This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
19905 | But since in other soils they are almost entirely absent, how shall they be introduced? |
17243 | Why? |
31237 | What is the result? |
33844 | How, then, may we best apply the nitrogen requirements of its early life? |
27117 | He wrote,"In the Twelve- daies[ before Christmas?] |
42305 | Where to? |
33679 | HOW ARE WEEDS INTRODUCED AND HOW ARE THEY SPREAD? |
33679 | Will it pay? |
34729 | Splendid results, is it not? |
18189 | 2 Shagbark hickory grafted in 1938(?) |
18189 | The question which naturally occurs is,"Why has n''t this been done with hickory nuts?" |
39779 | Starting with the question,"What is an Egg?" |
39779 | Will It Pay to Improve the Farm? |
19038 | What is its history? |
19038 | [ Sidenote:= Origin of the English Walnut=] But where did this walnut originate? |
19038 | _ What Luther Burbank has to say:_"When you plant another tree, why not plant the English Walnut? |
36872 | Ah, but you say, how about the time when there is not a single rose in sight? |
36872 | Who does not know its beautiful buds in their setting of mossy stems? |
39803 | Was there not an earlier empire whose leader had left visible tokens of his eclecticism? |
28594 | Who will try? |
37388 | _ Sind Bakterien die Ursache der Tabakfermentation?_"Centralbl. |
56162 | Brazil(? |
56162 | broad''; should''broad''|| be''long''? |
28065 | :_ Helen Harcourt_?) |
28065 | How may budded or grafted trees be distinguished from ordinary seedlings or from"doctored"seedling trees? |
28065 | What is to be done with them? |
28065 | What varieties shall I plant? |
32141 | Have any of the readers of GARDEN AND FOREST ever met with spontaneous hybrids? |
32141 | Is it best to thin out the growth or allow the trees to crowd and shade the feebler ones slowly to death? |
32141 | Then why not do so? |
28011 | Are such differences of practical importance? |
28011 | I also believe that it is as impossible for a man to answer offhand the question,"What is the best variety of tomato?" |
28011 | Will this be measured by the accuracy and completeness of their descriptions? |
28011 | as for a wise physician to answer the question,"What is the best medicine?" |
27862 | 125 Clark Street, CHICAGO, ILL. Do You Grow Flowers? |
27862 | ALBERT H. CLARK, BOX 117, CAMBRIDGE, MD Do You Grow Strawberries? |
27862 | Prize( Maule)? |
27862 | Snowstorm( Pearce)? |
37362 | = NARCISSUS=(_ Daffodil_).--What so charming in the spring- time as"a host of Golden Daffodils"? |
37362 | HOW DEEP SHOULD BULBS BE PLANTED? |
37362 | Whence then comes the bulb that is taken out of the soil when the flowering period is over? |
38051 | Cellulose film is used for repacked tomatoes 109 INTRODUCTION Why should there be a book on tomatoes? |
38051 | Failure to Set Fruit Why do tomatoes sometimes run to vine with failure to set fruit? |
38051 | The Tomato I THE TOMATO IS A GREAT FOOD AND CROP PLANT Vegetable, Fruit or Berry,--what is the tomato? |
38051 | Will the marketing conditions justify the extra cost of staking and pruning? |
47232 | Let him mark out his bed, dig the soil to the depth of eighteen inches? |
47232 | What has been their parentage? |
47232 | Whence have they sprung? |
45599 | And what does it all matter, anyway? |
45599 | Unusual punctuation and original spelling have been retained, receipe( recipe?) |
33464 | Are we growing our roses for exhibition, or at all events for a very few very perfect blooms? |
33464 | What would that great pioneer say to our Crimson Perpetuals of to- day? |
18913 | Is that tall plant a Lobelia? |
18913 | Of the usefulness of this flower in a cut state nothing whatever need be said-- who has not tried it? |
45978 | ''Is this indeed true, foster- father?'' |
45978 | = Winslow.=( Rip.?) |
45978 | Vin.?) |
22484 | And what is more worth while than to keep busy in the constant improvement and beautifying of one''s daily surroundings? |
22484 | CHAPTER VIII FLOWERING PLANTS The very important question--"What plants shall be grown in the house?" |
22484 | How are they to be converted into a small Garden of Eden, when all outdoors is chained in the silent desolation of drifted snow? |
22484 | What is the best kind of dirt to use? |
45946 | As for the benefit to the plants-- where will it come in? |
45946 | For are not the processes of germination and growth going on before their eyes akin to magic? |
45946 | If we were to treat these three plants alike, what do you suppose the result would be? |
45946 | Of course there must be flowers, but where shall they be put? |
46052 | But how are we who know very little about such things to know which_ is_ the best? |
46052 | ***** The question is frequently asked: Would you advise plowing or spading the garden in fall? |
46052 | And while we are at work at gardening, why not make it as attractive as possible? |
46052 | Said one amateur gardener to me when I gave him this advice:"Why should one be so particular about the seed? |
46052 | Why? |
26132 | If the dwarf apple- tree goes back to the Middle Ages and perhaps farther, then whence comes the apple originally? |
26132 | The Dwarf Apple- Tree 54 X. Whence Comes the Apple- Tree? |
26132 | The organism responsible for these blemishes is less evident than the codlin- moth; yet what fruit- grower knows the eggs of the codlin- moth? |
26132 | Why do we need so many kinds of apples? |
26132 | X WHENCE COMES THE APPLE- TREE? |
26132 | XII THE PLEASANT ART OF GRAFTING If I procure cuttings of a good apple, what shall I do with them that they may give me of their fruitage? |
26142 | (?) |
26142 | ---------+-------------+------------+------------+---------+------------ 1--Brown||||| Peat|Air dry(?) |
26142 | But why is it that light soils, need more manure than loamy or heavy lands? |
26142 | What is Peat? |
26142 | Would not as much soil of any kind be equally efficacious, by promoting to an equal degree the contact of oxygen from the atmosphere? |
26142 | _ What is Peat?_ By the general term Peat, we understand the organic matter or vegetable soil of bogs, swamps, beaver- meadows and salt- marshes. |
33323 | Does the fat return after cessation of the treatment? |
33323 | Has not one of our most learned divines exalted the art of digging by his commendation thereof, and who shall say him nay? |
33323 | I wonder if any of my readers have ever seen the one on St. Ann''s Hill, Chertsey? |
33323 | When sowing the seed, have we not bright visions of the time when that self- same seed will bear most exquisite blossoms? |
33323 | Why are the old= Christmas roses= seen so little, I wonder? |
7123 | Does that seem like too much work? |
7123 | Or why not grow a few extra fancy strawberries in the well cultivated spots about these trees? |
7123 | Why then, the reader may ask at this point, another garden book? |
32969 | Do any such noble examples remain in this country now? |
32969 | conspicua_, of purest white in the early months of March and April? |
37968 | In reply to a note sent him a few months since, asking:"How did or do you graft the hickories?" |
37968 | Synonyms:_ Juglans alba(? |
37968 | Synonyms:_ Juglans sulcata(? |
37968 | _ Juglans compressa(? |
37968 | _ Juglans exaltata(? |
37968 | _ Juglans ovalis(? |
37968 | _ Juglans squamosa(? |
20202 | When you plant another tree, why not plant a walnut? 20202 $ 25 to$ 150? 20202 And why? 20202 Animals respond to kindness, and why not the domestic trees? 20202 He says:One of the main points of discussion is, Which are preferable-- grafted or seedling trees? |
20202 | It is sometimes asked, why not plant seedling walnuts and top work those that are not good bearers? |
20202 | No record? |
20202 | The demand is already so great that purveyors are beginning to ask, where are the walnuts of the future to come from? |
20202 | Who can do better by any method? |
20202 | With what grander monument could one commemorate his little span on earth? |
40183 | --_Herrick._"What''s in a name? |
40183 | A garden was to them a place to"grow things"in, to work and walk in, but to sit in? |
40183 | And now that sweet- smelling plants are under consideration, may I not give you the details of an experiment with the common lilac as a house plant? |
40183 | For what saith the old herbalist-- combining in his ancient book floriculture and ethical instruction? |
40183 | In regard to pruning I have consulted many authorities, but"who shall decide when doctors disagree?" |
40183 | Take more rest, or you will pass on before me, and_ then_, who will lay me away?" |
40183 | Why not have our_ gardens_? |
40183 | do you hear the sea?" |
25905 | His land now produces four and a half bushels per acre; what time shall elapse when it shall be four and one half acres per bushel? |
25905 | Is he perfectly sane when he thinks he can skin his farm year after year, and not finally come to the bone? |
25905 | What sane farmer expects to move a heavy load over a rugged road with a team so lean and poverty- stricken that they cast but a faint shadow? |
25905 | Who dare predict that manure will not at some day be of value west of the Alleghanies? |
25905 | Why be contented with thirty bushels of corn per acre, when eighty or one hundred may be had? |
25905 | Why cut but one half- ton of hay per acre, when the laws of nature allow at least three? |
25905 | Why not, then, commence plowing under green crops, the only manure within easy reach? |
25905 | Why raise eight or twelve bushels of wheat per acre, when forty may as well be had? |
25905 | Yet is he much nearer sanity when he expects farming to be pleasant and profitable, and things to_ move aright_, unless his land is strong and fat? |
42825 | pleno? 42825 18 heterophýlla.? 42825 CÝCAS 230, Sago- palm? 42825 _ lucídium_? 42825 chinènsis- álba, double- white? 42825 crassinervis? 42825 longiflòrum? 42825 oppositifòlia? 42825 speciòsum? 42825 utilis? 39011 And if it thus diffuses out, where is the object of absorption? 39011 How then are we to explain the extensive ravages of the Larch disease over the whole of Europe during the latter half of this century? 39011 Is this due to the low temperature, the rarer atmosphere, the more intense illumination, the changes in moisture, etc., etc.? 39011 Need more be said? 39011 That the cell- protoplasm is its environment, and not so directly the outer world? 39011 The question now arises, how is this relatively enormous gain in energy employed by the plant? 39011 Why do we not here say that the stock has been_ infected_ by the scion? 4066 Are not these still Iduna''s apples, the taste of which keeps the gods forever young? 4066 Hath this been in your days, or even in the days of your fathers?... 4066 Was there one that hung so high and sheltered by the tangled branches that our sticks could not dislodge it? 4066 What are the imported half- ripe fruits of the torrid South to this fruit matured by the cold of the frigid North? 4066 What care I for Iduna''s apples so long as I can get these? 4066 Would it not tax a man''s invention,--no one to be named after a man, and all in the lingua vernacula? 4066 [ 13] Who shall stand god- father at the christening of the wild apples? 4066 and think you that they will let Loki or Thjassi carry them off to Jotunheim,[6] while they grow wrinkled and gray? 4512 Are your temperatures lower than mine and evaporation less? 4512 Does your soil hold more, than less than, or just as much available moisture as mine? 4512 How did the early pioneers irrigate their vegetables? 4512 Increasing Soil Fertility Saves Water Does crop growth equal water use? 4512 Is it as deep and open and moisture retentive? 4512 Or is your weather hotter? 4512 Were they due to extreme soil infertility? 4512 What is the texture of your soil, its water- holding capacity, and the dispersion of a drip into it? 4512 What to do with a giant kohlrabi( or any bulb getting overblown)? 4512 What to do? 4512 _ Would lowering plant density as much as this book suggests equally lower the yield of the plot? 34893 After all, is not the delight which belongs to a garden but a bit of borrowed glory from the Creator of sunlight, and of the kingdom of flowers? 34893 In seeking the simpler life which many are now craving, if luxuries are blessings that we could do without, must we count the flower garden a luxury? 34893 It would be a serious matter to attempt to name the best gardens in this State, for who could judge where such an infinite variety exists? 34893 Our unwritten motto is:If others can, then why not we?" |
34893 | What would it be? |
4924 | By what cultural treatment may this downward descent of the water be accelerated by the farmer? |
4924 | Do plants that evaporate much water grow more rapidly than those that evaporate less? |
4924 | However, the question remains, Is it possible to store the rainfall of successive years in the soil for the use of one crop? |
4924 | The real question before the dry- farmer is not,"Is the rainfall sufficient?" |
4924 | To what extent is the rainfall stored in soils? |
4924 | Transpiration for a pound of dry matter Is plant growth proportional to transpiration? |
4924 | What becomes of the rainfall? |
4924 | What proportion of the actual amount of water falling upon the soil can be stored in the soil and carried over from season to season? |
4924 | but rather,"Is it possible so to conserve and use the rainfall as to make it available for the production of profitable crops?" |
43531 | What can I have for dinner today? |
43531 | Can it be used profitably as a mulch? |
43531 | Is the crop a large one? |
43531 | Is the demand brisk or dull? |
43531 | Is the movement to your market large or light? |
43531 | Is your railroad service efficient? |
43531 | Should the quantity of seed potatoes used be subtracted from the total yield of large and small potatoes or from the salable crop? |
43531 | The first group answers the question,"What size of seed piece generally affords the largest yield of large and small potatoes?" |
43531 | The second group answers the query:"What size of seed piece generally gives the greatest yield exclusive of small potatoes?" |
43531 | This being the case, why should not potatoes grown under a litter mulch be especially well developed and therefore make strong seed? |
21414 | An old adage reads,"How can a man die in whose garden sage is growing?" |
21414 | Can we ever forget the picnic when we had certain kinds of sandwiches? |
21414 | Can we ever forget them; or, what is more practical, can we again realize them? |
21414 | Were those flavors real, or was it association and natural, youthful hunger that enticed us? |
21414 | What can recall the bridal year so surely as this same kindly lavender? |
21414 | What made us, like Oliver Twist, ask for more? |
21414 | [ Illustration: Spading Fork] All these are familiar friends; but what are those plants near the kitchen? |
21442 | ''Is there no drainage from the pan necessary?'' 21442 Madam,"he said,"have you the_ Psoriasis septennis_?" |
21442 | CHAPTER V. WATERING PLANTS.--IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS? |
21442 | Dear reader, did you ever see a large Camellia plant in full blossom? |
21442 | Do you recommend the use of artificial fertilizers for house plants, and does it benefit them? |
21442 | How are we to attack this formidable network of vines in order to do anything with them? |
21442 | IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS TO PLANTS? |
21442 | If we call the rose the"Queen of Flowers,"what royal title shall we bestow upon the beautiful Japan Lilies? |
21442 | Making and Planting Flower Beds 14 CHAPTER V. Watering Plants-- Is Cold Water Injurious? |
21442 | Now which is right? |
21442 | Who is not familiar with the Moneywort, with its low- trailing habit and small yellow flowers? |
21442 | Who will say but what the exhalation from her numerous plants increasing the humidity of the atmosphere in which she lived, prolonged her life? |
29659 | America Aminia Barry Black Eagle Clevener Creveling Eldorado Faith(?) |
29659 | DUTCHESS( Vinifera, Labrusca, Bourquiniana? |
29659 | EARLY VICTOR( Labrusca, Bourquiniana?) |
29659 | EDEN( Rotundifolia, Munsoniana?) |
29659 | Gaertner Grein Golden Hercules Jewel Massasoit Maxatawney(?) |
29659 | How has this material been fashioned into use? |
29659 | How, then, can the differences between vines of a variety in every vineyard in the land be explained? |
29659 | Is it not possible that with the new knowledge we can now grow European grapes in eastern America? |
29659 | WOODRUFF( Labrusca, Vinifera?) |
29659 | What determines the suitability of a region for grape- growing? |
29659 | What was the raw material of a fruit known since the beginning of agriculture and wherever temperate fruits are grown? |
29659 | Where are the grape regions of America? |
29659 | Who were the originative and who the directive agents? |
29659 | Why may we not grow these grapes if we protect them from phylloxera, fungi and cold? |
29659 | Æstivalis?) |
37607 | But how are we to have our lawns in"broad expanse"if we build a high wall near the house to cut off even the possibility of a lawn? |
37607 | Can the gentleman''s garden then, too, be a picture? |
37607 | How is a man to make gardens wisely if he does not know what has to be grown in them? |
37607 | Is the aim of the flower- garden to show the"modest foliage"of English trees when almost every country house is surrounded by our native woods? |
37607 | Old English house with trees in their natural form_] What, then, is the kind of"Formal Gardening"that is bad? |
37607 | Or are we to treat the house and garden as inseparable factors in one homogeneous whole, which are to co- operate for one premeditated result? |
37607 | Perhaps Mr. Blomfield would accept a plumb line? |
37607 | What right have we to deform things given us so perfect and lovely in form? |
47263 | 1?_( syn. |
47263 | 1?_= 2.=_ U. |
47263 | 3, 349 Early Cream, 349 Early Cronesteyn, 349 Early Curtis, 349 Early Downton, 349_ Early Favourite?_( syn. |
47263 | _ Early Favourite?_= 5.= Mas_ Pom. |
47263 | _ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_= 3.=_ Lond. |
47263 | _ Frühe Montagne?_= 9.= Liegel_ Anweisung_ 68. |
47263 | _ Newington Magdalene?_= 5.= Dochnahl_ Führ. |
47263 | _ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_= 8.= Thomas_ Guide Prat._ 50. |
47263 | _ Scott Cling?_= 3.=_ Del. |
47263 | _ Williams New York?_= 5.=_ Lond. |
47263 | by, 492 Williams Catherine, 492 Williams Cling, 492 Williams Early Purple, 492_ Williams New York?_( syn. |
47263 | of Beers Late Red Rareripe), 306 Beers Smock, 306_ Béguine de Termonde?_( syn. |
47263 | of Early Purple), 351 Pourprée Joseph Norin, 444 Pourprée Tardive de Lyon, 444_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_( syn. |
47263 | of Falcon), 358 Faut, 358 Favier, 358 Favourite, 358_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_( syn. |
47263 | of Frühe Mignonne), 364 Frühe May von Brigg, 364 Frühe Mignonne, 364_ Frühe Montagne?_( syn. |
47263 | of Jarle Late), 390 Jarrell Late Yellow, 390 Jarretts Late White, 390 Jaune d''Agen, 390_ Jaune d''Amerique?_( syn. |
47263 | of Old Newington), 429_ Newington Magdalene?_( syn. |
47263 | of Scott October), 463_ Scott Cling?_( syn. |
39993 | So, then,I laughed,"you think love has a great deal to do with the matter?" |
39993 | --_Johnson._ YOUR garden''s friends and foes,--have you ever thought about them as such? |
39993 | --_Rosaline Neish._ DID you ever see the boy or girl that did not want to get up a club? |
39993 | --_Wordsworth._ YOU children love a playhouse, do n''t you? |
39993 | And the reward for all this care and attention? |
39993 | And this invitation? |
39993 | Did you ever realize that gardens differ as much as people? |
39993 | Do n''t you know that old adage, ending"try, try again?" |
39993 | Does that sound strange,--with cold winds and occasional snow? |
39993 | For a meeting place during the summer, why not plan a flower club- house? |
39993 | For what? |
39993 | Heaven? |
39993 | Is your ground rich or poor? |
39993 | One poor little lame boy took some of his morning glory seed back to the slums and planted-- where? |
39993 | Slow process? |
39993 | What further proof do you need that your beloved garden has its enemies? |
39993 | Where? |
39993 | when the eve is cool? |
34885 | Gentlemen,he says,"what floure like you best in all this border? |
34885 | For September and October blossoming why not use the Abendrote or Evening Glow? |
34885 | For a larger garden, what is more alluring than a fountain sending forth a high, vapory stream, bursting into a cloud of filmy spray? |
34885 | For a rustic seat, why not try the wild grape or Crimson Glory vine? |
34885 | For a shady bit of garden, why not try out delphiniums? |
34885 | For a small beginning of a water garden, why not try a pocket in the rock? |
34885 | For the simple garden, why not make one yourself? |
34885 | Fragrance is necessary in the planting of a sundial, then why not use the Honeysuckle? |
34885 | Have you ever considered placing your sundial in the heart of a rose garden? |
34885 | Have you ever considered the graceful effect of ornamental grasses? |
34885 | If more than one tub is used, why not make a rockery between? |
34885 | If you are looking for novelty, why not try cobblestones? |
34885 | If your ground slopes to the garden edge why not design a rustic tea house to fit into the hillside? |
34885 | In that case why not use half barrels or tubs? |
34885 | We tire of the same idea continuously reproduced so why not work out a design of your own? |
34885 | Why not give them a home by themselves in a rough rockery? |
20770 | Can they be obtained equally well in another way? |
20770 | How far apart should the trees be planted and how many are required for an acre? |
20770 | How old should they be? |
20770 | How should the ground be prepared? |
20770 | How should the young trees be handled and cared for? |
20770 | If so, what should I do to make them profitable? |
20770 | Is it wise to use fillers or temporary trees, and if so, what kind? |
20770 | Is this the usual glorification of the mythical past or is it true? |
20770 | Or what it costs to produce a barrel of apples? |
20770 | The question is often asked, will it pay to fill up the decayed centers or sides of old trees? |
20770 | What arrangement of the trees is most advisable? |
20770 | What is the best method of setting? |
20770 | What will it cost and what returns may be expected? |
20770 | When shall I plant? |
20770 | When the trees are planted should they be inter- cropped, and if so, with what? |
20770 | Where and of whom shall I purchase my trees? |
20770 | Who knows what it costs to grow an orchard to bearing age? |
20770 | Will it pay to try to renovate my old apple trees? |
5418 | Do not the facts in the case prove the reverse? |
5418 | Does the owner of light, warm soils ask,"What, then, shall I do with my stable- manure, since you have said that it will be an injury to my garden?" |
5418 | I am often asked in effect, What raspberries do you recommend for the Gulf States? |
5418 | I have never considered this an objection against a variety; for why should any one wish to raise only one variety of strawberry? |
5418 | I suppose my best reply would be, What oranges do you think best adapted to New York? |
5418 | If we wish plants, let them grow by all means; but if fruit is our object, why should we let them grow? |
5418 | In many localities the chief question is, What kind CAN I grow? |
5418 | Is any one aghast at this labor? |
5418 | Taking this statement literally, we may well ask, Where, then, can grapes be grown? |
5418 | The question first arising is, What shall we plant? |
5418 | The question may arise in some minds, Why buy plants? |
5418 | What should be the first step in this case? |
5418 | Who has not seen the ground covered with premature and decaying fruit in July, August, and September? |
5418 | Why do not our schools teach a little practical natural history? |
5418 | Why not get them from the woods and fields, or let Nature provide bushes for us where she will? |
5418 | Why should you not plant those you like the best, those which are the most congenial? |
5418 | Why take the risk to save a two- penny stake? |
20917 | Acids, 9"Water, 841"----- 1,000"What must we do to bring such must to the condition of a normal must? |
20917 | And we, brother grape growers? |
20917 | And why should it? |
20917 | And why, in reality, should we seek to keep as a secret a practice which is perfectly right and justifiable? |
20917 | And why? |
20917 | Brother Skeptic, have you, or has any body, divined_ all_ the secrets of Nature''s workshop? |
20917 | But the question may be asked here, what shall be done by those who do not live in these favored regions, and yet would like to grow grapes? |
20917 | Can_ you_ hesitate, when the future is all bright before you, and the thousand and one obstacles have been overcome? |
20917 | If this is so, may we not recognize one of those shadows in the old Norman legend of events which transpired more than eight hundred years ago? |
20917 | If this is true what does it prove? |
20917 | Location and Soil 43 Preparing the Soil 45 WHAT SHALL WE PLANT? |
20917 | Need I name it? |
20917 | Our next question is: If, in six pounds of acids in a normal must, 754 pounds of water appear, how much water is required for nine pounds of acids? |
20917 | The next question to be considered is: Shall we plant cuttings or rooted plants? |
20917 | WHAT SHALL WE PLANT? |
17155 | Could I often get an established plant of_ Cattleya Mossiæ_ in flower for 4s.? |
17155 | It was rather dear, was n''t it? |
17155 | Alberti- Edwardi_, which has a broad soft margin of gold about its stately petals? |
17155 | But is it impossible that the explanation appears to fail only because we can not yet push it far enough? |
17155 | Do blackbirds and thrushes eat young frogs? |
17155 | He feels an interest in his wares, as who would not that dealt in objects of the extremest beauty and fascination? |
17155 | How many hybrids have we now, established, and passing from hand to hand as freely as natural species? |
17155 | How should a plant thrive better under artificial conditions than in the spot where Nature placed it? |
17155 | If so much could be done under such circumstances, what may rightly be called difficult in the cultivation of orchids? |
17155 | It furnishes material for cheering meditations on a Sunday morning-- is that a trifle? |
17155 | Suppose that we behold, in this nineteenth century, a mere epoch, or stage, in the ceaseless evolution? |
17155 | The auctioneer exclaims,"Does anybody want any_ crispums_?" |
17155 | There are books enough to inform them, certainly; but who reads an Orchid Book? |
17155 | Those experienced persons glanced at it and said,"Very nice, but have n''t you an_ Odontoglossum coeleste_ to show?" |
17155 | What do?" |
17155 | What was this? |
17155 | Who could have expected to see an Oncidium buried in long grass, exposed to the full power of a tropic sun? |
17155 | Why not raise to a comfortable level all parts of the area over which I had need to bend? |
17155 | delectabile_--ivory white, tinged with rose, strikingly blotched with red and showing a golden labellum? |
15517 | ''Tis said, that_ Justin Martyr_ being asked, why the_ Christians_ of his time were permitted the eating_ Flesh_ and not the_ Blood_? |
15517 | But there now starts up a Question, Whether it were better, or more proper, to_ Begin_ with_ Sallets_, or End and Conclude with them? |
15517 | But what think we of the_ Cicuta_, which there are who reckon among_ Sallet_ Herbs? |
