the Linden ........ 413 Experiments with Peach Root Galls ........ 413 Siftings from Other Sources .......... 415 Soil Irrigation .......... 415 Soil ...
Page 12
... blight and anthracnose upon the watered beans . The same is true of the tomatoes and egg - plants . A study of different fungicides has been made with all of the crops before mentioned , and also upon beets and several ornamental plants ...
... blight and anthracnose upon the watered beans . The same is true of the tomatoes and egg - plants . A study of different fungicides has been made with all of the crops before mentioned , and also upon beets and several ornamental plants ...
Page 175
... blight attacked the white variety soon after they came up and stopped their growth , so they were not worth cutting . Cost of cutting and hauling same as for first acre of cow peas . Yield and Cost of Soja Beans ( Green Variety ) . acre ...
... blight attacked the white variety soon after they came up and stopped their growth , so they were not worth cutting . Cost of cutting and hauling same as for first acre of cow peas . Yield and Cost of Soja Beans ( Green Variety ) . acre ...
Page 298
... blight began to be manifest at about the time the crop was harvested , and all the belts seemed to be infested in about the same degree . By June 1st , or about five weeks after the turnips were sown , the presence of the root disease ...
... blight began to be manifest at about the time the crop was harvested , and all the belts seemed to be infested in about the same degree . By June 1st , or about five weeks after the turnips were sown , the presence of the root disease ...
Page 328
... blight . For the convenience of the reader the summary for the two previous seasons given in the report for last year is here reproduced in part . * Summary for the Past Two Years . The soaking in Bordeaux mixture of beans before sowing ...
... blight . For the convenience of the reader the summary for the two previous seasons given in the report for last year is here reproduced in part . * Summary for the Past Two Years . The soaking in Bordeaux mixture of beans before sowing ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant Acid and Potash Ammonia amount applied average beans beetles beets black scale Bone Phosphate Bordeaux brands Bridgeton Bulletin bushels California cent check belt Chilocorus club-root Corn corrosive sublimate cost cows crop cucumber disease Egg Harbor City Experiment Station farmers favorable feeding Fertilizers Furnishing Nitrogen foliage fruit fungicides fungus gallons germs Ground Bone H. I. Budd Hunterdon county inches increase infested injury insects irrigated belt irrigation Jersey Kainit lady-birds larvæ leaf blight lime Manure milk mixture Mount Holly mulched nitrate Nitrogen orchards parasites percentage Phosphoric Acid plant-food plants Plot potash-bordeaux Potato Manure pounds clean pounds marked pounds per acre present season rainfall Rhizobius ventralis roots rows samples San José scale scab Scabby scale insects seed Series soda-bordeaux soil Soluble Special Potato species specimens Station Number sub-irrigation sulphur Superphosphate Tag Tag Tag temperature tomatoes trees tuberculin tuberculosis tuberculous turnips unsprayed vines yield
Popular passages
Page xxi - June 30, 1002 ; that we have found the same well kept and classified as above, and that the receipts for the year from the treasurer of the United .States are shown to have been...
Page 468 - ... and dying timber of the bull pine is standing in the Black Hills Forest Reserve, South Dakota. The amount has been variously estimated, but will probably approach 600,000,000 feet. The death of the trees was caused by the pine-destroying beetle of the Black Hills, as shown by investigations conducted by the Division of Entomology of the United States Department of Agriculture.
Page xv - I beg leave to submit, on behalf of the Trustees of Rutgers College in New Jersey maintaining Rutgers Scientific School, the New Jersey State College for the benefit of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, the...
Page 429 - Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island...
Page xxi - Dr. To receipts fro-m the treasurer of the United States, as per appropriation for fiscal year ending June 30.
Page 118 - ... flask in which the original precipitation was made, add 25 cc. of distilled water and an excess of the standard sodium hydroxide solution. By using a long glass rod, the paper can be pulped and the yellow precipitate dissolved in a very few seconds. Wash off the rod and the sides of the flask and add a few drops of the phenolphthalein solution and titrate the excess of standard NaOH with the standard HNO3.
Page 427 - I am convinced that the electric light can be used to advantage in the forcing of some plants." In the fall of 1892 Professor Rane introduced the use of the incandescent light in place of the arc lamp, and his recent report with its illustrations from photographs of plants, etc., has features of interest to all who are interested in science, as well as the market gardener. He finds that "the incandescent electric light has a marked effect upon greenhouse plants...
Page 408 - ... natural decay, and to place them in manure heaps would be still worse. The only safe thing to do when a serious enemy like this is in the asparagus field is to burn the plants even to the last scrap that can be gathered up. Let this be done at once, for any delay means the breaking up of the brittle, rusty plants and a generous sowing of the spores upon the ground.
Page 32 - Fahrenheit; and that portion of phosphoric acid not soluble in either of the above-named fluids, shall each be determined separately; and the material from which the phosphoric acid is obtained shall also be stated ; a legible statement of such analysis shall accompany all packages or lots of over one hundred pounds sold, offered or exposed for sale.
Page 32 - That every commercial fertilizer which shall be offered for sale in this State shall be accompanied by an analysis, stating the percentage therein of ammonia, or its equivalent of nitrogen ; of potash, in any form or combination, soluble in distilled water; and of phosphoric acid in any form or combination; the portion of phosphoric acid soluble in distilled water; that portion soluble in a neutral solution of citrate of ammonia at a temperature not exceeding one hundred degrees Fahrenheit; and that...