15517 | Esse cibus nequeunt? |
15517 | It being one of the Inquiries of the Noble[ 59]Mr._ Boyle_, what_ Herbs_ were proper and fit to make_ Sallets_ with, and how best to order them? |
15517 | Thus the Comical_ Master- Cook_, introduc''d by_ Damoxenus_, when asked[ Greek: pôs esin autois onmphonia];_ What Harmony there was in Meats_? |
15517 | What shall we add more? |
15517 | [ 122]----_Vides ut pallidus omnis__ Coena desurgat dubia? |
15517 | [ Footnote 65:_ Concerning the Use of Fruit( bessides many others) whether best to be eaten before, or after Meals? |
15517 | and who indeed would hazard it? |
15517 | and_ Fishing_, which is indeed a_ Lazy_ one? |
26084 | Can we afford it? |
26084 | --"What do you know about shipbuilding?" |
26084 | And echo answers,"Where?" |
26084 | And therefore, gentlemen, the question is not, Shall we have parks? |
26084 | And what better could they do? |
26084 | Are human life and health and virtue so cheap, that we can afford to count the cost of procuring and maintaining them? |
26084 | Are vice, crime, and disease so unimportant, that we can afford to let them thrive, and propagate themselves indefinitely? |
26084 | Are you aware, gentlemen, that that is coming upon us, that we must meet it, and avert it? |
26084 | Can we afford the expense? |
26084 | If it loses the two first of these distinctions, how long will it retain the last? |
26084 | Rather, let us ask, Can Boston afford to be less comfortable to live in, less attractive, less healthy, than sister cities? |
26084 | This is the verdict; and, granted this, there remain but two questions,--"Is this the time?" |
26084 | What was the result of this simple proceeding? |
26084 | Where are the breathing- places for this enlarged metropolis? |
26084 | Where are the noble parks and the wide- spreading groves? |
26084 | Where are the places of common resort for quiet and healthful enjoyment and peaceful recreation for this expanded population? |
26084 | Will no one save my child?" |
26084 | but where is you going to get the vind?" |
26084 | you have decided that; but the question is, Whether, having determined to have them, we shall rest content with saying so? |
20903 | Have you eaten your iron? |
20903 | ): Dr. Deming: Has anyone any new information about the filling or bearing of the McCallister? |
20903 | Are beans going to supplant nuts? |
20903 | Can anyone suggest a wax which will remain absolutely dry under the conditions described above? |
20903 | DR. DEMING: Is the Riehl orchard free from blight? |
20903 | Do web worms occur in cycles, or do other conditions govern their appearance? |
20903 | Do you suppose we could get him to be a king to lead for the finest in tree planting, grafted hickory- nut trees? |
20903 | Do you think I can get American species by grafting my species with Rhamnus Purshiana scions? |
20903 | Does it fill so badly that it is not a success? |
20903 | Does the bitternut grow farther north than either one of them? |
20903 | Dr. Deming: Every year? |
20903 | Dr. Deming: Is the Burlington worth growing? |
20903 | How are we to obtain this information? |
20903 | How many acres have been added in the last twenty years? |
20903 | I asked,"What percentage of the commercial pecan growers at the present time are producing 1,000 pounds of cured nuts to the acre?" |
20903 | Is it the black walnut or the shagbark? |
20903 | Is this a general or a local condition? |
20903 | Mr. Corsan: Are they in exceedingly rich soil or just ordinary? |
20903 | Mr. Corsan: What kind of a flavor has it? |
20903 | Now, are the problems of those who are interested in nuts more like those of the peach or the delphinium grower? |
20903 | Shall we call it a Hickbit? |
20903 | To say that there is room for much improvement sounds all right, but who is going to effect it? |
20903 | What does this all mean? |
20903 | What makes children so puny and so unwilling to do any real work today? |
20903 | What of the future? |
20903 | Where are you going to get these inbred seeds? |
20903 | Which have stood the cold and drought the best? |
20903 | Why not make the choice a good one? |
41133 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
41133 | Are you ready, Jack? |
41133 | Baccy does taste good on a day like this; but what does n''t? |
41133 | But why is n''t that youngster snug in bed and asleep? |
41133 | But, Jack, how about supper? |
41133 | CHAPTER V."Croker, minor, have you been up to the head- master? |
41133 | Cold are you, and wet? |
41133 | Danger with a little puff of wind like this? |
41133 | Different from a rat, eh? |
41133 | Do n''t you know that cows kick if you sniff at their heels? |
41133 | Has the bell rung? |
41133 | Pepper, Pepper, Wasp, Wasp, where on earth have you got to? |
41133 | Rather sweet, ai n''t it? |
41133 | Shall we drop this and have a day''s outdoor practice? |
41133 | This was more than I could stand, so I took the cord and led the dog away, but before doing so, I asked,"How about your children?" |
41133 | Well done, Chance; you have marked one in that hole near you, or more than one, is there? |
41133 | What do you say, boys? |
41133 | What, Jack, you say I have n''t spoken for the past mile? |
41133 | What, no grog? |
41133 | Would you, you rascal? |
41133 | Would you? |
41133 | Yes? |
41133 | who says there''s danger? |
19050 | But where are they? |
19050 | DR. MORRIS: Hales''s hickories? |
19050 | DR. MORRIS: Has anybody any Kirtland hickories in stock grafted for sale? |
19050 | DR. MORRIS: Have you any Weicker? |
19050 | Did it interfere with the growth of the tree? |
19050 | Has not the time arrived to put into practical operation what has been learned in the last eight years? |
19050 | How can nut culture be practically extended if the public is constantly confronted with features of the experimental stage? |
19050 | If you cut them off, do shoots come out of the stumps? |
19050 | Is that not sufficient basis to proceed on? |
19050 | MR. WEBER: Are back numbers of the Journal available? |
19050 | Mr. Littlepage, do you recall the trees in Georgetown? |
19050 | Now, what of its extent? |
19050 | Now, would the hound catch the hare before they got to a hickory tree half a mile away? |
19050 | QUESTION: Are any of these specially good for the South? |
19050 | QUESTION: At what age will they bear? |
19050 | QUESTION: Is there any difficulty in harvesting the crops, do the cones shed? |
19050 | QUESTION: Is there any more trouble with the cows and squirrels over nut pines than there is with ordinary pine trees? |
19050 | QUESTION: Of those that you suggest, what would be the best here? |
19050 | QUESTION: Would it be possible to produce grafted trees? |
19050 | Some may ask the question, has it paid? |
19050 | THE SECRETARY: One- quarter would be affected by blight and some of those would be good but not all? |
19050 | THE SECRETARY: Where did you find it, Mr. Reed? |
19050 | THE SECRETARY: Would those nuts be ruined? |
19050 | The native nut crop? |
19050 | What else is there to give? |
19050 | Will the sixteenth annual meeting see a greatly augmented membership without a practical incentive? |
19050 | With these facts before us we are prepared to inquire what place in the dietary are nuts prepared to fill? |
19050 | _ Acrobasis caryae_ Grote? |
19392 | Be quiet, ca n''t you? |
19392 | I wonder, madam,he replied, roughly,"why all ladies ask such questions?" |
19392 | && or in what poem the lines run down the ages? |
19392 | ''Sir,''he replied,''I did not count your glasses of wine; why should you number my cups of tea?''" |
19392 | Can the most vivid imagination picture the angels( above the stars) drinking coffee? |
19392 | Did eyes preadamite first see the bloom, Luscious nepenthe of the soul that grieves? |
19392 | How shall we speak thy complicated Pow''rs? |
19392 | I tell you? |
19392 | Is n''t that a picture? |
19392 | No? |
19392 | Of gossip, perhaps-- still and yet-- What of Johnson? |
19392 | Or wou''d you in sublimer Themes engage, And sing of Worthies who adorn the Age? |
19392 | Pray, what are they talking about, or of whom are they talking?" |
19392 | Sons of Appelles, wou''d you draw the Face And Shape of Venus, and with equal Grace In some Elysian Field the Figure place? |
19392 | Then, why not add tea to the list? |
19392 | What better proof do we want, therefore, that to women''s influence is due the cultivation and retention of the tea habit? |
19392 | What would the world do without tea?--how did it exist? |
19392 | Who does n''t think of taking in the comforting cup of tea? |
19392 | Who knows its author, or when it was written, or can quote the line before or after"the cups That cheer, but not inebriate"? |
19392 | Who was the first to color tea and coffee with milk? |
19392 | Whoever thinks of taking coffee into a sick- room? |
19392 | Why should it be? |
19392 | Without tea, what would become of women, and without women and tea, what would become of our domestic literary men and matinee idols? |
19392 | Would you? |
19392 | You Artists of the AEsculapian Tribe, Wou''d you, like AEsculapius''s Self, Prescribe, Cure Maladies, and Maladies prevent? |
19392 | You Pleaders, who for Conquest at the Bar Contend as Fierce and Loud as Chiefs in War; Would you Amaze and Charm the list''ning Court? |
19392 | You that to Isis''s Bark or Cam retreat, Wou''d you prove worthy Sons of either Seat, And All in Learning''s Commonwealth be Great? |
19392 | _ TEA IN LADIES''NOVELS_ What would women novelists do without tea in their books? |
20221 | Are they well filled? |
20221 | Dr. Deming: Is n''t that rather a record for distance north? |
20221 | Dr. Deming: Will your pecans have a good crop? |
20221 | Dr. G. A. Zimmerman said,"Why worry about the blight? |
20221 | Dr. Zimmerman: Do you know if the Japanese beetle attacks the chestnut or chinquapin? |
20221 | Have you any information other than what was published in that bulletin? |
20221 | Have you had any trouble with your black walnuts? |
20221 | I therefore gave him the subject,"Is the information we now have on general orchard fertility of value in the nut grove?" |
20221 | In the December issue, 1925, of the American Nut Journal, I read"Eventually, why not now?" |
20221 | Is the Information We Have on Orchard Fertility of Value in the Nut Grove? |
20221 | Is there any information about hickory nuts? |
20221 | Miss Sawyer: Did you get any information on the price? |
20221 | Miss Sawyer: Is the mollissima chestnut blight proof? |
20221 | Mr. Graham: Do you notice much difference in the kernels? |
20221 | Mr. Hershey: Did you find that it made the egg shells hard? |
20221 | Mr. Hershey: Did you have any correspondence with those people? |
20221 | Mr. Reed, how far north do pecans grow well? |
20221 | Mr. Reed: Do you have any difficulty in cracking nuts when they are dry? |
20221 | Mr. Reed: What did you do with screenings? |
20221 | Mr. Smith: Did you try offering prizes? |
20221 | Now you ask,"How are you going to produce that look?" |
20221 | Prof. Neilson: Have you had any experience with Turkish hazels? |
20221 | Prof. Reed: Do you people in Virginia have local names for different types of walnuts? |
20221 | Question: Do caterpillars give you any trouble? |
20221 | Question: Do seedlings come up? |
20221 | Question: Do you ever steam nuts before cracking? |
20221 | Question: Do you use a paper bag inside? |
20221 | Question: What percent do you lose in sieving? |
20221 | Slate, what can you tell us about it? |
20221 | Stoke, how many nuts did you crack? |
20221 | The Journal''s comment was"What are we waiting for?" |
20221 | The President: Do you do your separating of kernel and shell by hand? |
20221 | What is the swamp black walnut? |
20221 | When this picture was taken, I asked myself this question,"Was it a venture of fools rushing in where angels fear to tread?" |
20221 | Why had it so signally failed with perennial plants and most impressively with trees? |
40534 | Does the brief period of restful enjoyment repay for the many weary days antecedent and subsequent? |
40534 | Have you any request to make? |
40534 | How shall I stock my garden? |
40534 | What is the difference between them? 40534 Annuals of a new kind, high- priced novelties, have been tested; are they any better than our old favorites? 40534 Are Geraniums Pelargoniums? 40534 Are not those Teas lovely? 40534 As we change the numerous boxes of seedlings from one position to another, that they may catch the sunbeams,Will it pay?" |
40534 | At length he pushed open the door, and approaching Mr. Q., said:"''Will you give me a few of those flowers?'' |
40534 | But why should these brown bulbs, so alike to outward view, bear flowers so widely differing in hues? |
40534 | Did a cloudlet smile as you came through? |
40534 | Did a little sunbeam bold Kiss on your lips that tint of gold? |
40534 | Do I have any doubts respecting these descriptions-- that the distinguishing characteristics of each sort before me will fail to correspond? |
40534 | For an out- door annual climber, what can be prettier than the dainty, graceful Canary Flower? |
40534 | His curiosity led him to ask:"''What do you want them for?'' |
40534 | If we can not indulge in many sorts, what do we find the most satisfactory? |
40534 | In reply to the question,"What are the names of six of your finest gladiolus not very expensive?" |
40534 | LINES ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? |
40534 | Tell me the truth-- the end is approaching, is it not?" |
40534 | The leaves, a deep green with white embroidery, are very ornamental, but when surmounted with a wealth of bloom, what can be more charming? |
40534 | There, now, do n''t you feel nicely rested? |
40534 | What could be more lovely among the garnered treasures of the greenhouse? |
40534 | What flower can be whiter, sweeter, and more lovely than the Tuberose? |
40534 | What recreation for the mind and body more pure, refining, healthful, than that of the cultivation of flowers? |
40534 | What sort of music do they make? |
40534 | Where did you get that purple hue? |
40534 | Who shall decide when florists disagree? |
40534 | Why should_ Nestor_ be yellow striped with red, and_ Addison_ dark amaranth, with white stripes? |
40534 | Will it be of the Brass Band order, or that of the hand- organ style?" |
40534 | what are they? |
25831 | An"Italian"queen, is it? |
25831 | But where can the best seed be found? |
25831 | Can it be a matter of nutritional failure? |
25831 | Did it fail? |
25831 | Do some nut tree seedlings accept grafts more readily than others? |
25831 | Do we realize fully, I wonder, how important is the work of this group and the parent NNGA? |
25831 | How Hardy Are Oriental Chestnuts and Hybrids? |
25831 | How come? |
25831 | How far can it be carried north beyond its natural, or original, environment? |
25831 | May I suggest a few activities? |
25831 | May the Ohio growers ask you for your moral support in this venture? |
25831 | Now, comes the question, should we graft the Persian walnut high, here in Michigan? |
25831 | Or will they? |
25831 | Stoke: Would you consider chestnut hybrids worth while? |
25831 | The Pawpaw? |
25831 | The Pecan? |
25831 | The question arises; how near were Mr. Snyder''s Winklers to other varieties and in what direction with reference to the prevailing winds? |
25831 | Was it, perhaps, some Johnny Appleseed who engineered the New Deal of that day? |
25831 | Well, what should our specialist specialize in? |
25831 | What about the possibilities of Circassian walnut lumber? |
25831 | What has been the outcome of this plan to date? |
25831 | What has happened to the experiments of 60 years? |
25831 | What is the matter with the mulberry in America? |
25831 | What is to prevent the growers and the specialist from planting the English walnut for timber? |
25831 | What started him upon this crazy journey through the wilderness? |
25831 | What then is to be done with the land upon which our food crops had formerly been raised? |
25831 | What was the outcome? |
25831 | What wizard, or succession of wizards, was it who created a peach from a pest-- an asset from a liability? |
25831 | When his farm is sold, will the new owner sense the hand of the master and watch carefully over the walnuts and hickories, or will he cut them down? |
25831 | Where did the Persian, or so- called"English"walnut come from? |
25831 | Which experiments were successful and which were not? |
25831 | Why do n''t most people like it? |
25831 | Why is it a good commercial nut? |
25831 | Why is it not a good commercial fruit? |
25831 | Why should I expect anything else? |
25831 | Why? |
15191 | ?_ 11. |
15191 | A fatty oil is obtained in Demerara from the seeds of the butter tree,_ Pekea_(?) |
15191 | A pale yellow clear oil is obtained from the seed of_ Dolichos biflorus_(_?_). |
15191 | Does the palate exert some peculiar action on the ingesta, so as to give to each a distinct sapor? |
15191 | For culinary purposes, and as an article of diet, what qualities or characters obtain a preference? |
15191 | From what plants is it most easily manufactured? |
15191 | Is the process attended with any particular difficulties that ought to deter the East and West India planters from engaging in it? |
15191 | It is done in Bermuda, and why not here? |
15191 | Or_ vice versa_?] |
15191 | Other sources of oil are the_ Celastrus paniculatus_(_?_)_ Balanites Egyptictca_ and the saul tree(_ Shorea Robusta_). |
15191 | The question naturally arises,--How is the farmer to increase the quantity of soluble silica or flint in his soil? |
15191 | Upon what, then, do the nutritive properties of these various substances depend? |
15191 | What are the qualities or properties that lead manufacturers-- calico printers for example-- to prefer one variety to another? |
15191 | What differences exist between the characters of starch produced by different plants? |
15191 | What plants produce it in the largest quantity? |
15191 | What plants produce the largest yield per acre? |
15191 | What plants produce the most esteemed varieties? |
15191 | Why is not this preservative also employed after the cacao is dried, and when placed in the store, where it awaits the purchaser? |
15191 | Why is this? |
15191 | _ Algaroba beans_.--The seed pods or bean of the carob- tree(_ Ceratonia siliqua_, or_ Prosopis pallida_?) |
15191 | alata_?) |
15191 | sp?_ 4. |
15191 | sp?_ B. |
15191 | sp?_ III. |
19073 | A new kind of almond? |
19073 | Are you going into the cocoa? |
19073 | How did your uncle hold it through the various revolutions? |
19073 | 2,000 Belgium 6,000 1,000 1,000 8,000 Spain 6,000 7,000 6,000 8,000 Russia 5,000 4,000? |
19073 | ? |
19073 | AN SENIBUS CHOCOLATAE PUTUS? |
19073 | Anything else? |
19073 | Canada 3,000 4,000 9,000? |
19073 | I saw one fellow, very tall and gnarled, and with many pods on it; turning to the planter I enquired"How old is that tree?" |
19073 | Italy 2,000 5,000 6,000 6,000 Denmark 2,000 2,000 2,000? |
19073 | MANUFACTURER: How is that? |
19073 | Norway 1,000 2,000 2,000? |
19073 | Or in Venezuela? |
19073 | PLANTER: And washing? |
19073 | PLANTER: And where do the foreign odours come from? |
19073 | PLANTER: But a buyer can get a shrewd idea without roasting, surely? |
19073 | PLANTER: How about gloss? |
19073 | PLANTER: They do n''t clay there, do they? |
19073 | PLANTER: What do you mean exactly by good? |
19073 | PLANTER: What-- good with bad? |
19073 | PLANTER: You do n''t mean to tell me that only the good cacao sells? |
19073 | Shall we knock off or pluck the pods? |
19073 | Shall we shake the tree? |
19073 | Sweden 1,000 2,000 2,000? |
19073 | Tell me exactly what kind of cacao the manufacturers want? |
19073 | The question arises: How shall we gather it? |
19073 | U.S.A. 68,000 103,000 145,000 145,000 Germany 51,000 28,000? |
19073 | We have already seen the high food value of the cacao bean: what of the sugar which chocolate contains? |
19073 | Well, what exactly does he look for? |
19073 | What would the lovers in England do without chocolates, which enable them to indulge their delight in giving that which is sure to be well received? |
19073 | What''s the buyer''s objection to claying? |
19073 | they ask, just as in England we might enquire,"Are you going into the corn?" |
18288 | A MEMBER: Are any of your hybrids a success? |
18288 | A MEMBER: Ca n''t you explain to us, with one of your specimens, your method of spring layering? |
18288 | A MEMBER: Going back to the blight, will this tackle any size limb? |
18288 | A MEMBER: I would like to ask if the Byzantine hazel is attacked by blight as are the others? |
18288 | A MEMBER: In your experience are fungicides useful in handling the blight? |
18288 | A MEMBER: Once on, will it stay? |
18288 | A MEMBER: What is the difference between the cobs and the filberts? |
18288 | A MEMBER: What kind is it that blooms in the fall? |
18288 | Can we get a sprout from a good tree, and then have it go on sprouting indefinitely? |
18288 | DR. MORRIS: Do you cut the bark? |
18288 | In my part of the country this is true; how is it with you, Dr. Deming? |
18288 | In this native hazel, does it keep on spreading under ground? |
18288 | MR. HOLDEN: Do they get these trees from seedlings? |
18288 | MR. LITTLEPAGE: Well, is there anything really surprising, when you consider the origin of these trees? |
18288 | MR. PARISH: In doing this, shall we put in a little air hole? |
18288 | MR. POMEROY: Just because a tree has been grafted, why is all this necessary? |
18288 | MR. PRESIDENT: What is the size limit for the slip bark method? |
18288 | Might there not be some danger there? |
18288 | Or shall we make some change? |
18288 | PROFESSOR HEDRICK: Are there any East Asia hazels that thrive in this country? |
18288 | QUESTION: What do you mean by cold storage? |
18288 | RUSH: Do you know anything of the quality of that nut? |
18288 | Second: What is a good walnut? |
18288 | Shall membership continue to date from the calendar year? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: Do I understand that this Merribrooke hazel, put in the middle of an acre will fill the acre? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: Do we understand that these hazels that have borne for twenty- five years are European hazels? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: Have you budded any cold storage wood before this year? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: Mr. W. C. Reed, have you any additions that we ought to know? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: What can you tell us, Mr. White, that has not yet been covered? |
18288 | THE PRESIDENT: Will Mr. Jones tell us about budding with cold storage wood? |
18288 | W. C. REED: May I ask, Doctor, what you bud the Byzantine on? |
18288 | W. C. REED: What method of budding do you find most successful? |
18288 | What would be the result in the case of the English and black walnuts? |
18288 | What would you advise her to do with these? |
18288 | While going through the orchards at Grenoble in France, I asked a man"What is the matter with that tree?" |
18288 | Will you help the process along? |
39929 | But how is it possible for a Man to throw away his Money without doing some Service in the World? |
39929 | Do n''t you think this Building too is a very genteel one, and is extremely well situated? |
39929 | Do not you think that Haycock contrasts extremely well with this Temple? |
39929 | Hard by a Cottage Chimney smokes, From betwixt two aged Oaks.__ Calloph._ Can you repeat no more? |
39929 | If there be Force in Virtue, or in Song._ Does not your Pulse beat high, while you thus stand before such an awful Assembly? |
39929 | Is any Man the better for it? |
39929 | Is it not Money most vilely squandered away? |
39929 | It is finely painted in the Inside: Will you look into it? |
39929 | Now Land, now Sea, and Shores with Forest crown''d, Rocks, Dens, and Caves._---- But what have we got here? |
39929 | Pray what Titles are those Gentry distinguished by? |
39929 | Pray, Sir, do you know the Stories? |
39929 | What do you think of these two Pavilions? |
39929 | What do you think of this Scene? |
39929 | What is that Painting upon the Cieling? |
39929 | What signifies all this ostentatious Work? |
39929 | What wretched Scrawler has been at work upon these Walls? |
39929 | Why are they not always considered as having a natural Tendency to Luxury, to Riot, and Licentiousness? |
39929 | _ Are These Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are These Things So?_( 1740). |
39929 | _ Are These Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are These Things So?_( 1740). |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Did you never experience in a Concert vast Pleasure when the whole Band for a few Moments made a full Pause? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Do n''t you think that serpentine River, as it is called, is a great Addition to the Beauty of the Place? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Have you observed how the Statue is decorated? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ How? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Is it so late? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Pray what is your Opinion of checquered Marble''s being made use of in Busts? |
39929 | _ Calloph._ Yes: but can not you make a distinction between natural and moral Beauties? |
39929 | _ Callophilus_ seemed surprized, and could not forbear asking him, By what means his Opinions became so suddenly changed? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ I think it is.----But what have we got there? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ Is that Building the Temple of Friendship? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ Pray, Sir, what kind of a Building have we yonder, that struck our Sight as we crossed that Alley? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ Pray, what Building is that before us? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ What the D----l have we got here? |
39929 | _ Polypth._ Yonder likewise seems to be a Monument[19] rising: Pray who is it intended to do Honour to? |
22587 | Does anyone know for sure how to get pawpaw seed to germinate? |
22587 | _ What disease, if any, affects the nuts?_Fortunately, very few diseases are reported. |
22587 | _ What do you do to control the insects?_was then asked. |
22587 | _ What insects damage the nuts?_Weevil, by long odds. |
22587 | _ What proportion of nuts are taken by the squirrels?_The answers to this question range all the way from"all if allowed"to"none if prevented." |
22587 | _ What species are most injured by disease?_None are immune, apparently, though three reporters in favored regions answer"none"are injured. |
22587 | ( Does anyone know the details-- when to pick, how to pickle?) |
22587 | Are they through, due to having used up all the soil fertility? |
22587 | But what has? |
22587 | Can anyone tell me any experience with scent baits which I believe Biological Survey trappers sometimes use? |
22587 | Do any of the nut tree species prefer an acid to an alkaline soil? |
22587 | For Catawba grapes? |
22587 | For example, in response to the question,"What species are you planting experimentally or commercially?" |
22587 | For field corn? |
22587 | Frequent drouths? |
22587 | Hot, dry winds? |
22587 | How about a concerted breeding program for nut trees with full membership participation? |
22587 | In reply to the question,"What was your one greatest source of success? |
22587 | In the grafting of chestnuts, defective( incompatible?) |
22587 | Is anyone treating a bearing nut orchard as well as he would treat an apple orchard? |
22587 | Is it possible for different operators to obtain approximately the same score on replicate samples? |
22587 | Is it possible for one operator testing one lot of nuts to obtain the same score with replicate random samples? |
22587 | MacDaniels, L. H. Is it possible to devise a satisfactory judging schedule for black walnuts? |
22587 | Native nuts found plentifully? |
22587 | One might ask also in this connection, as does one nut nurseryman,"How soon will a Chinese elm or soft maple bear nuts?" |
22587 | Sparingly? |
22587 | Stoke says:"In response to your inquiry,''What nut trees, if any, do best in acid soils?'' |
22587 | The toxic(?) |
22587 | What are the causes of variation in the scores obtained? |
22587 | What would be the concensus of opinion on the merits of this much debated variety? |
22587 | Which of these reflect the inherent worth of the sample and which are related to technique, personal equation and methods of handling the sample? |
22587 | Why then this great variance? |
22587 | _ Suggestions and Requests._ In response to the questions,"Is there any service that N. N. G. A. could render you not now being met?" |
22587 | and"Have you any suggestions for future work? |
36279 | If the others could do all these things to perfection,she argued,"why could not he do them?" |
36279 | Again I ask myself, What is this for? |
36279 | Again he said,"What is this but bedding? |
36279 | And the test question I put to myself at any show is this, Does this really help the best interests of horticulture? |
36279 | And what is meant by coral- red? |
36279 | And why eat doubtful_ Boletus_ when one can have the delicious Chantarelle(_ Cantharellus cibarius_), also now at its best? |
36279 | Could anything be more tedious or more stupid? |
36279 | For an immense hardy flower of beautiful colouring what can equal the salmon- rose Moutan Reine Elizabeth? |
36279 | For have we not a brilliantly- gifted dignitary whose loving praise of the Queen of flowers has become a classic? |
36279 | For instance, what has become of the"_ great gray Hulo_"which he describes as a plant of the largest and strongest habit? |
36279 | For some time I did not see him, and when I asked another old countryman,"What''s gone o''Master Trussler?" |
36279 | Friends often ask me vaguely about Pæonies, and when I say,"What kind of Pæonies?" |
36279 | Has any tree so graceful a way of throwing up its stems as the birch? |
36279 | He was pounced upon by another, who asked,"What is this but bedding?" |
36279 | How is it that this fine native plant is almost invariably sold in nurseries as an American bramble? |
36279 | I ask him, Does he think it pretty, or is it any use? |
36279 | I ask myself, What is it for? |
36279 | Is it not Ruskin who says of Velasquez, that there is more colour in his black than in many another painter''s whole palette? |
36279 | Is not this some indication of what is wanted in gardens? |
36279 | The pretty little Woodruff is in flower; what scent is so delicate as that of its leaves? |
36279 | What does it teach? |
36279 | What should we do in winter without its vigorous masses of grand foliage in garden and shrubbery, to say nothing of its use indoors? |
36279 | Why amethystine? |
36279 | Why is the orchard put out of the way, as it generally is, in some remote region beyond the kitchen garden and stables? |
36279 | and what on earth are you going to do with that great heap of sand? |
36279 | and would it really nod him a glad good- morning when he opened his window to greet it? |
36279 | are you quarrying stone, or is it for the cellar of a building? |
19728 | ***** THE PRESIDENT: Is there any discussion upon the excellent paper just read by our treasurer? |
19728 | And what other class of trees even approaches the nut as a dual purpose tree? |
19728 | Are there any further remarks on this particular phase of the question? |
19728 | Are there any questions that you desire to ask the Professor? |
19728 | Are there any remarks in connection therewith? |
19728 | Are there any remarks thereon or any discussion? |
19728 | DR. CANADAY: What would be the best way to start a hickory along the roadside? |
19728 | Do they realize that the bush chinquapin might be substituted with success, in some sections at least? |
19728 | Do we not know of classes and varieties which may be planted under suitable conditions that will be certain to give satisfactory results? |
19728 | Do we want to grow a Major? |
19728 | Do you desire to act upon it at this time? |
19728 | From the nut? |
19728 | How about the Stabler walnut bearing? |
19728 | Is there any way of educating them? |
19728 | Is there some kind of a machine made for that purpose? |
19728 | MR. JORDAN: May I ask if, according to that theory, the Stuart and the Schley would not be expected to do well in Washington? |
19728 | MR. O''CONNOR: Concerning the planting of trees along the roadside, what enemies have they? |
19728 | Mr. President, can not this association block out at least a tentative nut research program for the whole United States? |
19728 | Now then, what are the duties and what are the opportunities? |
19728 | On half a dozen occasions some of our good friends have said,"What about the blight; do n''t you think it will wipe you out?" |
19728 | Perhaps some of the officials in these State Departments do n''t realize the possibilities of nut planting? |
19728 | THE PRESIDENT: Are there any further remarks upon this subject? |
19728 | THE PRESIDENT: Is there any discussion on Prof. Chittendon''s paper? |
19728 | THE PRESIDENT: Will there be any discussion on the subject so ably covered by Prof. Fagan? |
19728 | Then how are you going to plant trees on a man''s land if the highway belongs to that man? |
19728 | To whom do the cherries belong? |
19728 | What are the problems that should have first consideration? |
19728 | What are we to do about this whole question? |
19728 | What better investment could you make to beautify our highways than the planting of good trees? |
19728 | What could be more sacred? |
19728 | What do you think the Pennsylvania Agricultural Experiment Station should do for nut culture in this state? |
19728 | What sort of people will these trees live to see? |
19728 | Why does not the association, just as fast as it gets information, stick a pin there and fasten it down? |
19728 | Will there be a decadence of the taste and fondness for trees, which we hope is growing? |
19728 | Will these trees perchance live to see an upheaval of the happy affairs which now exist in this country? |
19728 | Will they bear? |
19728 | Would n''t it be a wonderfully beautiful and useful thing for the country? |
19728 | Would not the products you get from that tree more than offset the damage it does to a crop close to the tree? |
22721 | A large percentage of them showed evidence of interest such as:"the nuts are large and easy to crack,""where can I get more grafted trees?" |
22721 | Also, why reduce any of the weights or measures to percentages which only add to the complexity of the score? |
22721 | Can you report any hybrid or exotic oaks there, or put me in touch with any Dendrophiles interested in oak hybrids as crop trees?" |
22721 | Corsan:"How about charcoal?" |
22721 | Corsan:"Is using lime a good idea? |
22721 | Corsan:"When is it practical to take mulch away?" |
22721 | Corsan:"Why do you use Vigoro?" |
22721 | Could it be possible that the Weschcke hickory was pollinated by a butternut or the Broadview Persian walnut? |
22721 | Discussion after E. Sam Hemming''s paper Corsan:"Do you recommend the use of lime?" |
22721 | Dr. Colby:"Do n''t you think that index should begin with the volume Dr. Deming finished? |
22721 | Dr. Crane:"How often do you renew mulch under trees?" |
22721 | Dr. Crane:"What cut did you use in grafting those chestnuts?" |
22721 | Dr. MacDaniels:"Is there anyone present who helped with the judging of this contest?" |
22721 | Dr. Smith:"Is that top slanting?" |
22721 | First of all, why include the shells? |
22721 | I will present as a question: Has the Chinese chestnut, like the rose and the apple been hybridized out of all semblance of the wild form? |
22721 | Is it possible to devise a satisfactory judging schedule for black walnuts? |
22721 | Korn:"Is that uncommon?" |
22721 | McCollum:"Should n''t the price of a full set of reports be raised? |
22721 | McDaniel:"What percentage of chestnuts did well with the''plate''method of budding?" |
22721 | Member:"How do you keep your scions?" |
22721 | Member:"How would you prevent erosion on rolling land?" |
22721 | Member:"What time of year do you fertilize your trees?" |
22721 | Member:"Why does my young walnut tree not bear?" |
22721 | Member:"With English walnut is more than one tree necessary for pollination? |
22721 | O''Rourke:"Would you use clean cultivation for the first year?" |
22721 | Question:"Can the scions be cut with a small plane?" |
22721 | Question:"Do you always leave that stub on black walnut?" |
22721 | Question:"Do you find any difference in using buds from an eight or ten year old tree as against a younger tree?" |
22721 | Question:"What do you use a splice graft for?" |
22721 | Question:"What is the value of cut leaf black walnut?" |
22721 | Rick:"Should n''t it be propagated until we are sure?" |
22721 | Rick:"What about the Lamb walnut?" |
22721 | Silvis:"Do you recommend that freshly cut hay be used as mulch?" |
22721 | Slate:"How many sharks would you need for an acre of land?" |
22721 | Smith:"Would chestnuts stand carbon bisulphide for getting the weevil out, or is the hot water treatment better?" |
22721 | Sterling Smith:"Could n''t we offer$ 100.00 or more for a really outstanding black walnut that would meet certain specifications? |
22721 | The point to learn was, why? |
22721 | The question may be asked what causes or brings on this rest period in plants and what breaks it? |
22721 | This all results in such a severe removal or using up of the materials involved in the development? |
22721 | When hiking with a Boy Scout troop, they often asked me,"What tree is that?" |
22721 | Where does the rain go when it falls on the loose straw?" |
22721 | Who can tell? |
22721 | Will it be hardy farther north? |
22721 | [ Ed.--Did he feed them?] |
34570 | How much will it cost to plant one- eighth of an acre? |
34570 | Should the seed be sown broadcast? |
34570 | *** I wonder how many readers know that Ginseng can be grown in the house? |
34570 | About what are the dry roots worth per pound? |
34570 | All these damaged roots have gone to the Chinese as cultivated root and who could blame him for refusing to buy and look superstitious at such roots? |
34570 | And why do we have such a reverse of things among our gardens? |
34570 | Another question,"How long will it take it to mature?" |
34570 | Do the tops of Ginseng plants die annually? |
34570 | Do you fertilize your soil? |
34570 | Do you mulch beds in winter? |
34570 | Do you sow the seeds broadcast or plant in drills? |
34570 | Do you wonder now that the Korean Ginseng always commands a high price? |
34570 | Does the crop need shade while growing? |
34570 | Does the cultivation of the plants require much labor? |
34570 | Has the plant or root any enemies? |
34570 | Have you sold any dry roots yet from your garden? |
34570 | How are the roots dried? |
34570 | How far apart should the plants be set? |
34570 | How long does it take the seed of Ginseng to germinate? |
34570 | How many plants does it require to set an acre? |
34570 | How many roots does it take to make a pound? |
34570 | How many years will it take to grow marketable roots? |
34570 | How wide do you make your beds? |
34570 | If so, why is it that the wild root this fall has been at ready sale at$ 6.75 to$ 7.10 per pound? |
34570 | Is it a difficult crop to grow? |
34570 | Is it best to reset seedlings the first year? |
34570 | Must the roots be dried before marketable? |
34570 | Now your readers may say, how can they distinguish between the cultivated and the wild? |
34570 | Now, does this not show that the demand is all based on superstition? |
34570 | Suppose the same potato was grown in some swampy middle state, would the same splendid"Jersey Sweet"be the result? |
34570 | Upon the general appearance of so destructive a disease, one of the first questions of the growers was"where did it come from?" |
34570 | What are the roots used for and where does one find the best markets? |
34570 | What are we to do? |
34570 | What does the seed look like? |
34570 | What is generally used for shading? |
34570 | What kind of soil is best adapted to the crop? |
34570 | What price do plants and seed usually bring? |
34570 | What time of year do you dig the roots? |
34570 | When does the seed ripen? |
34570 | When is the best time to set plants and sow the seed? |
34570 | Why is this so? |
34570 | Why? |
34570 | Why? |
34570 | Will the plants bear seed the first year? |
38829 | Are we not all wrong in adopting one degree, so to say, of plant life as the only fitting one to lay before the house? 38829 Canst thou catch Leviathan with a hook?" |
38829 | That''s all, is it? |
38829 | What is a garden? |
38829 | What is a garden? |
38829 | Why is a garden made? |
38829 | _ What am I to say for my book? |
38829 | ( 2) What ornamental treatment is fit and right for a garden? |
38829 | ( 3) What should be the relation of the garden to the house? |
38829 | ( Why"needless,"then?) |
38829 | (_ Spectator._) But who_ does_ apply the Art- standard to Nature, or value her products as they resemble those of Art? |
38829 | And all goes to show, does it not? |
38829 | And has not Sir Walter well said:"Nothing is more the child of Art than a garden"? |
38829 | And where can we find a more promising sphere for artistic creation than a garden? |
38829 | Are there, then,_ two_ arts of gardening? |
38829 | How can this thing be? |
38829 | How comes he to strain at the gnat of formality in the old- fashioned garden, yet readily swallow the camel at Stowe? |
38829 | How, then, we ask--"How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea, Whose action is no stronger than a flower?" |
38829 | Is it well to devote the flower- bed to one type of vegetation only-- low herbaceous vegetation-- be that hardy or tender?... |
38829 | Is not modern garden- craft identical with the old, so far, indeed, as it hath art enough to stand any comparison with the other at all? |
38829 | Is the position true or false? |
38829 | Nay, what is one to make of even the logic of such argument as this? |
38829 | Nay, what need of artificial lakes at all if there be a running stream hard by? |
38829 | Or to the old Herbals of Wyer, and Turner, and Gerard, whom Richard Jefferies[14] pictures walking about our English lanes in old days? |
38829 | Or why should not scarlet oak and scarlet acer be grafted on common species of these genera along the margins of woods and plantations? |
38829 | The question now before us--"What ornament is fit and right for a garden?" |
38829 | The ruthless clearance of these gardens of renown is sad to relate:"For what sin has the plough passed over your pleasant places?" |
38829 | To what extent, we ask, may the forms of Nature be copied or recast? |
38829 | Was this valley the valley of death for our friend, or were the seeds of death already within him? |
38829 | What are the limits to which man may carry ideal portraiture of Nature for the purposes of Art? |
38829 | What is more charming than the effect of hollyhocks, peonies, poppies, tritomas, and tulips seen against a yew hedge? |
38829 | Where can our faculties find a happier medium of expression or a pleasanter field for display than the garden affords? |
38829 | Who will not agree with me in this? |
38829 | Why were the old- fashioned gardens destroyed? |
38829 | Why"poorer"? |
38829 | [ Footnote 4: Qu''est- ce l''expérience? |
38829 | or two sorts of Englishmen to please? |
38829 | says Newman,"what are we doing all through life, both as a necessity and a duty, but unlearning the world''s poetry, and attaining to its prose?" |
29058 | And if fruit- trees last to this age, how many ages is it to be supposed, strong and huge timber- trees will last? |
29058 | And what hurt, if that part of the tree, that before was shadowed, be now made partaker of the heat of the Sunne? |
29058 | And what other things is a vineyard, in those countries where vines doe thriue, than a large Orchard of trees bearing fruit? |
29058 | And where see we greater trees of bulke and bough, then standing on or neere the waters side? |
29058 | And where, or when, did you euer see a great tree packt on a wall? |
29058 | And who can deny, but the principall end of an Orchard, is the honest delight of one wearied with the works of his lawfull calling? |
29058 | But what hath shortned them? |
29058 | But why do I wander out of the compasse of mine Orchard, into the Forrests and Woods? |
29058 | Can there be deuised any way by nature, or art, sooner or soundlier to seeke out, and take away the heart and strength of earth, then by great trees? |
29058 | For who is able to manure an whole Orchard plot, if it be barren? |
29058 | How many apples would these haue borne? |
29058 | How many forrests and woods? |
29058 | If you aske me what vse shall be made of that waste ground betwixt tree and tree? |
29058 | If you aske why the plaines in_ Holderns_, and such countries are destitute of woods? |
29058 | Let all grow, and they will beare more fruit: and if you lop away superfluous boughes, they say, what a pitty is this? |
29058 | Nay, who did euer know a tree so vnkindly splat, come to age? |
29058 | Or what difference is there in the iuice of the Grape, and our Cyder& Perry, but the goodnes of the soile& clime where they grow? |
29058 | Page 95"_ Cur moritur homo, cum saluia crescit in horto?_"not changed. |
29058 | See you here an whole Army of mischeifes banded in troupes against the most fruitfull trees the earth beares? |
29058 | The gods of the earth, resembling the great God of heauen in authority, Maiestie, and abundance of all things, wherein is their most delight? |
29058 | What else are trees in comparison with the earth: but as haires to the body of a man? |
29058 | What is there of all these few that I haue reckoned, which doth not please the eye, the eare, the smell, and taste? |
29058 | What liuing body haue you greater then of trees? |
29058 | What more delightsome then an infinite variety of sweet smelling flowers? |
29058 | What rottennesse? |
29058 | What shall I say? |
29058 | What was_ Paradise_? |
29058 | and dying branches shall you see euery where? |
29058 | but a Garden and Orchard of trees and hearbs, full of pleasure? |
29058 | but into their Orchards? |
29058 | curtailed trunkes? |
29058 | drouping boughes? |
29058 | what dead armes? |
29058 | what hollownesse? |
29058 | what loads of mosses? |
29058 | whither? |
29058 | withered tops? |
39673 | ''Surely a few Strawberries?'' |
39673 | A gifted American lady once said to me--"Does not black seem to underlie all bright scarlet?" |
39673 | Again, how far is rook- shooting good for a rookery? |
39673 | And what remedy is there when we have used tobacco- powder and Gishurst Compound, and all in vain? |
39673 | But what must it be where this beautiful tree grows wild, as on the"Hills with high Magnolia overgrown,"where Gertrude of Wyoming was used to wander? |
39673 | By the way, is the Musk Rose still found in English gardens, and what is it? |
39673 | By the way, what could Mr. Tennyson have been thinking of when he describes his lotus- eaters as"Propt on beds of amaranth and_ moly_"? |
39673 | Can any one tell me why my Arbutus does not fruit? |
39673 | Can this phenomenon of fly- catching be accidental, or is some nice purpose concealed in it? |
39673 | Had there been in happier days a"mystère"beyond the charm of waving branches and whispering leaves? |
39673 | If such assimilation takes place, what is its purpose? |
39673 | Is it a disease( so to speak) in a particular tree, which spreads to other trees? |
39673 | Is this so, and, if so, what should be the proportion? |
39673 | Is this the right name, and is the Rose more common than I imagine? |
39673 | It is over too soon, but it can be_ supplanted_( may I say?) |
39673 | Meanwhile, why should we not more often bed out Chrysanthemums in masses, as in the Temple Gardens? |
39673 | Of other fruit I have nothing new to notice, unless it be to ask whether any one now living can smell the scent of dying Strawberry leaves? |
39673 | Or is it a blight in the air, against which we can not guard? |
39673 | Pierre Huber declares that the aphis is the_ milch- cow_ of the ant; and adds,"Who would have supposed that the ants were a_ pastoral people_?" |
39673 | Sometimes a patient says to me,''May I not have a little fruit?'' |
39673 | The bunches, it is true, are not handsome, the berries are not large, and the colour is not good; but has any Muscat a finer or more aromatic flavour? |
39673 | Was it a mere fond and foolish fancy? |
39673 | Was it his own garden at Highgate of which he thought, when he spoke of the garden in which Sylvio''s fawn was wo nt to hide? |
39673 | Was the mysterious flower, as some suggest, a Calendula( Marygold), or an Aster? |
39673 | What then can this flower be, a blue flower, which turns towards the Sun? |
39673 | Where is the double white Violet grown now? |
39673 | Why do they build in the Elm rather than the Beech? |
39673 | Why is not the Canna far more common in all our gardens? |
39673 | Why, again, do the old birds prevent the young ones from building in some particular tree? |
39673 | Will you have it?" |
39673 | [ 1] By the way, was it not Mrs. Barbauld who spoke of the Snowdrop as"an icicle changed into a flower?" |
39673 | [ 9] Why is this Anemone called_ japonica_? |
39673 | _ April 4._--Is any moment of the year more delightful than the present? |
39673 | or were the Strawberries of Elizabethan gardens different from those we are now growing? |
31729 | Better not pasture with any stock whatever; I do not think it advisable; I think the profit(?) |
31729 | But what has brought about this great change in tree and fruit? |
31729 | Dr. G. Bohrer: Do you know whether there is a source of drainage to that point? |
31729 | Dr. G. Bohrer: Would it not pay better to work them[ the culls] into cider and vinegar? |
31729 | Dr. J. Stayman: Can we prevent the borer from entering the tree? |
31729 | F. Holsinger: I would like to inquire whether your ground was thoroughly cultivated? |
31729 | For borers I use London purple, copper sulphate, Bordeaux, and Paris green[?]. |
31729 | For market I planted Ben Davis, Winesap, Missouri Pippin, Winter Duchess(? |
31729 | For market, Ben Davis, Winesap, Red Edgar(? |
31729 | For packing I prefer boxes made of slats[ lath? |
31729 | Have discarded all the specially recommended eastern[?] |
31729 | I have lessened the codling- moth by using copper sulphate solution very early[?]. |
31729 | I have one apricot tree which never bore until a swarm of bees came and lit on it, and it has borne every year since then[??]. |
31729 | I have one apricot tree which never bore until a swarm of bees came and lit on it, and it has borne every year since then[??]. |
31729 | I hunt the borers and go after them with a hot(?) |
31729 | I spray with London purple and Paris green when in full bloom[ how about bees? |
31729 | I sprayed twice last year with London purple, one or two pounds[?] |
31729 | I think a good rich[?] |
31729 | I would place it about second on the list of summer[?] |
31729 | Is it better to plant closely north and south or east and west? |
31729 | Is it there as evidence of some venture or speculation? |
31729 | Is that the experience of others? |
31729 | My trees are troubled with tobacco worms[?] |
31729 | Packs in barrels, well shaken down and pressed; marks with name of variety, and always rolls[?] |
31729 | Plant in low ground or a"draw"; advise any loose soil, but no clay subsoil(? |
31729 | Plants two- year- old trees thirty- five feet apart each way, with nothing[?] |
31729 | Prefer hilltop with square- jointed[?] |
31729 | Question:_ Does swine grazing injure orchards?_ J. W. Robison: Not if the hogs are kept out of it. |
31729 | Samuel Reynolds: Would pigs injure the soil? |
31729 | Secretary Barnes: About a year and a half ago, Governor Morrill said to me,"Why do n''t you get your people to grow Peck''s Pleasant? |
31729 | Should we diminish the feed of a vigorous horse annually for ten years, do you think he could pull the same load, or be of much value? |
31729 | Sort my apples into one class, cut out the rot, and make into apple dumplings[?]. |
31729 | Take in consideration the previous cropping of ten years, need we wonder what is the matter with our orchard? |
31729 | The ground should first be prepared by plowing as for corn; float off[?] |
31729 | The question arises, how much? |
31729 | The slats are nailed to the floor joists[?] |
31729 | The timbers[?] |
31729 | Was it imported as a curiosity? |
31729 | What is best for this locality, to break the prevailing south winds and yet have plenty of space for the roots to find moisture? |
31729 | What is our apple doing there? |
31729 | Why not? |
31729 | Why should they not do better? |
31729 | Windbreaks are essential; would make them of honey- locust, planted in rows on north[?] |
31729 | Would this have happened if the cultivation had been continued? |
31729 | [?????] |
31729 | [?????] |
31729 | [?????] |
31729 | [?????] |
31729 | [?????] |
31729 | [?] |
31729 | [?] |
31729 | [?] |
31729 | [?] |
31729 | [?] |
31729 | so as to make it pay the expense of handling the better part of the fruit? |
6117 | How about this partnership business-- does it not last sometimes after the strawberry season is over? |
6117 | Now you have two hands to work with instead of one-- so, do n''t you see? |
6117 | This man is your husband? |
6117 | What can you do after the berry season is over? |
6117 | Where is my lord protector? 6117 You are related, I suppose?" |
6117 | CHAPTER XII WHEN SHALL WE PLANT? |
6117 | Did not Nature stumble a little when man fell? |
6117 | Did she marry the rival, of surer aim and cooler head and heart, or did she haunt this place with regretful tears? |
6117 | Do you consider spring or fall the best season for planting in your locality? |
6117 | Has it a redeeming trait? |
6117 | How can it be otherwise, in view of the treatment they receive and the careless way in which they are propagated? |
6117 | How can we surpass that superb group of berries that prove their excellence year after year? |
6117 | How is it possible that an Antwerp-- one of the most tender varieties-- could have been the parent of the hardiest known raspberry? |
6117 | How often should one water? |
6117 | Idoeus_ class, and, therefore, is not adapted to our climate and light soil, but in higher latitudes and on heavy land it may prove one of the best? |
6117 | Idoeus_? |
6117 | If the business has grown to such proportions within the last half- century, may we not expect even greater increase in the future? |
6117 | If the question were asked,"Is there anything that comes from the garden better liked than a dish of strawberries?" |
6117 | Is it asked,"Why is not this done by plant- growers?" |
6117 | Is it perfectly hardy? |
6117 | Is this an average yield? |
6117 | Many ask me:"Do strawberries mix by being planted near each other?" |
6117 | Shall I root out the Charles Downing, Seth Boyden, and Monarch, and replace them with inferior kinds because they are new? |
6117 | Shall the fact that we have no such soil, and can not obtain it, discourage us? |
6117 | Shall this department of knowledge, so generally useful, be left only to technical prose? |
6117 | Should I revise these lists, as I fully expected to do, from time to time? |
6117 | The chief burden on most minds, however, is summed up in the words,"Do small fruits pay?" |
6117 | The first and most natural question will be: What is the chief need of this plant? |
6117 | Then the question arose, where were we to get the ashes? |
6117 | Therefore, the question naturally arises, what are strawberry plants and fruit made of? |
6117 | WHAT SHALL WE PLANT? |
6117 | WHEN SHALL WE PLANT? |
6117 | What could he do with that laughing woman, who no doubt had been a slave, but was now emancipated a trifle too completely? |
6117 | What fertilizer do you consider most efficient? |
6117 | What is the use of raising second, third, and fourth rate berries of the same class? |
6117 | What is your mode of culture? |
6117 | What soils are best adapted to them? |
6117 | What varieties of small fruits do best in your locality? |
6117 | What were we to do? |
6117 | What winter protection do you give, if any? |
6117 | What yo''mashin''down a half- acre o''berries fer?" |
6117 | Why? |
6117 | Will irrigation pay in our latitude, where we hope for seasonable rains? |
6117 | Would any soil be left? |
6117 | he vociferated, to the slouching, leisurely pickers that were drifting after him,"what''s de matter wid yer j''ints? |
39049 | Oh, far away in some serener air, The eyes that loved them see a heavenly dawn: How can they bloom without her tender care? 39049 What is this jolly smell all around here? |
39049 | Who is he? |
39049 | A friend says:"Do you think they will speak to you?" |
39049 | An old Narragansett coach driver called out to me,"Ye set such store on flowers, do n''t ye want to pick that Blue- pipe in Pender Zeke''s garden?" |
39049 | CHAPTER XXII ROSES OF YESTERDAY"Each morn a thousand Roses brings, you say; Yes, but where leaves the Rose of Yesterday?" |
39049 | Can you not believe that we love them still? |
39049 | Did you ever see a ghost in a garden? |
39049 | Do they not"smell sweet to the ear"? |
39049 | Do you care for color when you have such beauty of outline? |
39049 | Do you like its touch as well as its perfume? |
39049 | Do you like to bury your face in a bunch of Roses? |
39049 | Do you love to feel a Lilac spray brush your cheek in the cool of the evening? |
39049 | Do you suppose it can be natural? |
39049 | Edward Fitzgerald writes to Fanny Kemble:"Do n''t you love the Oleander? |
39049 | Have you ever smelt civet? |
39049 | Have you pleasure in the contact of a flower? |
39049 | Having this list of the names of these sturdy old annuals and perennials, what do you perceive besides the printed words? |
39049 | How many garden pictures have Hollyhocks? |
39049 | In answer to the question, What is the bluest flower in the garden or field? |
39049 | Is heliotrope a pale bluish purple? |
39049 | Is this because it is an herb instead of a purely decorative flower? |
39049 | Its readoption is advised with handsome dwellings in England, where ground- space is limited,--and why not in America, too? |
39049 | My contemplative girl lives in the city, how can she know that spring is here? |
39049 | No? |
39049 | S. was to indicate Black or Sable, and what letter was Scarlet to have? |
39049 | See the white Peony on page 44; is it not a seemly, comely thing, as well as a beautiful one? |
39049 | Some kind of a flower?" |
39049 | Sow Thistle| 5 A.M.| 11- 12 P.M. Yellow Goat- beard| 3- 5 A.M.| 9- 10(?) |
39049 | Still, who could write of sun- dials without choosing to transcribe these words of Lamb''s? |
39049 | The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table says:"Did you ever hear a poet who did not talk flowers? |
39049 | Then he said to his Mother,_ What Diet has Matthew of late fed upon_? |
39049 | Thus in the leaves of plants every shade of green is pleasing; then why is there no charm in a green flower? |
39049 | Was she of real life, or fiction? |
39049 | What could we send to the blind? |
39049 | What shall I say? |
39049 | When I visit the garden I always ask"Where is Job?" |
39049 | Where in all English verse are fairer flower hues? |
39049 | Who plants the seeds of Lupines in the barren soil? |
39049 | Who watereth the Lupines in the field?" |
39049 | Why are all the old appliances for raising water so pleasing? |
39049 | Why is it almost everywhere banished? |
39049 | Why should they live when her sweet life is gone?" |
39049 | You remember how commonplace their clothes were? |
39049 | You''ve read_ Lavengro_? |
39049 | all pink flowers near each other? |
39049 | all red flowers side by side? |
39049 | and what place has the Violet? |
39049 | is n''t this Crown- imperial a glorious plant? |
39049 | or shall we plant severely by colors-- all yellow flowers in a border together? |
39049 | the Flower de Luce? |
39049 | whence came thy dazzling hue? |
39049 | with Abundance and Variety? |
19408 | ''Step lively''? |
19408 | Can you tell me what shrub this is? |
19408 | Well,demanded one brave urchin,"what made''em go and plant a lot of bushes right on first base?" |
19408 | Where are you going? |
19408 | Why should I? |
19408 | Why? |
19408 | Also, how much will your purse allow? |
19408 | And if so, do you love only those parts of it which you never see and the appearance of which you have no power to modify? |
19408 | And if you are young and a lover of your country, do you not love its physical aspects,"its rocks and rills, its woods and templed hills"? |
19408 | And where did_ civitas_ get its name, when city and state were one, but from citizen? |
19408 | Because a garden should not, any more than my lady''s face, have all its features-- nose, eyes, ears, lips-- of one size? |
19408 | Because they belong to you? |
19408 | But of the really good sorts are there shrubs enough, you ask, to afford new lists year after year? |
19408 | But our home gardens, our home gardeners, either professional or amateur, where are they? |
19408 | But to have no garden is a distinct poverty in a householder''s life, whether he knows it or not, and-- suppose he very much wants a garden? |
19408 | Can you imagine a young man or woman without it? |
19408 | Do n''t they do it?" |
19408 | Does this seem hardly fair to the first garden? |
19408 | For what says the brave old song- couplet of New England''s mothers? |
19408 | For who was there to tell them or him that he was not one? |
19408 | How could they without tools? |
19408 | How much subserviency of nature to art and utility is really necessary to my own and my friends''and neighbors''best delight? |
19408 | How much, then, of nature''s subserviency does the range of your tastes demand? |
19408 | I lately heard a lady ask an amateur gardener,"What is the garden''s foundation principle?" |
19408 | If I describe it I must preface with all the disclaimers of a self- conscious amateur whose most venturesome argument goes no farther than"Why not?" |
19408 | If I should, where were my climax?" |
19408 | Is the term merely comparative? |
19408 | Is the world already artificial enough? |
19408 | May I repeat it? |
19408 | No? |
19408 | Oh, say, can you_ see_--? |
19408 | Or do you love the land only and not the people, the nation, the government? |
19408 | Or shall we make our plea to an"art impulse"? |
19408 | Or, loving these, have you no love for the nearest public fraction of it, your own town and neighbors? |
19408 | Otherwise, why do you let us call them yours? |
19408 | Shall we summarize? |
19408 | To say nothing of prizes, was not the garden itself its own reward?" |
19408 | Was he not right? |
19408 | Was it not Ruskin himself who wanted to butt the railway- train off the track and paw up the rails-- something like that? |
19408 | What makes a man rich? |
19408 | What maxim is? |
19408 | What shall we do about it? |
19408 | Whence comes civilization but from_ civitas_, the city? |
19408 | Where to Plant What? |
19408 | Whereupon he shrewdly pleads not for the sward but for the flowers,"You have those there to show off at their best?" |
19408 | Why is it so often right that a rich college, for example, should, in its money- chest, feel poor? |
19408 | Why should New Orleans so exceptionally choose to garden, and garden with such exceptional grace? |
19408 | Why should it? |
19408 | Will he know the smallest fact about it or yield any echo of your interest in it? |
19408 | Would n''t you?" |
19408 | You see the difference? |
19408 | [ Illustration:"''Where are you going?'' |
20032 | How, then, explain the undoubted discomfort that many people experience after eating nuts? 20032 ***** DR. ZIMMERMAN: Have you ever known anything about the Marmaton, owned by J. E. Tipke at Rockwell, Missouri? 20032 ***** MR. BRICKER: Have any of you come in contact with a black walnut, seemingly deformed, in which there is only one lobe in the shell? 20032 59 9 3.00 L. S. Huff, White Pigeon, Mich. ovalis? 20032 63 5 5.00[ A]Mrs. Hamill Goheen, Pennsylvania Furnace, Pa. Dunbarii? 20032 64 4 5.00 Steve Green, Battle Creek, Mich. ovalis? 20032 And how shall this best be accomplished? 20032 Bixbyi? 20032 Can he do the same with immunizing? 20032 Could you tell us how the eradication was done? 20032 DR. COLBY: Do you use any fertilizer in your orchard? 20032 DR. DEMING: Could you make an artificial ball in which the roots of a plant could be packed? 20032 DR. DEMING: Do you use the hammer in cracking entirely? 20032 DR. DEMING: What do you mean by 50% cracker? 20032 DR. DEMING: Why do you not use the mechanical cracker? 20032 DR. DEMING: Why is n''t the chestnut more appreciated in this country? 20032 DR. DRAKE: Did you call it by another name before? 20032 DR. DRAKE: Have you kept these eighteen months in good order? 20032 DR. SMITH: Did you try sphagnum moss? 20032 DR. SMITH: Do you know where the seed was procured? 20032 DR. SMITH: Does the curly character show in the sap wood or the heart? 20032 DR. SMITH: Have you any evidence for or against the decline of immunity in the tree? 20032 DR. SMITH: Have you seen chestnut grafts root as the apple does? 20032 DR. SMITH: How do you know it is a hybrid? 20032 DR. SMITH: How early can you cut them? 20032 DR. SMITH: How long will it take? 20032 DR. SMITH: Is n''t smallpox vaccination against your theory? 20032 DR. SMITH: Something like the Ben Davis? 20032 DR. SMITH: That kills the mold, two hours''exposure? 20032 DR. SMITH: Thus far you have established immunity in the living tree? 20032 DR. SMITH: What season? 20032 DR. SMITH: What would be the effect of putting in some beeswax? 20032 DR. SMITH: Wood of that year or previous? 20032 DR. ZIMMERMAN: Are you sure it was the paraffin? 20032 Do you intend to vaccinate the chestnut and make it immune and then expect it to transmit that immunity in its seed? 20032 Do you not think the commercial value of the black walnut is best tested by using a mechanical cracker? 20032 Dunbarii? 20032 Dunbarii? 20032 Get a permit from Washington? 20032 Has Dr. Deming anything to offer? 20032 Have you checked up in the second generation? 20032 How long do you do that? 20032 How long have these scions been growing? 20032 Is it better to cut the wood when entirely dormant, or would it grow better if cut when the sap starts in the spring? 20032 MEMBER: Any varieties of this that bloom late? 20032 MEMBER: How about the Stratford? 20032 MEMBER: How does it crack? 20032 MEMBER: How would we get them in? 20032 MEMBER: What did you crack them with? 20032 MEMBER: When is the best time to gather scion wood? 20032 MR. BOYCE: What would be a reasonable price for grafting? 20032 MR. BOYCE: Would it be a good plan to plant black walnuts and grow the seedlings right where you want your orchard? 20032 MR. HARRINGTON: Do you remember when we were down at the Riehl nursery that we ran into a chestnut that produces 7 to 9 in a burr? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: Could n''t we pass a law here, as they have in Germany, that every man has to plant thirty trees before he can get married? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: Have any of you had experience in grafting on the north side of the stock? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: How long? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: I would like to ask why insist on introducing the chestnut when we have the black walnut? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: Is n''t this only carried on until you get natural resistance? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: Juglan regia? 20032 MR. HERSHEY: Would soil conditions have anything to do with it? 20032 MR. WEBER: Did you notice any bad results? 20032 MR. WEBER: May I ask how hot it got that summer? 20032 MR. WEBER: What kind of paraffin did you use? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Any further discussion of this interesting paper? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Did you get any Japanese walnuts? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Deming, what is your observation of the Stabler with one lobe? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Have you found a first class butternut? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Have you specimens of all of these? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Is that a little town in Iowa? 20032 THE PRESIDENT: Was n''t there one tree there with a spread of 125 feet? 20032 Was that the one named Gibbons? 20032 What can we do to make it better known? 20032 Why are n''t the farmers acquainted with the possibilities of growing chestnuts here in the middle west? 20032 Why? 20032 You never sterilize the inside in any way? 20032 ovata 65 3 10.00 John Roddy, Napoleon, Ohio Dunbarii? 21516 --Is that north or south out there in Kansas? 21516 1919 Discussion MR. McDANIEL: What age and height were these trees when planted? 21516 Any comments on layers? 21516 Any discussion and criticism both destructive and constructive? 21516 Any further discussion? 21516 Anyone having any difficulty? 21516 Anyone hear about the hickory and chestnut weevil? 21516 C. S. WALTERS: May I interrupt? 21516 DR. ROHRBACHER: Any questions or remarks? 21516 DR. ROHRBACHER: Do I hear it seconded? 21516 DR. ROHRBACHER: Is the committee ready to report? 21516 Discussion MEMBER: 300 board feet per acre per year? 21516 Has the weevil disappeared entirely? 21516 How do they have such big crops? 21516 How many Hoosiers here? 21516 How many here from Ohio today? 21516 I asked him,Do you know you are a life member of that association?" |
21516 | I think that we have any amount of evidence that Chinese chestnuts can be rooted from cuttings, but can trees grow on from rooting cuttings? |
21516 | If your scion is not the same size it might over lap or... how do you handle that? |
21516 | In pinching back, do you mean that the actual growth rate is changed, or that debudding will suppress the entire tree? |
21516 | In top working a seedling tree? |
21516 | Is there anything further to take up under the heading of helping our secretary? |
21516 | MEMBER: After you have produced all these grafts, what are you going to do with them? |
21516 | MEMBER: Did they bear after you grafted them? |
21516 | MEMBER: Did you ever try not to? |
21516 | MEMBER: Did you say Northern Peninsula of Michigan? |
21516 | MEMBER: Did you try layering? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do I understand that most any place along that tree trunk there are adventitious buds? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do I understand the common spittle bug is an enemy to nut trees? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do you get away from the bad effects of BHC by using lindane? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do you recommend two year wood for budding? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do you think the figure could be propagated by asexual propagation? |
21516 | MEMBER: Do you wax the graft? |
21516 | MEMBER: Does the Chinese chestnut seed have a rest period? |
21516 | MEMBER: Has anyone tried to deep freeze? |
21516 | MEMBER: Have you had any success in bench grafting of the chestnuts? |
21516 | MEMBER: He uses a speed sprayer, does n''t he? |
21516 | MEMBER: How about Niblack? |
21516 | MEMBER: How about eating quality? |
21516 | MEMBER: How about mound layering? |
21516 | MEMBER: How does that compare in Missouri? |
21516 | MEMBER: How far removed from other varieties do they have to be? |
21516 | MEMBER: Is it thought to be acquired or hereditary? |
21516 | MEMBER: Is that 7916 a pretty good sized nut? |
21516 | MEMBER: May I ask the time of the year when you pruned? |
21516 | MEMBER: What are the stumpage prices? |
21516 | MEMBER: What do you disinfect those cuts with? |
21516 | MEMBER: What do you mean by membership-- members or officers? |
21516 | MEMBER: What factors suppress them? |
21516 | MEMBER: What percent of failures do you expect on a hundred? |
21516 | MEMBER: What time do you recommend budding? |
21516 | MEMBER: Where would it rank in the ability to bear? |
21516 | MEMBER: Would n''t it do better if you dipped the top in paraffin or something? |
21516 | MEMBER: Would you explain that? |
21516 | MEMBER: Your lattitude is about the same as Evansville? |
21516 | MR. CHANDLER: Did you see these big trees where I told you about having the crop? |
21516 | MR. CORSAN: Would you call the Chinese chestnut a second? |
21516 | MR. CRAIG: Curly walnut would be worth more? |
21516 | MR. DAVIDSON: In connection with this rapid growth, is there any difference in the quality of the wood? |
21516 | MR. MAGILL: Do you find your bearing earlier? |
21516 | MR. MAGILL: Do you plant seedlings where you want them to grow and then later top work? |
21516 | MR. MAGILL: In Iowa, out there, what varieties are making good? |
21516 | MR. O''ROURKE: Are there any other questions pertaining to seeds? |
21516 | MR. O''ROURKE: Is it not a fact that... seed has no true rest period as we know it with trees? |
21516 | MR. O''ROURKE: Shall we move to vegetative propagation and consider cuttings first? |
21516 | MR. SHERMAN: What is the best method of treating the chestnut seeds in the fall to prevent the development of weevils? |
21516 | May I have those slides? |
21516 | Shall we have a motion? |
21516 | The one thing you want to know is,"how much is it worth?" |
21516 | Though you say pruning dwarfs the tree, actually the root is still there and given enough time will not the tree recover? |
21516 | What are the processes to check that? |
21516 | What can be easier than growing a timber tree in the woodlands? |
21516 | What factors would you take into consideration in trying to make a decision? |
21516 | What is your best offer for them?" |
21516 | What is your observation on these northern pecans? |
21516 | When the wood matures, will it have the same value for furniture and so on as the slower growing ones? |
21516 | Which one shall we take up first? |
21516 | Who grows most of the Chinese chestnuts, germinates most of the seed? |
21516 | Why not plant the hicans? |
21516 | Will the Illinois people rise, both members and visitors? |
21516 | Will the members from these two states rise briefly? |
21516 | Would they be more like the softwood? |
21516 | [ 1] MEMBER: Are there just two broods? |
19373 | Nutty,do we hear someone suggest? |
19373 | Well, Lige,inquired the thrifty spouse,"Did you find out''bout that''ditto''we did n''t get? |
19373 | Adopt resolutions? |
19373 | And what about the labor involved in raising and harvesting the English walnut crop in question? |
19373 | And why not? |
19373 | Are there any remarks? |
19373 | Are there any remarks? |
19373 | Are you ready for the question? |
19373 | But did the Anti- Saloon League, for example, content itself with resolutions when it wanted real results in the halls of legislation? |
19373 | But how about the strip of land along the roadside, an aggregate waste of at least one per cent of the acreages of eastern farms? |
19373 | CHARACTERISTICS OF THE RESISTANT TREES What now are the characteristics of these resistant trees? |
19373 | DR. KELLOGG: Do you use the same method in transferring buds? |
19373 | DR. KELLOGG: Dr. Morris, how old hickories may be used for grafting? |
19373 | DR. KELLOGG: When should the scions be cut? |
19373 | DR. MORRIS: How many members have we, Mr. President? |
19373 | Do n''t they run very largely for Persian walnuts? |
19373 | Do you cover the scion with paraffin or only the union? |
19373 | Does any one have anything to present while we are waiting for the secretary, who is busy? |
19373 | Has that been attended to? |
19373 | How are we going to know one when we see it? |
19373 | How shall we bring this about? |
19373 | How then explain the undoubted discomforture that many people experience after eating nuts? |
19373 | I said,"Why do you keep them out here?" |
19373 | I think Mr. Bixby said,"Why do n''t you try grafting on that kind of material?" |
19373 | IS THE DISEASE RESISTANCE HERE AN HEREDITARY CHARACTER? |
19373 | In other words, is it worth while to plant them with that point in view? |
19373 | Is the freeing of the acorn and its tannin and other objectionable substances a practical consideration? |
19373 | Is there anything else that should come up at the morning session? |
19373 | Is there anything else we want to bring up at this morning session? |
19373 | Is there anything else you wish to ask before we leave this topic? |
19373 | It is not quite sure of itself in many cases, and when it is not sure of itself, when it has a fear, what does it do? |
19373 | MR. BIXBY: Can any one here tell me where seedlings of the big western shellback, Carya laciniosa, can be obtained? |
19373 | MR. JONES: Some of your varieties are hybrids are n''t they? |
19373 | MR. MCGLENNON: Can the secretary tell us how many members there are? |
19373 | MR. MCGLENNON: Has there been provision made for a paper on filberts by Mr. Vollertsen? |
19373 | MR. MCGLENNON: How many states are included in the northern association territory? |
19373 | MR. MCGLENNON: Is this not a very good field to open up operations along that line, right here at Battle Creek? |
19373 | MR. OLCOTT: The committee as you suggested it is Dr. Morris, Mr. J. F. Jones, Mr. Linton, Mr. McGlennon and myself? |
19373 | MR. SIMMONDS: Has that another name? |
19373 | MR. SIMONDS: Are they raising nuts in Michigan on pines? |
19373 | Mr. Secretary, are there any other things that ought to come up that you think of? |
19373 | Mr. Secretary, do you know of anything else? |
19373 | Now what was the reason for this immense pleasure I found in working among those plants? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: Are there any questions you would like to ask Mr. Simonds while he is with us, or is there any discussion? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: Are you ready for the question? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: Have you any suggestions as to whom you want on that committee? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: How many members? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: Is there any discussion? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: What is the next thing on the program, Mr. Secretary? |
19373 | PRESIDENT REED: You get better results, Mr. Jones, from waxing the entire scion? |
19373 | QUESTION: Are pecans a variety of hickory? |
19373 | QUESTION: Can you successfully graft a pecan on the pignut? |
19373 | QUESTION: Do you prefer the melted paraffin to the old- fashioned way of using bees wax? |
19373 | QUESTION: Does the hazel find its way into the market commercially? |
19373 | QUESTION: Does the stock you graft on have any effect on the quality of the fruit? |
19373 | QUESTION: How many grafts would be necessary on a nut tree twelve inches in diameter? |
19373 | QUESTION: In summer grafting do you remove the leaves from scions? |
19373 | QUESTION: Is the hazel a long lived tree? |
19373 | QUESTION: What is the best stock to graft pecan on? |
19373 | QUESTION: What is the best time of year? |
19373 | Suppose we want to give them good care, what are we going to do? |
19373 | That is, is their biological value as satisfactory as their digestibility? |
19373 | That was your idea, Mr. Bixby, was it? |
19373 | To prune or graft them? |
19373 | VOICE: About what degree of heat is best for the wax? |
19373 | VOICE: Do you use anything besides the hickory as stock for grafting on? |
19373 | VOICE: How do you apply the hot wax? |
19373 | VOICE: How large black walnut trees could be top worked to English walnuts? |
19373 | VOICE: Will it be practical to plant nuts, get young plants, and then bud or graft them? |
19373 | Was it perhaps from the commercial or financial point of view, the future income from them for fruit or when the plants reached a saleable age? |
19373 | Was n''t there a committee on nominations for officers to be elected, this morning? |
19373 | We then ask the next question: Are nuts adequate as far as their proteins contain these essential amino acids, and do nuts contain vitamines? |
19373 | What did you find?" |
19373 | What do we mean by"pignut?" |
19373 | What is the first? |
19373 | What is the irritating principle of the English walnut? |
19373 | What is your pleasure? |
19373 | What is your pleasure? |
19373 | What then were the results of the survey? |
19373 | Who else shall we have, for a second member? |
19373 | Why do nut oils tend to become rancid easily and can this tendency be remedied? |
19373 | You cut the top off did n''t you? |
19373 | |? |
19373 | |? |
32205 | ''And all incidental expenses? |
32205 | ''Are there any white ones among them?'' |
32205 | ''Are they poisonous?'' |
32205 | ''By the bye,''said that gentleman,''are you aware that Mr. Blank started this morning in the direction of Tovar?'' |
32205 | ''Did you arrest him?'' |
32205 | ''Feed the father?'' |
32205 | ''For hunting?'' |
32205 | ''How much?'' |
32205 | ''How will you get them?'' |
32205 | ''I told you they was rum chaps, did n''t I? |
32205 | ''In the cellar? |
32205 | ''Is there a village in the neighbourhood where they treat their cocks as you do, and could you make a match for next Sunday? |
32205 | ''Is there any danger?'' |
32205 | ''Is this mine? |
32205 | ''Is this-- is this mine?'' |
32205 | ''Say, Mis''r George, you tell nobody-- honour bright?-not nobody?'' |
32205 | ''So in November last year some hundreds or thousands of a remarkable orchid were offered at Protheroe''s under the title"L. pumila(?)." |
32205 | ''Well, you will pay me the fifty dollars promised?'' |
32205 | ''Well,''he said,''what will you give me?'' |
32205 | ''What are these Cattleyas?'' |
32205 | ''What did they do with it?'' |
32205 | ''What have the orchids done to him?'' |
32205 | ''What is that?'' |
32205 | ''What shall we pay?'' |
32205 | ''What sort of a thing is it, after all? |
32205 | ''What your matter, sir?'' |
32205 | ''Which way has the villain gone? |
32205 | ''Why?'' |
32205 | ''Will you buy the Cattleya?'' |
32205 | ''You are on bad terms with the Cura?'' |
32205 | ''You say nugget, hey?'' |
32205 | ''You took it from Ahtan?'' |
32205 | And can I get Dyaks?'' |
32205 | As for the rest--_quien sabe_? |
32205 | Before going further, Oversluys asked whether the orchids were white? |
32205 | But in that bloody realm of Brunei to whom should a wise man complain? |
32205 | But suppose the enemy used this device to ensnare him? |
32205 | But what can be said in a few lines? |
32205 | But what is the use? |
32205 | But who would climb the church roof in the dark? |
32205 | Can you lead us round to the other side? |
32205 | Could one of the three parents named supply this colour? |
32205 | D''you call yourself a gore- stained British seaman, Forster? |
32205 | D''you think you can hide this from the fetich? |
32205 | Did his brother know where it was? |
32205 | Does it not seem to follow that man should rise to his highest level there? |
32205 | Every hearer asked, of course, how the race could avoid extinction under such circumstances? |
32205 | He asked his brother how he was regarded? |
32205 | He asked whether it could possibly be worth while to quarrel with these customers for the sake of a very few dollars? |
32205 | He was looking for orchids, however, and who could have expected to find an Oncidium buried among herbage in the open ground? |
32205 | Horrible, is n''t it?'' |
32205 | How did they do it?'' |
32205 | How should a white flower be there? |
32205 | I say, what will you give for a dozen?'' |
32205 | I say, what''ll old Cutter look like when he sees_ that_?'' |
32205 | In short, could Mr. Spicer give him a''job''? |
32205 | In short, here was a fortune for the gathering-- and what terms would Mr. Brown offer him? |
32205 | Is it not so?'' |
32205 | Is it unreasonable then to believe, as was said, that orchids were designed at their inception to comfort the elect in this anxious age? |
32205 | Is that how they do there? |
32205 | It will not be counted against me for a sin, brother?'' |
32205 | Mine? |
32205 | Must we admit, then, that a Dendrobium of the Himalayas( crystallinum) does not differ generically from an Epidendrum of Mexico( radicans)? |
32205 | Now will you show me your huaco?'' |
32205 | Now, you will give me a trifle for my poor?'' |
32205 | Opinions? |
32205 | See? |
32205 | That mysterious spot on the hills? |
32205 | The Cura, an amiable veteran, did not doubt that she had been carried off by force; was not this girl the most devout and dutiful in the parish? |
32205 | The sagacious reader will begin to ask by this time what are the disadvantages to set against all these merits? |
32205 | The white man wanted them for medicine? |
32205 | There was a moment''s silence for thought; then the president, gravely:''You, Carib Sam, what you say?'' |
32205 | Was it a real good placer, with nuggets in it?--how much had they pouched, and was the game likely to last? |
32205 | Well, two of these fellows have married-- one, a Potato, has married the Stomach of a pig----''''Eh?'' |
32205 | What boon granted to mankind stands in like case? |
32205 | What could tempt a French captain to the Atlantic shore of Costa Rica? |
32205 | What did the Cacique do with his nosegay since he was not allowed to deposit it on the altar? |
32205 | What do we do wrong?'' |
32205 | What follows? |
32205 | What possessed you?'' |
32205 | What sort of flower was it? |
32205 | What sort of man is your Padre?'' |
32205 | What''s the good? |
32205 | Where you think Ahtan?'' |
32205 | Why should a people living as do these restrict the number of their children? |
32205 | Why should they limit the family? |
32205 | Would the Tuan object to this little speculation? |
32205 | Yes? |
32205 | You did n''t get''em all to- day?'' |
32205 | You hear?'' |
32205 | You pay?'' |
32205 | You says, mine, sir? |
32205 | You understand? |
32205 | cried Arnold,''is he here?'' |
32205 | got any weeds to sell? |
22312 | ***** President Morris: Are there any comments upon this paper of Mr. Hales? |
22312 | 1 What type of nut do you consider the"Juglans mandshurica"to be? |
22312 | 3 Is it a nut of commercial or other value? |
22312 | 4 How was it introduced into this country? |
22312 | 5 What are the characteristics of the tree? |
22312 | 6 Have you raised them yourself or can you say who has? |
22312 | 7 Can you send samples or say where they can be obtained? |
22312 | Another would say,"Is n''t this a fine thin shelled nut?" |
22312 | Are we likely to find more species among the hickories than the ones already described? |
22312 | Are we to raise immune chestnuts? |
22312 | Can we expect such results in topworking our own hickories? |
22312 | Can you tell us what stocks the Hales hickory is grafted upon? |
22312 | Do they have to hull the Persian walnuts? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: Are we going to have success in topworking, and by what method? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: Did he practice spraying experiments carefully? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: How did you know they were hybrids, by the appearance? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: Is n''t that a most promising field for experiment, in producing blight- free varieties, and also in spraying? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: Mr. Littlepage has had some success in budding hickory very early, have n''t you? |
22312 | Doctor Deming: Then had we not better include the President,_ ex- officio_, on that committee? |
22312 | Does Stuart maintain its reputation for hardiness in his locality? |
22312 | Had you thought it out? |
22312 | Has anyone had experience along this line? |
22312 | Has that been worked out? |
22312 | Have we many parallels in the field of mycology? |
22312 | How about the bearing in that kind of a tree? |
22312 | How do you explain that, Professor Craig? |
22312 | How many people who eat nuts know anything about their quality? |
22312 | I presume you meant of the southern pecans? |
22312 | IS THERE A FUTURE FOR_ JUGLANS REGIA_ AND_ HICORIA PECAN_ IN NEW YORK AND NEW ENGLAND? |
22312 | In connection with any disease of this sort, one naturally inquires, how are we going to recognize this disease? |
22312 | Is it not remarkable that so little effort has been made to extend the natural range of this superb native nut northward? |
22312 | Is n''t this a line of observation we have got to follow out in adapting pecans to northern fields? |
22312 | Is there any discussion on this paper? |
22312 | Is there any further discussion on this point? |
22312 | Luther Burbank:( Does it resemble the Persian walnut--)_ No._(--or the butternut?) |
22312 | Mr. Brown: Can anyone give me any information on grafting chestnuts? |
22312 | Mr. Brown: What about the position of the graft? |
22312 | Mr. Collins: Is n''t the size of the fruit increased in the case of apples? |
22312 | Mr. Collins: Is n''t this subject one in which the Association might interest itself? |
22312 | Mr. Collins: May I call attention to another complication? |
22312 | Mr. Jensen: Does the plant grow more rapidly when it is grafted than on its own stock? |
22312 | Mr. Jensen: In your grafting, what was the relationship of the rapidity of the growth of top after grafting, compared with the old stock? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage, will you take the chair? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: Do you know the variety of hickory that it was topworked to? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: Have you none of the Indiana varieties? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: What is its bearing record as to quantity? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: What varieties have you there? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: What would you prophesy about the average seedling Persian walnut tree as to success and quality of nut? |
22312 | Mr. Littlepage: Where were your northern grown nuts stratified? |
22312 | Mr. Pomeroy: Did he bud on black walnut stock? |
22312 | Mr. Pomeroy: How long should the paper sack be left? |
22312 | Mr. Pomeroy: I want to ask if he thinks he will have any difficulty in transplanting those black walnuts seven or eight years old? |
22312 | Mr. Reed( Washington, D. C.): But trees of Stuart are in bearing? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: At what age did the original trees begin to bear? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: Does the mere operation of grafting or budding influence earliness of bearing? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: Have you ever found any individual trees in infested districts that were immune? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: Have you seen that with other fruits, Professor Craig? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: How is it elsewhere than in New York? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: I would like to ask Professor Craig to what extent he would select seed for nursery purposes? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: Is Mr. Lake''s point always true, that the stock below the point of union remains a normal hickory? |
22312 | Mr. Reed: You have n''t seen any nuts yet? |
22312 | Mr. Wilcox( Pennsylvania): How do you prepare your stocks for budding and grafting, in pots? |
22312 | Mr. Wilcox: Have you prepared any stocks in pots at all? |
22312 | Mr. Wilcox: What kind of pots do you use? |
22312 | Now, in the midst of this disaster, what was the behavior of my experimental chestnuts of various kinds? |
22312 | President Morris: Are we likely to have success along that line by some modification of the plan? |
22312 | President Morris: Do you have the common hazel abundant? |
22312 | President Morris: Does that work out logically in that way, is it a comparative matter all the time? |
22312 | President Morris: Have the members anything to say about the Stringfellow method of transplanting hickories? |
22312 | President Morris: How about getting callus by three months, we will say, in storage? |
22312 | President Morris: How long do they keep them in the nurseries? |
22312 | President Morris: Professor Lake, will you speak on any of these points? |
22312 | President Morris: Shall we make Mr. Reed''s motion take the place of Doctor Deming''s? |
22312 | President Morris: Shall we say that nuts for the connoisseur should not be bleached? |
22312 | President Morris: What could be finer than your English walnuts? |
22312 | President Morris: What has been your experience, Mr. Roper? |
22312 | President Morris: Will that have to go as another motion or as an amendment to Doctor Deming''s? |
22312 | Prof. E. R. Lake, Washington, D. C. 100 Discussion 102 Is There a Future for Juglans Regia and Hicoria Pecan in New York and New England? |
22312 | Professor Collins: Does n''t there seem to be antagonism between eastern Asiatic other than Japanese and Japanese? |
22312 | Professor Collins: Is there any antagonism between eastern Asian and Japanese? |
22312 | Professor Collins? |
22312 | Professor Craig: Did n''t you see his plantation of top worked hickories? |
22312 | Professor Craig: Do you mean whip grafting? |
22312 | Professor Craig: In growing your hickories from root cuttings, have you had any trouble from excessive sprouting? |
22312 | Professor Craig: May I add one word? |
22312 | Professor Craig: May I say that it seems to me there are one or two matters arising out of the Secretary''s report which are worthy of special action? |
22312 | Professor Craig: Should not the Secretary be empowered to send a copy of those resolutions to the Commissioner of Agriculture? |
22312 | Professor Craig: What is your minimum temperature? |
22312 | Professor Craig: What method do you employ? |
22312 | Professor Lake: At what time was the ringing done? |
22312 | Professor Lake: Does that complete all the committees? |
22312 | Professor Lake: Does that statement, that you think it does n''t make much difference about the parent of the nuts for stock, apply to walnuts? |
22312 | Professor Lake: Have we a committee on nomenclature? |
22312 | Professor Lake: How long did it require? |
22312 | Professor Lake: I would like to ask if you did n''t bud or graft the best stocks in the row too? |
22312 | Professor Lake: You do n''t know how successful the callousing has been? |
22312 | Q 2 Does it resemble the Persian walnut or the butternut? |
22312 | Rush: Were those buds then of the year previous?. |
22312 | Shall we call the little one shagbark, and the big shagbark shellbark, or must we always depend upon the scientific names in classifying? |
22312 | Shall we designate these hybrids as"shellcans,""shagcans,"or"hickcans,"after the nomenclatural methods of present day plant breeders? |
22312 | Supposing you have a mechanical union perfected, what is the difference in the food that different species of the same genus transmit? |
22312 | That was the Stuart, was it not? |
22312 | The question has been asked more often than otherwise, why do we find the disease on the tops of hills away from the water? |
22312 | What do you think about that, Professor Craig? |
22312 | What had you in mind particularly? |
22312 | What has been your experience, Mr. Littlepage? |
22312 | What have the Meehans done? |
22312 | What hickory is that? |
22312 | What influence would the characters of the parent tree from which the seed came have on the grafted tree? |
22312 | What is the condition of the wood of those large growths of walnuts? |
22312 | What would you anticipate, Professor Craig? |
22312 | Who has had experience? |
22312 | Why would n''t those grow? |
25935 | What does thatAmerican"see in our nuts? |
25935 | A man said to me some time ago,"I wonder why God made the hicans the cross between the pecans and the hickory?" |
25935 | And she said,"Why do they bear regular crops and this good tree that makes so many fine, big kernels bears every other year?" |
25935 | Any other discussion on hickory varieties? |
25935 | Are there any questions? |
25935 | Are there in America no nuts?" |
25935 | Beside the above mentioned questions I added: What is the name and address of the owner of the tree, and its location? |
25935 | But can you plant dry seed any time during the winter? |
25935 | Could it be the winter rest period? |
25935 | DR. COLBY: How do you remove the hulls? |
25935 | DR. MCKAY: Did I understand you to mention the variety Schinnerling? |
25935 | DR. MCKAY: Will you tell us something about how you handle the nuts in your plant, how they are hulled and cracked, and so forth? |
25935 | Did it occur here? |
25935 | Did you have a further report, Mr. Secretary? |
25935 | Do I hear such a motion? |
25935 | Do I hear such a motion? |
25935 | Do pecan seed have a rest period, and is there any difference between pecans and hickory in that respect? |
25935 | Do we have any discussion on this proposal? |
25935 | Do you know whether that is still there at the Jones place, that Turkish tree hazel, Mrs. Weber? |
25935 | Does he receive more money if it contains a higher percent of kernels? |
25935 | Does n''t the Winkler hold its catkins most years? |
25935 | Dr. McKay? |
25935 | Going on with the program of the evening, are you ready to show the film? |
25935 | Has anyone any comments on hickory varieties? |
25935 | Have you anything to say about that, Mr. O''Rourke? |
25935 | Have you had some experience, Mr. Ferguson? |
25935 | Have you seen it? |
25935 | How about everything in this room? |
25935 | How about it, Slate? |
25935 | How does the chairman keep the squirrels from eating them? |
25935 | How does the disease jump from one infection center to healthy trees 200 yards, 2 miles or even 100 miles away? |
25935 | How many are growing the Wilcox? |
25935 | How many find it a good variety? |
25935 | How many have Davis? |
25935 | How many pounds of the nuts the tree yielded that year? |
25935 | How old, tall and thick the trunk of tree is? |
25935 | I have spoken of the value of trees for the preservation of wild life, but how do trees affect the life of man and how does man affect tree life? |
25935 | I said,"Why ca n''t we get the dirt somewhere else? |
25935 | I said,"You mean they are going to destroy those trees?" |
25935 | If not, let us take up Mr. Beckert''s question: When do you take scion wood of the shagbark hickory? |
25935 | In what kind of soil does it thrive? |
25935 | Is Dr. McKay in the room? |
25935 | Is it a native fungus, or imported? |
25935 | Is that due to the exceptional vigor of Rockville which apparently is a hybrid and may have hybrid vigor? |
25935 | Is that right, Mr. Bolten? |
25935 | Is that right? |
25935 | Is that true, Mr. Salzer? |
25935 | Is that your experience? |
25935 | Is there a motion to approve these names? |
25935 | Is there a second? |
25935 | Is there any further business to come before this group at this time? |
25935 | Is there anything further? |
25935 | Is there in the nuts, leaves and bark any sign of cross- pollination? |
25935 | Let us think for a minute, what are the things of the greatest value in this room? |
25935 | MR, GERARDI: Big as your thumb? |
25935 | MR. BECKERT: Are the hickory stocks potted before you graft, or are you grafting bare roots? |
25935 | MR. CRAIG: Have you tried hickory on pecan? |
25935 | MR. DAVIDSON: Do you know anything as to the bearing of black walnuts this year as compared to previous years? |
25935 | MR. FERGUSON: Do you carry higher temperatures for walnuts? |
25935 | MR. FERGUSON: What temperature do you use in the frames? |
25935 | MR. GERARDI: How big is that Schinnerling? |
25935 | MR. LEMKE: What do you do when you strike a day that is very humid and the nuts start getting moldy? |
25935 | MR. MACHOVINA: After spraying for shuck maggot with DDT do you encourage the presence of mites? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Do you have Medium Long? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Do you have any indication that you get a better quality nut from one county or one area than you do from another? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Have you fruited the Weschke at Beltsville? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Is that doing well? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: What species is the Shaul, is it_ ovata_ or_ laciniosa_? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: You do n''t notice any difference, do you, between the Missouri and the Kentucky nuts? |
25935 | MR. MURPHY: Do you pay a premium for cultivated nuts? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Any other comment on that? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Any other discussion on stocks that will take wet soil conditions? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Are you familiar with Mr. Lassiter''s stock work? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Do I understand you correctly that you do feel that the pecan must be after- ripened? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Is that clearly understood that there will be no attempt made to delete the section on affiliation? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Will the bitternut do better, or would the mockernut? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: You would say probably 10 days to 2 weeks before the bud scales would break? |
25935 | MR. ROHRBACHER: On what basis do you buy black walnuts? |
25935 | MR. SALZER: Can you tell me if the farmer is paid by the weight of the nuts, or does he receive his pay after the kernels are shelled out? |
25935 | MR. SALZER: Which varieties will grow on fairly wet soil? |
25935 | MR. SAWYER: How is the Ryan? |
25935 | MR. SHESSLER: How many years are lost in this method of bench grafting compared with field grafting trees in the nursery row? |
25935 | MR. SHESSLER: In other words, a tree grafted out in the field will have nuts on it three years sooner? |
25935 | MR. SNYDER: Well, do n''t we have$ 3,000 in bonds? |
25935 | MR. WALLICK: What percentage of kernels do you get? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Do you fertilize those bushes? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Do you get any improved varieties, such as Thomas, Stabler or Ohio? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: What sizes and grades of kernels do you have? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Which grades bring the highest prices? |
25935 | MRS. WEBER: Where is it located? |
25935 | Mr. Becker, do you wish to say something about the Reed Memorial? |
25935 | Mr. Gerardi? |
25935 | Mr. Wilkinson, what has been your experience in germinating pecan seeds? |
25935 | Opposed? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MACDANIELS: Any other discussion? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Are there further remarks? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: How about the Barnes? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Is it your pleasure to adopt these resolutions all at once, or do you wish to separate them? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Mr. Magill, are you all set with your program? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Why could n''t you send some in for testing? |
25935 | SLATE: Any evidence that the fungus is mutating to make more virulent strains? |
25935 | SLATE: The seedlings? |
25935 | SLATE: What is the origin of the fungus? |
25935 | SLATE: What is the origin of the seedlings? |
25935 | SLATE: What variety do you think is best? |
25935 | STOKE: Does the black walnut bloom at the same time that the Persian walnut blooms? |
25935 | STOKE: May I say just one more thing to clarify my suggestion? |
25935 | See that tree standing right out there?" |
25935 | The furniture, the clothing you wear, the ring on your finger, the glass in the windows, etc.? |
25935 | The last time we raised the dues what was the effect? |
25935 | The next paper is,"Nut Shells-- Asset or Liability? |
25935 | Then another worry came-- could the seedlings stand the Ontario winter? |
25935 | What are they for, if it is n''t to tide us over a hard period like this? |
25935 | What characteristic of a black walnut, then, can be used in evaluating it? |
25935 | What does it do with you? |
25935 | What enemies attack it? |
25935 | What fertilizer, or manure, has been used in the particular case, or none? |
25935 | What have you to say about the filbert varieties? |
25935 | What two or three would you plant? |
25935 | What will happen to your trees after you are dead? |
25935 | What''s been your experience with some of the varieties and what are your principal cultural problems with the filberts? |
25935 | What, in your opinion, is the one factor that is more responsible for this alternate bearing of black walnuts? |
25935 | Which one would you recommend? |
25935 | Which varieties-- I presume you mean species, is that correct?--will grow on fairly wet soil? |
25935 | Who else has a variety that is doing very well? |
25935 | Who has some questions that they''d like to bring up? |
25935 | Who wants to speak first? |
25935 | Who would like to answer that? |
25935 | Why am I on that Committee in 1952? |
25935 | Why was I on that Committee in 1935? |
25935 | Why was I on that Committee in 1939? |
25935 | Will those men come here? |
25935 | Will you come up now? |
25935 | You remember those days, Pappy? |
23656 | ***** Mr. Littlepage, have you any report from the Committee on Incorporation? |
23656 | ***** The Chairman: Will someone put Prof. Smith''s suggestion in the form of a motion? |
23656 | A Member: Are the leaves moist or dry? |
23656 | A Member: Do you cultivate the ground? |
23656 | A Member: Do you unroll this roll of cloth? |
23656 | A Member: Do you use the same method on the Persian walnut? |
23656 | A Member: Do you wax in addition to the paper you put on? |
23656 | A Member: Does that work on pecans as well as hickories? |
23656 | A Member: Does this tend to hold that in or is it all held in by the patch there? |
23656 | A Member: Have you found that fertilizing a tree increased the percentage of tannin? |
23656 | A Member: How do you get your excess of wax off the cloth? |
23656 | A Member: How long do you leave on the paper bags? |
23656 | A Member: Is n''t it a fact that you can use three and four year pecan wood just as well? |
23656 | A Member: Is n''t that to keep the wax out of the cambium layer? |
23656 | A Member: Mr. Sober, do you do that? |
23656 | A Member: Was that the old Furness Grove? |
23656 | A Member: When is this kind of grafting done? |
23656 | A Member: You want one bud on this? |
23656 | A member: Did you paint over the scars? |
23656 | A member: How much blight is there around you? |
23656 | A member: You would n''t recommend cutting back that tap- root too severely, would you? |
23656 | Another thing, we are right up against the problem of the insect pests of these trees and who is going to take care of them along the roadside? |
23656 | Are n''t there any expert chemists here who can tell us? |
23656 | Budded or grafted? |
23656 | But who is going to breed these things? |
23656 | Can anyone tell us anything about this danger of sun- scald to the trunk? |
23656 | Can he not see that, in keeping with all the other unknown factors, his profits must also be unknown? |
23656 | Can it be managed successfully in proportion as apple tree parasites are managed? |
23656 | Col. Sober: Do you find it apt to curl up in windy days-- the paper? |
23656 | Col. Sober: What time in the season do you graft? |
23656 | Did you ever receive the literature of one of these various concerns that has pecan or apple orchards to sell? |
23656 | Do they look any different from the other nuts on the tree? |
23656 | Does anyone else wish to speak on this subject? |
23656 | Five years old? |
23656 | Furthermore, what of the contract of these concerns? |
23656 | Has n''t it always been private individuals who get the new varieties? |
23656 | Have you found that? |
23656 | I asked one nurseryman, who wanted an enormous price for one hybrid oak, why he did n''t make ten thousand of those for himself next year? |
23656 | I said,"Will you give me these persimmons?" |
23656 | I see Col. Sober here; ca n''t you tell us about your experience in managing the blight? |
23656 | I think I am right in that, am I not, Mr. Pierce? |
23656 | If you were planting on land where the water- table is low, you would leave more tap- root? |
23656 | Is that right, Mr. Pierce? |
23656 | Is there any chestnut blight in southern Illinois? |
23656 | Is there anything you''d like to add to that, Mr. Littlepage? |
23656 | It is more of an ornament than it is a commercial nut, is n''t it? |
23656 | Let them keep grazing around? |
23656 | May we not have chestnut orchards managed with the same degree of relative expense and the same degree of relative profit? |
23656 | Maybe I''m mistaken but did this Government ever produce any trees? |
23656 | Moreover, suppose suit is brought on one of these contracts and bonds? |
23656 | Mr. Corsan: Are yours southern orchards? |
23656 | Mr. Corsan: How about the cattle? |
23656 | Mr. Corsan: May I ask if there is any soil food that would increase the amount of tannin? |
23656 | Mr. Harris: Gravelly bottom? |
23656 | Mr. Harris: What time of year do you bud them? |
23656 | Mr. Hutt: Can you use parafine in place of beeswax? |
23656 | Mr. Hutt: Do you notice any difference in the shapes of any of those hybrids, the nuts, when you get them matured and harvested? |
23656 | Mr. Hutt: I would like to ask how widely you have been able to cross species? |
23656 | Mr. Jones: Did you ever use raffia for tying your grafts? |
23656 | Mr. Jones: The strip goes through the wax? |
23656 | Mr. Jones: You prefer the tallow? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: Are there any coniferous trees in that forest? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: How about the nuts? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: If it is a chinkapin, what is there to indicate that there is any chestnut blood in it? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: Is n''t there a question about that? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: One parent was a chestnut? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: What is that new statement about roots, that it is desirable to leave them? |
23656 | Mr. Lake: You say you are going to issue that? |
23656 | Mr. Littlepage: What is the approximate water level below the ground? |
23656 | Mr. Pomeroy: I want to ask the speaker what the approximate cost would be for one spraying of a tree about that size, 70 feet in height? |
23656 | Mr. Pomeroy: Would n''t it be well to dip the cut end of the walnut scion in wax to hold the sap? |
23656 | Mr. Reed: Do you thin them out after they get that size? |
23656 | Mr. Reed: In about two weeks take off the wrapping; and about how much longer is it before you get a growth like that? |
23656 | Mr. Reed: Sandy loam? |
23656 | Mr. Reed: That one dies then? |
23656 | Mr. Reed: What would you consider an average crop? |
23656 | Mr. Smith: I would like to ask if Mr. Littlepage is n''t going to open up that barrel of actual facts that he has about yields? |
23656 | Must we go on the dot or have we two days or four days or a week, in the case of hickories and walnuts? |
23656 | Now in conclusion let me say, what is the lesson to be learned? |
23656 | Oranges set between them? |
23656 | Preservation of the race!--why so? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Are there any fine points about this trimming, other than mere wedge? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Do you know the origin of the seed? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Do you wax the tip end? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Do you wax this in here? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Have you found that all the species of hickory take grafts with equal ease? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Have you had any experience in fixing up a bed of scions like that and putting it in cold storage? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Have you its yielding record? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Have you used that with pecans in the North? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: How often do you wet that sawdust? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: I should like to ask Dr. Deming if he would give us his experience in propagating the walnut and hickory? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: If we should dig up a tree like this and cut it off a foot and a half down, would it be all right to transplant it? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: If you were going to transplant those for your own use where would you cut them off? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Is it necessary that this should be waxed cloth? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Over two hundred years old, then? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: The paper bag protects the scion? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: Was the land low or high? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: What do you use the lamp black for, Mr. Jones? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: What have those trees yielded? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: What is the superiority of that over plain cleft grafting? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: What stage of stock do you prefer? |
23656 | Prof. Smith: When is the top cut off? |
23656 | Professor Smith: Have you ever tried the plan of serving collations to squirrels? |
23656 | Rush, will you kindly read the list of the names of the men you proposed to act as a Nominating Committee? |
23656 | Second, what percentage of the oak pollen kept in cold storage a month was alive? |
23656 | That tree is owned by Mr. Henry Hales of Ridgewood, N. J. Prof. Smith: Have they fertilized it? |
23656 | That was done in August, using buds of the present season''s growth, and in about how many days is it that you take off the wrapping? |
23656 | That''s an 18 or 20 inch tree, is n''t it? |
23656 | The Chairman: Beef tallow or mutton tallow? |
23656 | The Chairman: But you let them breathe all the while? |
23656 | The Chairman: But, later on, cracks and squirrel scratches and all sorts of injuries would allow new spores to be carried in? |
23656 | The Chairman: Does the shell fill down there? |
23656 | The Chairman: Have you tried this method on the other hickories besides the pecans? |
23656 | The Chairman: How about school children reporting on trees under their care? |
23656 | The Chairman: How about using scion wood more than one year old? |
23656 | The Chairman: How do you make that wax? |
23656 | The Chairman: How do you make your wax cloth? |
23656 | The Chairman: How far down does your wax go, Mr. Jones? |
23656 | The Chairman: How many years? |
23656 | The Chairman: How old is it? |
23656 | The Chairman: I would like to ask, does it make a great deal of difference whether the bud ring is half an inch long or an inch and a quarter long? |
23656 | The Chairman: In our locality, people would ask,"Why is that string of squirrels following that man?" |
23656 | The Chairman: Is n''t that the poplar tree borer that always attacks the Lombardy? |
23656 | The Chairman: Is the Connellsville fungus also_ diaporthe parasitica_? |
23656 | The Chairman: Is there any further discussion on the matter of frauds? |
23656 | The Chairman: Is there any further discussion? |
23656 | The Chairman: Mr. Jones, will you give us your points now? |
23656 | The Chairman: One reason is because it has been cut back regularly every year for scions? |
23656 | The Chairman: That may be due to varietal differences, though, rather than specific? |
23656 | The Chairman: The question is of changing the generic name, from_ diaporthe_, on the basis of the previously established species? |
23656 | The Chairman: The trees are planted on this same old stump land? |
23656 | The Chairman: Then the length of the bud is not of great importance? |
23656 | The Chairman: What do you cover the top with? |
23656 | The Chairman: What has been your experience with the Stringfellow method of cutting off every single root? |
23656 | The Chairman: What is the form of the nuts? |
23656 | The Chairman: What is your method? |
23656 | The Chairman: What varieties? |
23656 | The Chairman: Which way does it face? |
23656 | The Chairman: Will Mr. Littlepage please respond to the Mayor''s kindly address of welcome? |
23656 | The Chairman: Would those trees grow after they have been dried as much as that? |
23656 | The Chairman: Would you carry the patch around to the other side? |
23656 | The Chairman: You do n''t mind this arch being left up? |
23656 | The Chairman: You took good care of yours? |
23656 | The Chairman: You try to keep an equilibrium by cutting down the top in proportion? |
23656 | The Chairman: You''ve got shagbark to catch fairly well, have you by this method? |
23656 | The Secretary: And the top? |
23656 | The Secretary: Are not those all hybrids? |
23656 | The Secretary: Has it been settled that it is not desirable? |
23656 | The Secretary: How did your pecans and hickories do last summer? |
23656 | The Secretary: Is n''t it a desirable thing that the society should be incorporated? |
23656 | The Secretary: That trees will grow as well transplanted as if they have never been transplanted? |
23656 | These crop yielding trees? |
23656 | Third, what is the range of time that the hybridizer has to make the pollinization? |
23656 | Those are a good age now or perhaps a little bit older than we usually graft, are n''t they, Mr. Sober? |
23656 | What are the facts? |
23656 | What are we going to do about the$ 66.00? |
23656 | What basis has any court or jury for fixing damages? |
23656 | What does it specify? |
23656 | What is the measure of damages? |
23656 | What percentage of pollen grains of the white oak were alive? |
23656 | What prospects have we for the balancing of that account? |
23656 | Which one keeps the American quality and which one retains the coarseness of the European type? |
23656 | Why would n''t it pay to give them portions of wheat and corn? |
23656 | Will someone propose that we have such a committee? |
23656 | Would it not be wise to suggest that some of these seedlings be put in odd corners? |
23656 | Would the gentleman advise taking those up, cutting the tap- roots and planting them again? |
23656 | Would you feel like saying that a water- table at 24 inches was neither too low nor too high? |
23656 | Yet what are the facts? |
23656 | Your work has been chiefly with the chestnut as a timber tree? |
48063 | And Davy is the garden- pea and you the sweet- pea, is that it? 48063 And are n''t they nuts?" |
48063 | And are potatoes biennials, too? |
48063 | And did n''t Bessie want her violets? |
48063 | And did the lily ever bloom again? |
48063 | And does it belong to a family, too? |
48063 | And does n''t the bloom of a blackberry look like the bloom of a plum, and a cherry, and a pear, and an apple, and all those things? |
48063 | And how about hickory and walnuts? |
48063 | And is that really all that the flower''s pretty color and sweet smell and delicious honey are for? |
48063 | And is that what makes some flowers such funny shapes, too? |
48063 | And peaches, and apples, and plums, and pears, all on one tree, too? |
48063 | And the flower makes three, does n''t it? 48063 And what will you call my rose?" |
48063 | And will the flowers that grew in the garden of the princess never bloom again? |
48063 | And wo n''t my morning- glories have flowers on them? |
48063 | And wo n''t my pansies come at all? |
48063 | Are n''t beans of the Pulse family, too? |
48063 | Are they Exogens? |
48063 | Are we? 48063 But I''d be hungry again before the things grew, would n''t I? |
48063 | But apples and plums and peaches are not roses, are they? |
48063 | But are the seeds just alike? |
48063 | But ca n''t we have all the things we like? |
48063 | But do n''t you think it might all just happen so? |
48063 | But do seaweeds and mosses and lichens and ferns and mushrooms all belong to one family? |
48063 | But does that really grow like our plants on the shore? |
48063 | But how can I care so much unless I can see them? |
48063 | But is the peach a calyx, too? |
48063 | But my nasturtium, Papa, what about that? |
48063 | But toads do sit under mushrooms, do n''t they? |
48063 | But what about the twining? |
48063 | But what became of the wicked Kapoka? 48063 But why do you think they can see and hear?" |
48063 | But-- but do n''t you think a flower_ ought_ to be a principal part? |
48063 | Ca n''t I have strawberries, instead of the salad? |
48063 | Ca n''t the class in botany sit by the teacher? |
48063 | Can I, Mamma? |
48063 | Can you name the three kinds of plants now? |
48063 | Can you see me? 48063 Can you, Davy? |
48063 | Can_ you_ see me? 48063 Did they really travel as you have told?" |
48063 | Did you find any flowers on the ferns? |
48063 | Do n''t you think it''s about big enough now? |
48063 | Do n''t you think they look a little, a very little, like wild roses, only the flowers are smaller and white, instead of pink? |
48063 | Do poison- ivy and Virginia creeper belong to the same family? |
48063 | Do seeds from the same bush make the different roses? |
48063 | Do sharks live on plants, too? |
48063 | Do sunflowers belong to a family now? |
48063 | Do the leaves really take up light? |
48063 | Do they fry things? |
48063 | Do they raise corn in any other country except America? |
48063 | Do you mean for the flower, or for themselves? |
48063 | Do you mean me? |
48063 | Do you see the difference? |
48063 | Do you suppose the poison- ivy knows that it is poison? |
48063 | Do you suppose there are any more? |
48063 | Do you think all these things like to be together? |
48063 | Do you think any other flower could be queen over that? |
48063 | Does the story mean that we should n''t care too much for our gardens? |
48063 | Here is a flower which has three little petals and four large flower- leaves which you would think were petals, would n''t you? 48063 How about all that seaweed you were gathering yesterday?" |
48063 | How about blackberries and raspberries? |
48063 | How about the ferns? |
48063 | How about the strawberries? |
48063 | How deep, and how many seeds in a pot? |
48063 | How did she get to be queen? 48063 How long will it take them to grow?" |
48063 | How many kinds of seeds are there? |
48063 | I wish it would be warm again,said Davy,"so there would be strawberries and nice things to eat in the garden; do n''t you, Prue?" |
48063 | Is it, Papa? 48063 Is n''t this flower one of them, too?" |
48063 | Is that simple or compound? |
48063 | Is the rose really the queen of the flowers? |
48063 | It is n''t at all, is it, Papa? |
48063 | It''s an Endogen,he said, very decidedly,"is n''t it, Papa?" |
48063 | Like Davy''s or mine? |
48063 | More than for folks, I mean? |
48063 | Oh, Papa, where did you get those funny violets? |
48063 | Oh, and can you have more than one kind on a tree? |
48063 | Oh, is my sweet rose- moss just old pursley weed? |
48063 | Oh, is that why people sometimes call it Indian corn? |
48063 | Oh, that will be playing''market,''wo n''t it? 48063 Oh, what makes some of my pea leaves look so dark?" |
48063 | Oh, will my morning- glories die now? |
48063 | Once upon a time there were two friars--"What are friars? |
48063 | Papa, do n''t hazelnuts and chestnuts belong to the same family? |
48063 | Papa, is it true that if you put fern seeds in your shoes, nobody can see you? |
48063 | Papa,asked little Prue,"have n''t my morning- glories any useful relations, like my sweet- pease?" |
48063 | Papa,_ are n''t_ mushrooms toad- stools, and_ do n''t_ they build them to sit on, in pleasant weather, and to get under, when it rains? |
48063 | So you have noticed that, have you? 48063 That''s steam,"said Davy, wisely;"but what makes it warm?" |
48063 | They did, did n''t they, Papa? |
48063 | They went hand in hand, just as Davy and I do when we go walking, did n''t they? |
48063 | This is the blade, and this is the stem,said Davy,"but what are stipules?" |
48063 | Was there really ever a poor man and a little sick girl who had pease sent to them? |
48063 | Well, once upon a time there was a princess with a beautiful garden--"Is this the same princess that turned into a red rose? |
48063 | Well, that is a good start, but there are a good many kinds of roots and''bend- overs,''and what are''stuck- ins?'' |
48063 | What are in my other little pots? |
48063 | What are the little flowers, and the big one in the center? |
48063 | What are they, Davy? |
48063 | What are they? |
48063 | What did they do? |
48063 | What do you mean by their working? |
48063 | What else have we? |
48063 | What is all the excitement? |
48063 | What kind of pease were they? |
48063 | What makes all the nuts have such big, thick hulls, anyway? |
48063 | What makes seeds so different? |
48063 | What makes the smoke? |
48063 | What makes them all speckly? |
48063 | What''s all this about strawberry short- cake and morning- glories? |
48063 | What? |
48063 | When can we eat it? |
48063 | When_ will_ it be warm? 48063 Where did it come from?" |
48063 | Where will you get dirt? 48063 Which is my side? |
48063 | Who is he? |
48063 | Why do n''t you have to plant them every year? |
48063 | Why do they call it love- vine? |
48063 | Why do you think it is an Endogen, Davy? |
48063 | Why do you think so? |
48063 | Why, did you plant one, Davy? |
48063 | Why, no, are they violets? 48063 Why, no, but-- but do n''t folks have to choose queens, or something?" |
48063 | Why, yes, but why did you think so, Prue? |
48063 | Will it_ ever_ be warm again? |
48063 | Will we_ ever_ have another garden? |
48063 | 135"And the apple blossom, too?" |
48063 | A real, true fairy story?" |
48063 | And if the flower knows, why should n''t the bee?" |
48063 | And now what else is there that has the family mark-- we might call it the family seal?" |
48063 | And yours, Alyssum, the one we call Pepper- grass, because he is so fiery?'' |
48063 | Are my pansies violets?" |
48063 | But what''s this? |
48063 | But where''s the rest of it? |
48063 | By and by she asked:"And do you think I will have flowers for Davy''s birthday? |
48063 | Ca n''t I have two pots of pansies?" |
48063 | Can you find a buttercup?" |
48063 | Can you see me, now?" |
48063 | Can you see me?" |
48063 | Can you_ see_ me, Mamma? |
48063 | Did she just happen to be queen, or did the other flowers choose her?" |
48063 | Did you ever notice, Davy, how much a cornstalk looks like an Indian, with plumes, and its ear, like a quiver for holding arrows?" |
48063 | Did you make it all just now?" |
48063 | Do you think you like that, Davy?" |
48063 | How do you suppose they can tell which way to start-- which is right, and which is left?" |
48063 | How much farther will it go?" |
48063 | IV DID YOU EVER SEE THE LITTLE MAN IN THE PANSY? |
48063 | Is it really a sister to that ugly weed?" |
48063 | Is it, Papa? |
48063 | Is there really anything like nutting to make a little boy and girl hungry? |
48063 | Is there, Papa?" |
48063 | It''s so long--""What do you_ s''pose_ it was?" |
48063 | Now, Prue, why did you think it was an Exogen?" |
48063 | Oh, what''s that in the center-- that tall plant? |
48063 | Soon he said:"And where do sweet and sour and all the pepper and mustard and horseradish tastes come from? |
48063 | That would suit you, would n''t it, Davy boy?" |
48063 | The pollen would fall on the stigma anyway, would n''t it?" |
48063 | Then with an old knife he dug down into the pot a little, and up came, what do you suppose? |
48063 | Those really same ones-- did they ever really live, or did you make it up about them?" |
48063 | What are those vines? |
48063 | What did they do with him?" |
48063 | What else have you brought, Davy?" |
48063 | What will we have in those littlest pots? |
48063 | When_ can_ we have a garden?" |
48063 | Where do all these things come from? |
48063 | Where is your brother, Mustard? |
48063 | Why do n''t some go the other way?" |
48063 | Why, where did Davy go?" |
48063 | Why, who is its sister?" |
48063 | Will they die?" |
48063 | You know, do n''t you, that the pansies you love so much, Prue, are one kind of violet, cultivated until they are large and fine?" |
48063 | You see--""But wo n''t my bean vines and corn grow up like that?" |
48063 | [ Illustration: DAVY''S POT OF RADISHES]"Oh, may I pick it to- morrow for Davy''s birthday?" |
48063 | [ Illustration:"DON''T YOU THINK THE BLACKBERRY LOOKS A LITTLE LIKE A WILD ROSE?"] |
48063 | asked little Prue,"just to get bees to work for it?" |
48063 | asked the little girl,"where do new roses come from?" |
48063 | but how would you have biscuits and shortcake without wheat to make the flour of?" |
48063 | he asked,"or Endogens? |
48063 | said the one who was limping,''how is it you can walk along so spry, and feel so happy, with those dreadful pease in your shoes?'' |
48063 | what do you mean by Stella and Dian?" |
17514 | ''Come in and see her, wo n''t you? 17514 ''Do I annoy you by staying here? |
17514 | A deal of trouble? |
17514 | And what is company? |
17514 | And when Ann- stasia brought them up in her ap''n, Dinah walked behind, did n''t she? |
17514 | And why should you think that I would deal otherwise by you? |
17514 | And you will give me no more encouragement than this? 17514 Are you a travelling jeweler''s shop?" |
17514 | Did you find any signs of a chicken house on the place when you first came? |
17514 | Do you clear the land as far back as this? |
17514 | Have you put in the trowels? |
17514 | How could we enjoy a sunset that held the whole circle of the horizon at once? |
17514 | How do you like your employment? |
17514 | How do you mean to manage? |
17514 | How would the place do for the new hen- house? |
17514 | I wonder, now, is that a dog or only uts growl ter sind me back in the wet fer luv av the laugh at me? |
17514 | Is n''t that what you were thinking, my Lady Lazy? |
17514 | Meself, is it? 17514 Or twelve moons?" |
17514 | Seein''as yer another gintleman o''the road in the same ploice, what more loike than the misfortune''s the same? |
17514 | Shall I go for the doctor? |
17514 | Then I may try to convince you that my plan is best? |
17514 | Well, Larry McManus,said Bart, cheerfully,"how came you in this barn so far away from Oireland a night like this?" |
17514 | Well,I said, extending my hand,"what next?" |
17514 | What do you mean, Anastasia? |
17514 | What gave you this turn? 17514 What is it?" |
17514 | When would you like the lease to begin? 17514 When would you live there?" |
17514 | Where is the shade that ferns need? |
17514 | Why bother with this, when they are to be transplanted as soon as they are fist up? |
17514 | Would a setter pup come in three crates? |
17514 | Yes, you''ve always had flowers, but did you pick the sweet peas or did Barney? 17514 You feel better now, Opie?" |
17514 | _ Pandora_ Hast thou never Lifted the lid? 17514 ''And who''ll help yer?'' 17514 ''And your wife? 17514 ''Will it spoil now and give yer away, I wonder?'' 17514 ( Did I not tell you that he observes?) 17514 ***** Now to begin: will your shady place yield you a bed four feet in width by at least twenty in length? 17514 After all, are we sure that it is not, in a way, both of these? 17514 After all, what is home? 17514 And does n''t nature''s garden have on and off seasons? 17514 And how about the soil? 17514 And of course Maria Maxwell will not object; why should she? 17514 Are you not thinking about returning to your indoor bed and board again? 17514 As Bart hesitated, I burst forth,Have you ever tended flowers, Larry?" |
17514 | Bart laughed, and_ The Man_, gazing around the table innocently said,"Oh, has_ it_ begun, and am I intruding and breaking up plans? |
17514 | But how about Amos? |
17514 | But is it? |
17514 | But muvver, if you are the tumpany, you ca n''t go to sleep when you''ve gone away, can you?" |
17514 | But of the wind, who shall answer for it or trust it? |
17514 | But one day what do you think happened? |
17514 | But what did the point of view matter: he was content and unhurried-- what better beginning for a vacation? |
17514 | But why bother? |
17514 | Can either you or Evan tell me more of them and why we do not see them here? |
17514 | Can you imagine anything more jarring and inconsistent than cannas, castor- oil beans, coleus, and nasturtiums in a prim setting of box? |
17514 | Come, which shall it be? |
17514 | Cortright, did you say your name was?'' |
17514 | Could anything be more in keeping with both our desires and needs? |
17514 | Could flowers and a home make up for it? |
17514 | Could n''t he have brought you in a few sticks?" |
17514 | Could you not bring him down with you before the summer is over? |
17514 | Did he accept the offer?" |
17514 | Did you know Dr. Marchant, sir? |
17514 | Did you put in the lunch?" |
17514 | Do they come within my range and pocket, think you? |
17514 | Do we really ever learn all of its vagaries and impossible possibilities? |
17514 | Do you know it? |
17514 | Do you know it? |
17514 | Do you know the thing? |
17514 | Do you remember the old saying"When away keep open thine eyes, and so pack thy trunk for the home- going?" |
17514 | Do you remember the_ Masque of Pandora_, and the mysterious chest? |
17514 | Do you understand? |
17514 | Does n''t even nature meet with disaster once in a while as if by way of encouragement to us? |
17514 | Does the grass look ragged and unsightly? |
17514 | Every conceivable tint of green is there, besides shades of pink and lavender in leaf case and catkin, but what dominates and translates the whole? |
17514 | First-- is the species of a colour and length of flowering season to be used in jungle- like masses for summer colour? |
17514 | Flowers, is it? |
17514 | Frankly, do you dislike me?" |
17514 | Get him out, somebody, why do n''t you? |
17514 | Has Miss Maxwell made a bid for the farm? |
17514 | Have you a man with quick wit and a straight eye to be the spade hand during the Garden Vacation? |
17514 | Hiven rest ye, sor, but have ye ever a job o''garden work now on yer estate, sor, that would kape me until I got the bit to cross to Kathy?" |
17514 | How about our fencing? |
17514 | How can any woman be so devoid of even the little sentiment of gifts as she is? |
17514 | How can you tell wild suckers from the desired growth? |
17514 | How was it possible, we queried? |
17514 | I want to own a resting- place for the soles of my feet when they are tired, and is it strange that I should pitch my tent near two good friends?" |
17514 | If Nature looks to the ways of the wind when she plants, why should not we? |
17514 | If a few seeds will produce a few plants, why not the more the merrier? |
17514 | If you are thinking of making out a book list of your needs as an answer to your mother''s or your"in- law''s"query,"What do you want for Christmas?" |
17514 | If you have no one either in the family or neighbourhood likely to attract_ The Man from Everywhere_, why may we not have him? |
17514 | In May? |
17514 | In the woods the farmer allows the ferns to stand, for are they not one of the usual attributes of a picnic? |
17514 | Is Opie ill again? |
17514 | Is a carnation a pink, or a pink a carnation? |
17514 | Is it comprehensive, think you? |
17514 | Is it possible that I am about to be seized with Agamemnon Peterkin''s ambition to write a book to make the world wise? |
17514 | Is there anything more like the incense of praise to the flower lover? |
17514 | Is there anything on your mind? |
17514 | Is there no more human basis upon which I can persuade you to come to Opal Farm when it is mine? |
17514 | It is only when some one of the household is positively ill that the record must be set down in black characters, for what else really counts? |
17514 | Martin Cortright, is it not?'' |
17514 | Meanwhile, I have Maria for a winter companion, and a mystery to solve and puzzle about; is not this truly feminine bliss? |
17514 | Nature does not attempt placid lowland pictures on a steep hillside, nor dramatic landscape effects in a horizonless meadow, therefore why should you? |
17514 | No good wish or omen?" |
17514 | Not Mrs. Chester Marchant?'' |
17514 | On the gold of the marsh marigolds edging the water? |
17514 | Second-- has it fragrance or decorative quality for house decoration? |
17514 | She listens and merely shakes her head, saying,"We''vited them to come, did n''t we, mother? |
17514 | So why should n''t ours? |
17514 | Sure, hev ye the cow below ud let me down a drap o''milk?" |
17514 | Tell me frankly, would you like me to stay?" |
17514 | The Infant, still clutching the box, looked at me in round- eyed wonder:"I had Dinah and the kittens to play with in the nursery, did n''t I, mother?" |
17514 | Upon how few of all the species of annuals listed does the real success of the summer garden rest? |
17514 | Upon these was her hope built, for with a market waiting, what lay between her and success but work? |
17514 | Was an explosion coming at last to end twelve years of out- of- door peace, also involving my neighbour and domestic standby, Martha Corkle Saunders? |
17514 | Was it an electric spark from the telephone? |
17514 | Were they discouraged? |
17514 | What annuals may be planted now to tide you easily over the summer? |
17514 | What business have people to put such dangerous skylights near a public road?" |
17514 | What do you want it for?" |
17514 | What is_ it_?" |
17514 | What matters it if a seed lies one or two years in the ground? |
17514 | Where does Spring set her first flag of truce-- out in the windswept open? |
17514 | Where does the eye pause with the greatest sense of pleasure and restfulness? |
17514 | Where is that neighbour of yours in the other half of the house? |
17514 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
17514 | Why do you not use your old wall in a like manner? |
17514 | Why might they not join us on our driving trips, by way of their vacation? |
17514 | Will it prove a second honeymoon, think you, or end in a total eclipse of our venture? |
17514 | Will you lend it to me? |
17514 | Will you revise the list for me? |
17514 | Will you tell me in due course which of the ferns are best for our purpose? |
17514 | Would I better begin at once or wait until July or August, as some of the catalogues suggest? |
17514 | Would you plant roses in rows or small separate beds? |
17514 | Would you prefer I went elsewhere?'' |
17514 | You''ll have to put up with me for the rest of the night and a man is n''t as cheerful a companion as a woman-- is he, Amos?" |
17514 | but what for?" |
17514 | do n''t you want to drive down to the sheriff''s?" |
17514 | ejaculated Bart,''but how will such a scheme give Mary a vacation from housekeeping and the everlasting three meals a day? |
17514 | not early vegetables, but flowers?" |
17514 | or on the silver- white plumes of shad- bush that wave and beckon across the marshes, as they stray from moist ground toward the light woods? |
17514 | says I,''and where''ll yer git the posies and what all?'' |
17514 | so lustily and scratching so testily in the leaves that have drifted under an old rose shrub? |
13537 | ''Is grafting really necessary?'' 13537 ''What are you doing?'' |
13537 | ''Will the Junior Garden Club give suggestions and practical help for the improvement of the Oldfield Centre School Grounds?'' 13537 Are we putting the right amount of drainage into these pots?" |
13537 | Are you here for all the time, now? |
13537 | Back again to what? |
13537 | Because it is heat, is n''t it? 13537 But how can the work of the wind and the bees and the birds be improved on? |
13537 | But when is the time to put out the hotbed, or indoor- started seedlings? 13537 Could n''t we meet oftener than just Saturdays?" |
13537 | Did you ever observe the seed of wild carrot? 13537 Did you make a few cakes of ice and thus have a cold storage plant?" |
13537 | Do any of you girls happen to know just where in the school room the boxes are to be placed? |
13537 | Do you know what these are? |
13537 | George has been testing seed,said Jay,"and he might tell us about it now, could n''t he, Chief? |
13537 | Grow any more lettuce and radish? |
13537 | Has George found out the time when other seeds lose value? |
13537 | Have you any more lettuce than what you can use yourself? |
13537 | Have you noticed how water takes definite courses down hills? 13537 How can the good bacteria be encouraged to grow, and the bad ones prevented from forming? |
13537 | How deep shall I dig the gutter? |
13537 | How do you like my strawberry bed? |
13537 | How many more girls belong to this company? |
13537 | How many pounds of lime,asked Jack,"to the bushel?" |
13537 | How must the small garden be spaded? 13537 How?" |
13537 | I say, Chief, do n''t you think some of us might go up to the city and help Philip make the cement pond? |
13537 | I see, thank you, and why do you say layer of heat? 13537 I should like to ask,"Dee made bold to say,"where you boys got strawberries to make ice cream of? |
13537 | If this is a true story, how can we be so small as always to make money from this garden? 13537 If, then, the chances are so good for renewal of weeds, what is the plan of campaign which we should follow? |
13537 | Is there any real percentage of germination that seeds should have? |
13537 | Is there nothing for us this winter, O Chief? |
13537 | Look,cried Elizabeth,"there comes Jack; what shall we do?" |
13537 | May we have those first? |
13537 | Not bad? |
13537 | Now can we fight these chaps? 13537 Philip, do you know what you are going to do?" |
13537 | Question number one: suppose your backyard had been clay soil-- what would you have done with it then? |
13537 | Shall we fix up the school window boxes now? |
13537 | Take sandy soil-- what is its greatest need? 13537 This question is constantly being asked,''How can I tell what insect is doing the destructive work?'' |
13537 | Very well, young man, I wish to know two things: First, where did you get your knowledge? 13537 Well, what is your stock you have to work with, girls? |
13537 | What are you going to do with all these, I''d like to know? |
13537 | What does the chairman have to do? |
13537 | What is a dibber? |
13537 | What is a drill? |
13537 | What is to be done with the rubbish often found on new garden sites? 13537 What is topping?" |
13537 | What pests are likely to attack our plants? |
13537 | What shall we do about this? |
13537 | What''s that? |
13537 | When shall we plant seeds outdoors? 13537 Where did that splendid window box come from?" |
13537 | Where did you get all this knowledge, Philip? |
13537 | Where''d you copy that stuff? 13537 Who are''_ we_''?" |
13537 | Who seconds this? |
13537 | Who would wish a wild- flower garden without violets? 13537 Why did he place a bag over the pansy? |
13537 | Why did n''t you give some one a rubber plant? |
13537 | Why put it outside? |
13537 | Why sunflowers? |
13537 | Why,questioned Albert, as he picked himself up,"why must poor Albert always do the hard work, while the other fellows stay by the warm fire?" |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Will you tell us about the watering of plants? |
13537 | You do not mean that we''ll have to remember and answer questions just like school? 13537 After all is fine and deeply worked, say to about a foot deep, the next thing to consider is this-- how deep should a seed be planted? 13537 After all, boys, since you can put in the tile drain would it not be wiser to do so? |
13537 | And also leave one entire row blossoming as it will?" |
13537 | And second, where does my pay come in?" |
13537 | And then--""And then,"broke in Albert, unable longer to contain himself,"what do you think he gave us? |
13537 | Anything more, boys, before the popcorn?" |
13537 | Ask your father, will you?" |
13537 | But ca n''t I leave just one blossom on each plant to see what the fruit is like?" |
13537 | But suppose it is a grand collection of tin cans, bottles and such things as can not be burned? |
13537 | But what of that? |
13537 | Can you see the beauty of it? |
13537 | Can you? |
13537 | Come in here and show me how, will you?" |
13537 | Did you ever try the Icicle radish? |
13537 | Did you find out the amount of lime to use?" |
13537 | Did you know, George, that corn is a most exhaustive crop?" |
13537 | Discouraging, is it not? |
13537 | Do n''t you think I might carry her a plant nicely potted?" |
13537 | Do n''t you? |
13537 | Do you agree?" |
13537 | Do you know that stool can be used over again? |
13537 | Do you picture this? |
13537 | Do you remember that little sickly boy who was in school last spring? |
13537 | Do you see that there was little opportunity then for the seed being blown off the surface of the ground? |
13537 | Do you see the good of cleaning up rubbish? |
13537 | Girls are not such bad gardeners, are they?" |
13537 | Has any fellow a really simple table?" |
13537 | Has n''t he a fine chance in the world? |
13537 | Have n''t you fellows heard your fathers talk about sour ground? |
13537 | Have you noticed how social, but clannish, our wild flowers are? |
13537 | Here is a bed of petunias, let us say; do you know just how it is possible to have larger, finer petunias next year? |
13537 | How are you to know where they are? |
13537 | How can one"fix up"for toads? |
13537 | How can they be held down? |
13537 | How can you tell when one of these is lacking? |
13537 | How could we fix up the grounds so that the little building should have a really attractive setting? |
13537 | How much is lime a bushel, Jack? |
13537 | How shall we improve a sandy soil? |
13537 | I wonder if it has struck you, how really hygienic plants are? |
13537 | I wonder why, when people think of transplanting violets, a dull, dark, moist spot immediately comes to mind? |
13537 | I''ll do the corn stunt; are n''t you going to, Pete?" |
13537 | Imagine a fellow out planting carrots and reading before he sows: The carrot-- a bi-- bi what, biped, did you say, Myron?" |
13537 | Is Philip here for Sunday?" |
13537 | Is it sturdy, strong, well shaped and symmetrical; does it have a goodly number of fine blossoms? |
13537 | Is n''t that right?" |
13537 | It certainly is not an acid, is it?" |
13537 | It is staggering, is it not? |
13537 | It looks well, does it not, boys? |
13537 | Just as absurd, is it not, for you to suggest that you can not work on that same garden unless you receive ten cents an hour? |
13537 | Just how are you going to work that?" |
13537 | Just what was the trouble? |
13537 | Manufacturing what? |
13537 | Marvelous, is it not? |
13537 | May I help?" |
13537 | Now boys, how much fertilizer do you think ought to go on this poor land of George''s?" |
13537 | Now what is the use of trying on that?" |
13537 | Now when I looked at the four- year- old seed, what do you think? |
13537 | Now you are probably saying within yourselves, how was limestone first formed? |
13537 | Now, George, what do you think about planting a crop that works the soil very hard, especially when the soil you are dealing with is rather poor?" |
13537 | Pretty necessary to have in the soil, is it not? |
13537 | Pretty poor business, is it not? |
13537 | Question number two: suppose you had no sand-- what then?" |
13537 | Shall I call all the tables in, Chief?" |
13537 | Shall it be screwed to the casement? |
13537 | Shall it go on the sill? |
13537 | Shall we put on the coarse material next? |
13537 | So if your window is large, why not have two small boxes for the space rather than one large one? |
13537 | Some violets are found in the swamps, but did you happen to notice what long stems they have? |
13537 | Suppose the bag were not on; suppose after he had put the pollen on, the wind had blown other pollen to this same pistil? |
13537 | That is pretty bad, is it not? |
13537 | That is right, is it not? |
13537 | That seems a great deal, does n''t it? |
13537 | The backyard garden is a lovely idea, is it not? |
13537 | The power which plants have to move is very clearly shown, is it not? |
13537 | These things depend largely, do they not, upon one''s point of view? |
13537 | To make a wild apple tree with its gnarly, little sour apples into a really truly, well- behaved tree bearing good fruit is worth while, is it not? |
13537 | We may as well use the right names; do n''t you think so, Chief?" |
13537 | We''ll be glad to have him, sha n''t we, boys?" |
13537 | What blossoms shall you decide upon? |
13537 | What can we do with them? |
13537 | What do you mean by pricking out?" |
13537 | What do you mean by succession crops?" |
13537 | What does he look like? |
13537 | What else are you going to plant, Jack?" |
13537 | What is going to happen with that pot already full of soil when you put the plant in? |
13537 | What is lovelier? |
13537 | What is that you are saying, Dee?" |
13537 | What lovelier in early spring than a bed of daffodils close to the house? |
13537 | What shall be chosen? |
13537 | What shall be done with the sod? |
13537 | What shall we do about this school- ground business?" |
13537 | What would be the result? |
13537 | Whence, then, came the moisture? |
13537 | Who wants to be stingy? |
13537 | Who wishes to buy dirty radishes or droopy looking lettuce? |
13537 | Who wishes to leave a beautiful looking front yard, turn the corner of a house, and find a dump heap? |
13537 | Who would wish a Fourth of July dinner without peas? |
13537 | Why do n''t you use your hoe right?" |
13537 | Why does the size of the seed make a difference? |
13537 | Why have all the blooms in August? |
13537 | Why is this? |
13537 | Why not have some hardy perennials and some self- sowing annuals? |
13537 | Why not plant some seed which will produce plants that come up year after year? |
13537 | Why not sell them? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Why? |
13537 | Will you suggest good things to plant?" |
13537 | Will you take us in?" |
13537 | Will you?" |
13537 | Wonderful, is it not? |
13537 | Wonderful? |
13537 | Would you think that this gay little beggar was a member of the milkweed family? |
13537 | You see the point, do you not? |
13537 | and"How do you do it?" |
13537 | plenty of water, but how about the air? |
26013 | Do you see that? 26013 Do you think, in your opinion, that this would be a good peach for us to grow? |
26013 | You are interested in nuts? 26013 )[ 34] Those who prefer the week after Labor Day? 26013 A MEMBER: Do n''t they bloom a month later than most of the others? 26013 A MEMBER: Do you come down to a pretty good point? 26013 A MEMBER: Do you think soil temperature is going to be a limiting factor? 26013 A MEMBER: How far down do they go? 26013 A MEMBER: How much area would a( 1/2-pound) can like that treat? 26013 A MEMBER: Is that a side graft you are making there? 26013 A MEMBER: The migration of nitrogen-- is there some such migration, and is it just in the case of the sawdust? 26013 A MEMBER: When were they planted? 26013 A MEMBER: Will birds or any kind of poultry eat them? 26013 A MEMBER: Would n''t it also be all right to leave that stub on to tie your sprout to so it wo n''t want to break? 26013 And Mr. Porter of Windsor, will you help Mr. Allaman on the Resolutions Committee? 26013 And how can you get it tested? 26013 And how many experiment stations or their actions have been influenced by the Northern Nut Growers Association? 26013 And what could be nicer than a butter similar to peanut butter? 26013 And who does not know the precious wood of the wild cherry? 26013 Any discussion? 26013 Any further discussion? 26013 Any objections that we have nominations from the floor? 26013 Any other business? 26013 Any other comment on the butternut? 26013 Any other discussion? 26013 Any other questions? 26013 Any questions? 26013 Any remarks? 26013 Any remarks? 26013 Anything else? 26013 Anything real tight, or how? 26013 Are there any nominations for president? 26013 Are there other resolutions anyone has from the floor? 26013 Are there reports of the committees? 26013 Are we commercial nut growers, or do we grow them for home consumption? 26013 By that I mean, does it have a good, large kernel which is well filled and bright in color, or good flavor free from any objectionable characters? 26013 Can even the exceptional farmer do it on 20 acres? 26013 Can the average farmer_ save_ that much in his lifetime? 26013 Can we never learn to begin, as Hitler began-- as the Russians are even now beginning-- with the nation''s children? 26013 Can you answer that question? 26013 Can you see that? 26013 Certainly they are spread over the region we are interested in, are n''t they? 26013 Couple of weeks? 26013 Craig 2 106 Discussion MR. FRYE: How about butternuts for pollenization? 26013 DR. ANTHONY: Before you bang it down, may I make one announcement? 26013 DR. CRANE: And how much evidence did he base his conclusion on? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Any discussions? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Any other business? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Anybody else have any suggestions? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Are there remarks? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Are we men, or are we mice? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Can you use that material as a wax? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Do you wish to nominate more than three and have a ballot? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Does this group wish to express a preference as to the last week in August or the first week in September? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: How many growers of nut trees have this bunch disease on their property? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: I say we have always come down to the point, here we are, where do we go from here and what do we do next? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: No Persian walnut will be refused? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Should they be sent to you? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Suppose you have n''t got a good union? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: These two resolutions, do you wish to accept them or adopt them together? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Where did you get the seed? 26013 DR. MacDANIELS: Will this include all Persian walnuts? 26013 DR. McKAY: I''d like to ask what effect low temperature has on them and how far north you think will be their limit? 26013 DR. ROHBACHER: When do you put that stock in the house? 26013 DR. ROHBACHER: You have to dig those up in the fall? 26013 Discussion MR. McDANIEL: Does this disease affect any other beetles we have in America, besides the Japanese? 26013 Discussion MR. RICK: Are they planted permanently in the can? 26013 Do any of the contest committee or members have any suggestions? 26013 Do we have a committee on contests?--of the Carpathian walnut contest? 26013 Do we have any for secretary? 26013 Do we have any old business, Mr. Secretary? 26013 Do you move to have the secretary cast a unanimous ballot? 26013 Do you put on additional wax? 26013 Do you think of any, Mr. Weber? 26013 Do you want to say a word, Dr. Colby? 26013 Do you want to say anything further on that, Mr. Chase? 26013 Does anybody have a nomination? 26013 Does anybody know what result came of it? 26013 Does anyone present know the history of this gavel? 26013 Does it have better flavor than other peach varieties? |
26013 | Does that seem to be a reasonable thing to do? |
26013 | Does the crop ripen evenly? |
26013 | Dr. McKay? |
26013 | Has anyone else come in in the meantime who has a report? |
26013 | Have they agreed on any one variety they do n''t want to plant? |
26013 | Have you tried the European beechnuts in your locality? |
26013 | How About the Butternut? |
26013 | How about its shell, percentage of shell in relation to kernel? |
26013 | How are you to reduce the beetle crop on these places, mostly on ground you do n''t control? |
26013 | How old is Mr. Corsan? |
26013 | I believe that''s right, is n''t it, Mr. Adams? |
26013 | I believe you have the beetles at your plantation at Wassaic, Mr. Smith? |
26013 | I think this answers the oft- asked question,"Why do not my black walnuts fill as they used to?" |
26013 | I think we should consider whether the variety will bear good crops consistently, and if it does n''t bear well-- why? |
26013 | I thought he''d call again, but I did n''t get his name, or at least I have lost it, and what do you think he is growing in the way of nuts? |
26013 | I want to ask Mr. Sherman, should I be thinking about receiving 10,000 entries in this contest? |
26013 | I wonder if the Japanese walnut, through its quickness in showing the disease, might not be a safeguard to the other walnuts? |
26013 | I. W. Short of Taunton, Massachusetts here, or does he have his paper here? |
26013 | If so, how? |
26013 | If the Northern Nut Growers is not the one that should do it, what kind of an organization can be effective to do it? |
26013 | If the meeting is held the last week in August, the dormitories would be available, would they not? |
26013 | If you can solve that-- DR. CRANE: Why did n''t you grow up to a six- foot- six guy weighing 250 pounds? |
26013 | In this article I would like to answer briefly our most often asked question, as to which varieties do we think best from our experience with them? |
26013 | Is it any wonder that the inquiring farmer finds them rather frustrating? |
26013 | Is it better? |
26013 | Is that right, Professor Slate? |
26013 | Is the Farmer Missing Something? |
26013 | Is the Treasurer ready with his report? |
26013 | Is there any analogy there that would help us in anything we can do? |
26013 | Is there any further business? |
26013 | Is there any other business which we ought to transact at this time? |
26013 | Is there any other discussion on this point? |
26013 | Is there any reason why we should n''t follow some suggestion such as that, stick our necks out and go ahead? |
26013 | Is there more comment? |
26013 | MR. BERNATH: You mean for sprouting? |
26013 | MR. BERST: How about corn cobs? |
26013 | MR. CALDWELL: Can you reproduce that result? |
26013 | MR. CALDWELL: If it does n''t produce all the while, why does n''t it? |
26013 | MR. CALDWELL: The blue spruce are grafted by the same method? |
26013 | MR. CALDWELL: Use this method for shagbarks the same way? |
26013 | MR. CALDWELL: Why does n''t it produce a good nut? |
26013 | MR. CHASE: Are there any other nominations for vice- president? |
26013 | MR. CHASE: The question is asked, this is n''t the time of year that you would do this, is it? |
26013 | MR. CHASE: Then, shall we exclude the Northwestern states? |
26013 | MR. CHASE: Whitewash? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: Did you find a good French variety? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: Did you mention Turkish tree hazel? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: How about a dance in this hall? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: Mr. Bernath, would that be the right stuff to put sweet chestnuts in in the fall? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: Or any latex? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: That is the latex that congeals quickly? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: That''s not too damp? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: This is not called Scotch Tape? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: Why not have the former Miss Jones president again? |
26013 | MR. CORSAN: You just put them in damp sawdust? |
26013 | MR. CRAIG: Did he use any fertilizers? |
26013 | MR. EMERSON: You do n''t use any wax? |
26013 | MR. FRYE: One application is all that''s needed? |
26013 | MR. FRYE: That sawdust, how old must it be, and how green have you used? |
26013 | MR. H. F. STOKE: May I also say a word? |
26013 | MR. JAY SMITH: How about anything in the street, leaves? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: Black walnuts? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: Do you sell them in the shell? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: How long? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: How many trees do you have in a planting now? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: In that section? |
26013 | MR. KINTZEL: Rubber tape? |
26013 | MR. LOWERRE: Would the DDT kill the parasitic wasps? |
26013 | MR. MILLER: But the same graft ca n''t be used outside without grafting wax, can it? |
26013 | MR. McDANIEL: How about the green June beetle? |
26013 | MR. O''ROURKE: I would like to say, are we going to wait until we test all of those varieties? |
26013 | MR. O''ROURKE: Is there any correlation between the age of the tree and the expression of the disease? |
26013 | MR. O''ROURKE: Why do you place the scions so that the bud is on the inside? |
26013 | MR. O''ROURKE: Would you by any chance think it might be seed borne? |
26013 | MR. PATAKY: Do any of the members here have shelled butternuts or hickory nuts that they would sell? |
26013 | MR. PORTER: Do I act now, in this meeting? |
26013 | MR. RICK: And the stock is n''t in the case until you are ready to graft? |
26013 | MR. RICK: Do n''t you have those in rows? |
26013 | MR. RICK: Do you keep your scions cool until you are ready to use them? |
26013 | MR. RICK: How do you slope this? |
26013 | MR. RICK: How many weeks, usually, before you graft, after these are put in the case? |
26013 | MR. RICK: Is there any advantage in sloping the top? |
26013 | MR. RICK: Is this outside or inside? |
26013 | MR. RICK: It would be all right just to go out to the tree and cut your scions and bring them in and the next day graft? |
26013 | MR. RICK: The scion was cut on both sides, was it, or one side? |
26013 | MR. RICK: To prevent fungus would it be a good idea to dip them in a weak solution of Bordeaux? |
26013 | MR. SHERMAN: How many nuts are expected? |
26013 | MR. SHERMAN: In case of heavy rain tomorrow, what are the plans? |
26013 | MR. SHERMAN: What temperature in the greenhouse? |
26013 | MR. STERLING SMITH: What do you mean, Fahrenheit? |
26013 | MR. SZEGO: When do you cut your scion wood? |
26013 | MR. SZEGO: When do you take the tape off? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: And the scion eventually forms its own root? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: And you do n''t wax either the top, or anything? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: Do you dampen it any? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: How do you cut above the bud that you use above the graft? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: It does n''t make any difference if you cut the rubber band that''s on it or not? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: That is one reason for having the bud face the stock? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: The question arises: How old is Mr. Corsan? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: The shade? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: What sort of a cultivator do you use? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: What sort of shading element do you use? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: When you make that cut of the excess understock, you do n''t even wax? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: Why do n''t you get a Wheelmaster? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: Will this spore powder kill other kinds of grubs that are in the sod? |
26013 | MR. WEBER: With the bud side up? |
26013 | May private owners of the earth''s resources not use or destroy them as they see fit? |
26013 | Might I have a showing of hands by those who have Japanese beetle already? |
26013 | Mr. Allaman, I believe you are president of the Pennsylvania group, are you not? |
26013 | Mr. Allaman, will you take chairmanship for that? |
26013 | Mr. Secretary, do we have a report of the editor? |
26013 | Now you make sure that the scion-- MR. WEBER: You start at the top? |
26013 | Now, then, the question is what kind of an organization? |
26013 | Now, this brings us next to the very important consideration of how are we going to get a new good variety? |
26013 | Now, what about it? |
26013 | Now, why have such a thing? |
26013 | Reports of any special committees? |
26013 | Resolutions DR. MacDANIELS: Is the Resolutions Committee here? |
26013 | STOKE: How deep is that effect on the soil? |
26013 | STOKE: That''s about the same as surgical tape? |
26013 | See how far that can stretch? |
26013 | She will say,"Why do n''t you stop and look at that Persian walnut? |
26013 | Should I plant Stabler, Ohio, Thomas? |
26013 | Slate, do you have a brief report? |
26013 | So I think some of the Northern Ohio members-- I think Mr. Smith is here, are there any other members? |
26013 | That is: Why are we growing nuts? |
26013 | That''s the first thing you want to find out: Is the nut itself intrinsically the type of thing you want to deal with? |
26013 | The center of membership appears to be about Central Ohio, is that right? |
26013 | The first thing people want to know is,"what varieties do I plant?" |
26013 | The second is,"Where do I buy them?" |
26013 | The time, I think, has to be left to be worked out with the authorities at Illinois, is that right? |
26013 | Then they put it up to me or Dr. McKay, or Dr. Colby, and think that you could just name right and left, and they ask,"What varieties shall we plant?" |
26013 | Those who would prefer a meeting date comparable to this year? |
26013 | Was this lone tree self pollinating or receiving pollen from a tree this far away? |
26013 | Well, then, what''s the next step that we take up? |
26013 | What am I going to do? |
26013 | What is it now? |
26013 | What more do you want for a nice job ahead? |
26013 | What? |
26013 | When I get a letter coming in from most anywhere in the country wanting to know what variety of black walnut to plant, do you know what I tell them? |
26013 | When they speak of the blossom, they speak of the horsechestnut, do they not? |
26013 | Where can I get some trees? |
26013 | Who will second the motion? |
26013 | Why ca n''t we have quail around the farms instead of shooting them? |
26013 | Why do n''t you stop there?" |
26013 | Why does n''t he? |
26013 | Why have it in Pennsylvania? |
26013 | Why? |
26013 | With as little investment of money and work? |
26013 | Would anybody like to look at this? |
26013 | Would it matter if it was flat? |
26013 | You have a medical man here? |
26013 | You mean before it sets up? |
26013 | You say there are 500 trees that did nothing at all? |
26013 | to report that committee appointment? |
46327 | ( Horticultural) 44 × 88? |
46327 | 1885, as a synonym under_ Cerasus pseudocerasus_? |
46327 | 1888? |
46327 | 1893? |
46327 | 1908? |
46327 | 1909? |
46327 | 1909? |
46327 | = Adlington.= Species? |
46327 | = Affane.= Species? |
46327 | = Albertine Millet.= Species? |
46327 | = Andrews.= Species? |
46327 | = Baylor.= Species? |
46327 | = Belle Bosc.= Species? |
46327 | = Belle Defay.= Species? |
46327 | = Belle Vezzouris.= Species? |
46327 | = Belle de Boskoop.= Species? |
46327 | = Belle de Rochelle.= Species? |
46327 | = Bicolor Van Mons.= Species? |
46327 | = Black American.= Species? |
46327 | = Black Margaret.= Species? |
46327 | = Black Prolific.= Species? |
46327 | = Blasse Johanni Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Bocage.= Species? |
46327 | = Bon Bon.= Species? |
46327 | = Book.= Species? |
46327 | = Bount Dantzic.= Species? |
46327 | = Boyd Early Black.= Species? |
46327 | = Byrnville.= Species? |
46327 | = Cameleon.= Species? |
46327 | = Catskill.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise Albanes.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise Bellon.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise Rouge Sanguine.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise Royale Ordinaire.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise d''Angleterre Précoce.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise de Mai Double.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise de Mai Simple.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise de Martigné.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise de Tiercé.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise de l''Ardèche.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerise du Prince Maurice.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerisier Royal Tardif à Fruit Noir.= Species? |
46327 | = Cerisier de Varenne.= Species? |
46327 | = Champagne.= Species? |
46327 | = Coeur de Pigeon Noir.= Species? |
46327 | = Como.= Species? |
46327 | = Comtesse de Médicis Spada.= Species? |
46327 | = Condé.= Species? |
46327 | = Courte- queue de Gaiberg.= Species? |
46327 | = Crawford.= Species? |
46327 | = Crown Prince.= Species? |
46327 | = Datge.= Species? |
46327 | = De Belleu.= Species? |
46327 | = De Jacap.= Species? |
46327 | = De Ravaene.= Species? |
46327 | = De Sibérie à gros fruit et à rameaux pendans.= Species? |
46327 | = De Vaux.= Species? |
46327 | = Denner Black.= Species? |
46327 | = Des Cheneaux.= Species? |
46327 | = Ditst.= Species? |
46327 | = Dobbeete Moreller.= Species? |
46327 | = Doctay.= Species? |
46327 | = Dorotheenkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Doty.= Species? |
46327 | = Dougall.= Species? |
46327 | = Dove Bank.= Species? |
46327 | = Du Comte Egger.= Species? |
46327 | = Dumas.= Species? |
46327 | = Dure Noir Grosse.= Species? |
46327 | = Délicieuse.= Species? |
46327 | = Early Eugene.= Species? |
46327 | = Ebenter Cherry.= Species? |
46327 | = Edouard Seneclause.= Species? |
46327 | = Elfner Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = English Gaskin.= Species? |
46327 | = Frogmore Early Crown.= Species? |
46327 | = Früheste der Mark.= Species? |
46327 | = Gamdale.= Species? |
46327 | = Gaskins.= Species? |
46327 | = Golden Knob.= Species? |
46327 | = Gormley.= Species? |
46327 | = Governor Luce.= Species? |
46327 | = Grafenburger Frühkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Grande Ronde.= Species? |
46327 | = Great Leafed.= Species? |
46327 | = Griotte Tardive d''Annecy.= Species? |
46327 | = Griotte de Schaarbeck.= Species? |
46327 | = Grosse Friedrichskirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Grosse Transparente.= Species? |
46327 | = Gubens Ehre.= Species? |
46327 | = Guindoux Noir de Faix.= Species? |
46327 | = Halifax.= Species? |
46327 | = Hamell Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Hamels Arissen.= Species? |
46327 | = Hartlib.= Species? |
46327 | = Hartlippe.= Species? |
46327 | = Hartz Mountain.= Species? |
46327 | = Headley.= Species? |
46327 | = Hedwigs Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Heintzen( Heintze''s) Frühe Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Hensel Early.= Species? |
46327 | = Herzkirsche Léona Quesnel.= Species? |
46327 | = Herzkirsche Trauben.= Species? |
46327 | = Herzkirsche Wils Frühe.= Species? |
46327 | = Holstein.= Species? |
46327 | = Hâtive de Balis.= Species? |
46327 | = Hâtive de St. Jean.= Species? |
46327 | = Hâtive ou Précoce.= Species? |
46327 | = Incomparable en Beauté.= Species? |
46327 | = Jean Arendsen.= Species? |
46327 | = Jerusalem Kirsche von der Natte.= Species? |
46327 | = Kazan Seedling.= Species? |
46327 | = Kentish Preserve.= Species? |
46327 | = Kesterter Früh Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Kleine Natte.= Species? |
46327 | = Knapp.= Species? |
46327 | = Koeper.= Species? |
46327 | = Korkovanyer Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Kostelniti.= Species? |
46327 | = Kriek van den Broek.= Species? |
46327 | = Kritzendorfer Einsiedekirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = La Nappe.= Species? |
46327 | = Laeder Kirsebaer.= Species? |
46327 | = Langsurer Prachtweichsel.= Species? |
46327 | = Large Guindolle.= Species? |
46327 | = Large Spanish.= Species? |
46327 | = Latham.= Species? |
46327 | = Little Phil.= Species? |
46327 | = Long Finger.= Species? |
46327 | = Lothaunner Erfurter.= Species? |
46327 | = Léopold( II).= Species? |
46327 | = Magnifique de Daval.= Species? |
46327 | = Magog.= Species? |
46327 | = Manger.= Species? |
46327 | = Marells Royal.= Species? |
46327 | = Mazarine.= Species? |
46327 | = Meissener Weisse.= Species? |
46327 | = Merise Grosse Rose Oblongue.= Species? |
46327 | = Merise Petite Ronda.= Species? |
46327 | = Merisier Fastigié.= Species? |
46327 | = Miller.= Species? |
46327 | = Monkirsche Rote.= Species? |
46327 | = Monstrueuse Hennequine.= Species? |
46327 | = Morisco.= Species? |
46327 | = Morten Seedling.= Species? |
46327 | = New Royal.= Species? |
46327 | = Nonpareil.= Species? |
46327 | = Norfolk.= Species? |
46327 | = Oliver.= Species? |
46327 | = Orléa Smith.= Species? |
46327 | = Pandys Glaskirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Parent.= Species? |
46327 | = Pauline de Vigny.= Species? |
46327 | = Peach- Blossomed.= Species? |
46327 | = Polsted.= Species? |
46327 | = Portugal.= Species? |
46327 | = Prince Englebert.= Species? |
46327 | = Prince Royal.= Species? |
46327 | = Prince.= Species? |
46327 | = Prunus zappeyana? |
46327 | = Précoce de Marest.= Species? |
46327 | = Précoce de Sabaret.= Species? |
46327 | = Rainier French.= Species? |
46327 | = Red Canada.= Species? |
46327 | = Red Russian.= Species? |
46327 | = Reichart.= Species? |
46327 | = Richardson Late Black.= Species? |
46327 | = Richter Sämling.= Species? |
46327 | = Rock.= Species? |
46327 | = Rockland.= Species? |
46327 | = Romaine.= Species? |
46327 | = Ronald.= Species? |
46327 | = Rose Charmeux.= Species? |
46327 | = Rothe Glanzkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Rouge Pâle Tardive.= Species? |
46327 | = Royal American.= Species? |
46327 | = Russie à Fruit Blanc.= Species? |
46327 | = Sacramento.= Species? |
46327 | = Saint- Laurent.= Species? |
46327 | = Schneeberger Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Schwarze Oranienkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Schöne von Brügge.= Species? |
46327 | = Select Beauty.= Species? |
46327 | = Short- stem May.= Species? |
46327 | = Sleinhaus.= Species? |
46327 | = Smidt Yellow.= Species? |
46327 | = Soft- stone Cherry.= Species? |
46327 | = Starr Prolific.= Species? |
46327 | = Sweet Morello.= Species? |
46327 | = Sächsische Frühe Maikirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Tardive Noire d''Espagne.= Species? |
46327 | = Tardive de Brederode.= Species? |
46327 | = Tardive de Peine.= Species? |
46327 | = Thirty Day.= Species? |
46327 | = Toctonne Précoce.= Species? |
46327 | = Toronto.= Species? |
46327 | = Transparente de Siebenfreund.= Species? |
46327 | = Triomphe de Fausin.= Species? |
46327 | = Turner Late.= Species? |
46327 | = Twyford.= Species? |
46327 | = Vanskike.= Species? |
46327 | = Vaughn.= Species? |
46327 | = Vistula.= Species? |
46327 | = Warren Transparent.= Species? |
46327 | = Washington Purple.= Species? |
46327 | = Weis, Roth und Rosenfarbig Marmorirte Kramelkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Weisse Mandelkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = White French.= Species? |
46327 | = White Transparent.= Species? |
46327 | = Winter Schwarze.= Species? |
46327 | = Zweifarbige Kirsche.= Species? |
46327 | = Zwitterkirsche.= Species? |
46327 | ? |
46327 | ?" |
46327 | Armenia, Georgia, Himalaya? |
46327 | Bigarreau( Golden)? |
46327 | Himalaya? |
46327 | How are the cherries described in the passage from Pliny related to those of modern culture? |
46327 | In what respects is it easier to grow cherries on the Mahaleb in the nursery than on the Mazzard? |
46327 | It is described as"being the blackest"but whether_ Prunus avium_ or_ Prunus cerasus_, sweet or sour, who can tell? |
46327 | Received from Belgium without description; its value is questioned in_ Guide Pratique._= Alexandrine Béon.= Species? |
46327 | Species? |
46327 | What fruit better adapted to the uses of colonists than the cherry? |
46327 | Why has the Mahaleb supplanted the Mazzard? |
46327 | X.= Species? |
46327 | _ Amber_? |
46327 | _ Bigarreau rouge de Tilgener_? |
46327 | _ Bigarreautier à fruit jaune?_= 7.= Noisette_ Man. |
46327 | _ Cerise de Prusse noire?_= 6.=_ Ibid._= 11=:160. |
46327 | _ Cerisier cuculle_? |
46327 | _ Coeur de Boeuf nouveau_? |
46327 | _ De Sibérie à fruit rond_? |
46327 | _ Frühkirsche_? |
46327 | _ Grosse Morelle double?_= 3.= Mas_ Pom. |
46327 | _ Grosse Spanische Weichsel_? |
46327 | _ Guigne à courte queue_? |
46327 | _ Guignier à gros fruit noir_? |
46327 | _ Impératrice Downton_? |
46327 | _ Late Black Bigarreau_? |
46327 | _ Late Honey_? |
46327 | _ Petit Bigarreau Hâtif_? |
46327 | _ Prunus tomentosa_,(?) |
46327 | _ Summer''s Honey_? |
46327 | _ Türkine_? |
46327 | cerasus?_= 1.=_ Lond. |
46327 | cerasus_), 24 44 × 48? |
46327 | neglecta_), 17_ Prunus zappeyana_, 20_ Prunus zappeyana? |
46327 | pumila × P.?_= 1.=_ Can. |
46327 | szechuanica_, var.?" |
56526 | ''Ow many''ave you got''ere? |
56526 | A purty sight I calls that,said old Lovell, surveying his porch,"an''yourn ai n''t loike it, ai n''t it? |
56526 | About the Sunday school? |
56526 | And I may keep my holly hedge? |
56526 | And ca n''t one cut back the suckers and let the pink rose grow again? |
56526 | And it''s only at night, or against heavy rains, that they want protecting? |
56526 | And the plants that are to stay, may they be touched? |
56526 | And why did you need the press- gang to make you come and help this nice hard- working kind of an afternoon? |
56526 | And why,I asked again,"why this tugging and this wedging?" |
56526 | And wot''ull I do for_ my_ wegetables? |
56526 | And you wo n''t resign? |
56526 | Anything over of the five pounds? 56526 Are they very difficult to grow, or very expensive? |
56526 | But do you cut off_ all_ the new growth? |
56526 | But if you do n''t know, how do you know I am wrong? |
56526 | But those are n''t suckers? |
56526 | But when you came here was it like this? |
56526 | But why wo n''t they say''poker''and have done with it? |
56526 | Ca n''t I? 56526 Can I be sure the seed is there?" |
56526 | Can you see this October garden at all? 56526 Did n''t he? |
56526 | Did you have a good concert? |
56526 | Did you mean me or Griggs? |
56526 | Do n''t they last? 56526 Do n''t you know how I meant it to be? |
56526 | Do n''t you like talking about my garden? |
56526 | Do n''t you like the look of a kitchen garden? 56526 Do you know what that is?" |
56526 | Does it bloom on the new wood? |
56526 | El- bore!--did you say? 56526 Going strong?" |
56526 | Grass? 56526 Griggs, have you any wooden boxes or pans or things in which we can sow these seeds?" |
56526 | Griggs, what on earth are these? |
56526 | Griggs, what_ are_ you doing? |
56526 | Have we been doing anything very ignorant? 56526 How deep should you plant them?" |
56526 | How many have you done? |
56526 | I feel I am playing with little tin soldiers, do n''t you? |
56526 | If faith be added to hope is the next step sure? |
56526 | Is it too late? 56526 Is n''t it lovely? |
56526 | Is that for potatoes? |
56526 | Is this a good place for them during the winter? 56526 May I help you?" |
56526 | May n''t I help the garden to grow? 56526 Must it have another name? |
56526 | My dear girl, what on earth_ have_ you? 56526 No, but why tolerate it? |
56526 | Now can_ you_ tell me what are hellebores? |
56526 | Now, come; if you do n''t like this, what can you suggest better, eh? |
56526 | Now, sir, the year is nearly up, say,''how has the garden grown?'' |
56526 | Now, why do n''t you grow more of those? |
56526 | Oh, Jim, where did you find them? |
56526 | Oh, why bother Griggs? 56526 Oh, will you? |
56526 | Perhaps there might be too many colours, might n''t there? |
56526 | Really, but what were the etceteras? 56526 Say now, do you grow nightingales in your garden, Mistress Mary? |
56526 | Say, tall and reverend sir, can you reach a star? 56526 Shall I take out the roots we have put in to begin with?" |
56526 | Shall I write and ask my mother? |
56526 | Should Griggs put some of the savoury heap just round their roots? |
56526 | Some seeds take longer than others too, do n''t they? |
56526 | That particular one? |
56526 | That''s what they taught at your school, did n''t they, Reverend Young Man? |
56526 | The earth is n''t dirty, it is beautifully, healthily clean; and do n''t you love its''most excellent cordial smell''? 56526 Them? |
56526 | Well, may I have this gravel path up and make a border here? |
56526 | Well, shall we say six pounds for this next year? |
56526 | Well, we have not seen much yet, have we? |
56526 | What are those? |
56526 | What are you sprinkling that bed with those tiny green twigs for? |
56526 | What did his Reverence say to your resignation? |
56526 | What flowers_ do_ live out of doors? 56526 What is faith in this instance?" |
56526 | What is growing here? |
56526 | What is that? |
56526 | What shall I do? |
56526 | What''s up? 56526 What, buttercups?" |
56526 | What, not with Dutch bulbs? 56526 Where did you get them? |
56526 | Where? 56526 Why did you not fill the two round beds with these? |
56526 | Why is that? |
56526 | Will they flower? |
56526 | Will you really, sir? 56526 Would n''t a wooden tub rot away, though? |
56526 | You do n''t think she really knows,whispered Jim to me,"because if she does, she is going rather far, is n''t she?" |
56526 | You do n''t want heat for them? |
56526 | You have a little rhyme about Mary and her garden, have n''t you? 56526 You will come back and do the necessary watering,"I said,"and I shall be here to see it is done; you quite understand?" |
56526 | ''And how''bout my mowing? |
56526 | A whole third of the heavens separates the two; and what does that not mean to us of lack in light and warmth? |
56526 | And since when do lilies of the valley refuse to grow out of doors?" |
56526 | And the magician''s wand to work this transformation? |
56526 | And then the little snapdragons, what do you call them?--anti-- anti-- what? |
56526 | And then,"Why had we no violets? |
56526 | And what flowers had I omitted? |
56526 | And what had been the result? |
56526 | And what kind of sheet or wet blanket is old Griggs preparing for my eyes in front?" |
56526 | And what shall I do meanwhile? |
56526 | And what would happen if they were planted topsy- turvy? |
56526 | And, Mary, you bought_ all_ these bulbs? |
56526 | Anti-- rrh-- well, what''s this name?" |
56526 | Are n''t the babies there still?" |
56526 | Are they not lovely?" |
56526 | Between grass, what can look so staring and hideous as that patch of yellow? |
56526 | But ca n''t he be retired?" |
56526 | But how to circumvent the tree? |
56526 | But these lively stars of white and blue are not the kind to cull, are they, Mistress Mary? |
56526 | But what did it all mean? |
56526 | But what was the matter with those newly- planted rose trees? |
56526 | But wherewithal am I to do the dinner- table to- night? |
56526 | But who knows what_ I_ am composed of?" |
56526 | But why did you do it?" |
56526 | But why did you?" |
56526 | But why should they? |
56526 | But why was it not more successful? |
56526 | But would she really? |
56526 | Ca n''t we get rid of him, sir? |
56526 | Could it be? |
56526 | Could they send up shoots from anywhere they chose? |
56526 | Did the heavy weed crops speak well for his industry? |
56526 | Did the underground interlacement of that pernicious ground- elder do him credit? |
56526 | Did they come up?" |
56526 | Did they mean flowers? |
56526 | Did worms eat bulbs? |
56526 | Do all these pretty things grow in your garden, Mistress Mary?" |
56526 | Do n''t they want anything to eat or drink?" |
56526 | Do n''t you feel this?" |
56526 | Do n''t you put plants straight into the earth? |
56526 | Do n''t you see it?" |
56526 | Do n''t you think the garden has grown?" |
56526 | Do n''t_ you_ want your tea every day?" |
56526 | Do you call that pricking out? |
56526 | Do you know what"hellebore"is? |
56526 | Do you mean to say you expect those little things to flower this year? |
56526 | Do you see what I am trying to say?" |
56526 | Do you think-- can it be-- are they my crocuses?" |
56526 | Do you want all the flowers to wear black coats like you and me?" |
56526 | Does n''t Griggs?" |
56526 | Does n''t anyone know? |
56526 | Down in their hearts could those poor draggled, tangled specimens dream of radiant blooms turned to the sun? |
56526 | Ever see that old Griggs up at th''Rectory working away wi''his shears? |
56526 | Grandis means big but Tritoma?" |
56526 | Griggs, do you know what flower is called hellebore?" |
56526 | HOW THE GARDEN GREW BY MAUD MARYON"Mary, Mary, quite contrairy, How does your garden grow?" |
56526 | Had I not rooted, amongst other things, too much of myself in my garden for me now lightly to withdraw? |
56526 | Have n''t you seen the Park?" |
56526 | Have we done anything wrong?" |
56526 | Have you a lamb?" |
56526 | Have you ever noticed how a winter aconite springs from its bed? |
56526 | Have you ever noticed how great a difference there is between the sun''s summer and winter march across the heavens? |
56526 | He said he did, and I said,"Then may I do it?" |
56526 | How could I trust my precious seeds to this old murderer? |
56526 | How much has gone?" |
56526 | How test the soil and the sourness which would be fatal to flourishing? |
56526 | However will you and Griggs manage those you have already?" |
56526 | I gasped,"What are you doing? |
56526 | I long for the day when I too shall say,"Oh, I will send you some of that, wait until the autumn,"and"You care for this? |
56526 | I prefer perennials, do n''t you?" |
56526 | I want to have a great show this year; do n''t you? |
56526 | I wonder, now, have you let Griggs have any time for the vegetables lately?" |
56526 | If I cuts the stem wot becomes of them buds, eh?" |
56526 | Irresistibly the thought arises,"With what body shall_ we_ come?" |
56526 | Is it a bargain?" |
56526 | Is n''t it deadly nightshade, or something like that?" |
56526 | Is n''t there any post besides that of gardener which he might fill?" |
56526 | Is not that something?" |
56526 | Is that enough? |
56526 | Is that it? |
56526 | Is that the rule? |
56526 | It is grass, is n''t it?" |
56526 | It was easy to say I would"resign"the garden, but could I? |
56526 | It''s quite gone, I suppose?" |
56526 | Nature is wasteful, and so is human nature, but we ca n''t weed out the overcrowded families; and do the fittest there always survive? |
56526 | Nice brown thing, why had you not given just one little green sprout as the crocuses and snowdrops had done, so that there_ could_ be no mistake? |
56526 | Not that yours is very yellow, been down some time, eh? |
56526 | Now, Young Man, what do you say? |
56526 | Now, how does that sound?" |
56526 | Now, why did n''t you speak sooner?" |
56526 | Practical they are not, but why ask it of them? |
56526 | Putting pride aside, was not my interest in all those young promising plants for the spring too deep for me now to desert them? |
56526 | Remind one of bulls''-eyes, do n''t they? |
56526 | See him spring up that tree?" |
56526 | Shall I get Griggs and a spade?" |
56526 | Shall I go and pitch into old Griggs?" |
56526 | So I said dubiously,"Yellow jasmine should never be cut at all, then?" |
56526 | Sunflowers again--"golden- nigger,""Ã ¦ sthetic gem,""Prussian giant"--how could one help sampling such seductive names? |
56526 | Surely_ violets_ were not an impossibility? |
56526 | That would be fine, eh?" |
56526 | The cookery- books tell one to"make a white sauce of flour, butter and milk,"but how? |
56526 | The proof of the pudding would be in the eating, but how prevent any tragic consequences? |
56526 | Then we might have those stocks, all colours are they? |
56526 | There is honesty, almost nicer in sound than in reality; and lavender must come here, or where will be the old fashion? |
56526 | They always divide them up, do n''t they? |
56526 | They can be knocked up, ca n''t they?" |
56526 | Though who could talk when the whole night is throbbing with beauty? |
56526 | Was it really any use putting in that silly little twig? |
56526 | Was that right? |
56526 | Was that your idea?" |
56526 | We have none of those nice high blue things, what do you call them? |
56526 | Well, then, how do you manage yours? |
56526 | Well, what for the open? |
56526 | Were the buds on the trees swelling? |
56526 | Were they expensive, I wondered? |
56526 | Were worms the enemies in this particular case? |
56526 | What can one talk of better than a garden? |
56526 | What can we do?" |
56526 | What could have become of those planted by Griggs last year? |
56526 | What did you do it for? |
56526 | What do you think he was doing? |
56526 | What had happened in my short absence? |
56526 | What had happened to them? |
56526 | What is there so attractive in that prickly hedge? |
56526 | What on earth is that? |
56526 | What shall I do with them?" |
56526 | What was he doing? |
56526 | What was it growing in the grass? |
56526 | What was there? |
56526 | Where do n''t you pick? |
56526 | Where was he? |
56526 | Wherein lies the mystery of that delicately- flavoured, creamy substance or that lumpy kind of paste? |
56526 | Who is to do it?" |
56526 | Whoi, el- bore? |
56526 | Why are you so afraid of time? |
56526 | Why in the name of Reason make a curve when a straight line leads quicker between two places? |
56526 | Why not more?" |
56526 | Why then had my much- vaunted crimson rambler failed me? |
56526 | Why wo n''t the things make haste? |
56526 | Why, where is the harm in variety? |
56526 | Why? |
56526 | Will it go on?" |
56526 | Will that satisfy you?" |
56526 | Will they all die?" |
56526 | Will you tell me that?" |
56526 | Wo n''t I do as well? |
56526 | Wo n''t they come again? |
56526 | Would he care to have his gardening capacity judged by the dearth that reigned at the Rectory? |
56526 | Would it ever come to anything?" |
56526 | Would n''t it be more satisfactory to you to see the garden looking nice than like a howling wilderness?" |
56526 | Would you like me to retire in his favour?" |
56526 | You are still grubbing in things, are n''t you?" |
56526 | You do n''t feel inclined to get up and preach now, do you? |
56526 | You do n''t know?" |
56526 | You might be useful, sir, for a bit, might n''t you? |
56526 | You wants a show? |
56526 | Young Man, are you thinking?" |
56526 | _ This_ is Adam''s work, eh? |
56526 | _ but_--""Well, you are all_ for_ it, anyhow?" |
56526 | but do they want it all their own way? |
56526 | but whose fault is that?" |
56526 | d.?" |
56526 | do n''t you think that will do?" |
56526 | does n''t it make you feel just too awfully small for anything? |
56526 | front of the Rector''s winder?" |
56526 | has he gone to bed?" |
56526 | how to teach it manners? |
56526 | however can a poor Yank hear your nightingale? |
56526 | it''s the clipping, is it? |
56526 | more borders? |
56526 | or would the perversity of such a position be too much for their budding vitality? |
56526 | suggested Jim;"but they are strong little beggars and will grow bigger, wo n''t they?" |
56526 | why had I so cheerfully undertaken such an apparently hopeless task? |
18183 | What can I do for hardy pears? |
18183 | What crop do you consider the best green manure? |
18183 | What experiments are being conducted by the University of Minnesota with orchard and other horticultural crops? |
18183 | 1 and 2? |
18183 | 1017 everbearing strawberry plants? |
18183 | 4? |
18183 | 5 What is Hardiness? |
18183 | 8 How May University Farm and the Minnesota State Horticultural Society be Mutually Helpful in Developing the Farms and Homes of the Northwest? |
18183 | A Member: Are your trees still as far apart as they were at first? |
18183 | A Member: Common corn land, is that fit for raising asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: Did I understand some one to say that the mulberry was not hardy? |
18183 | A Member: Did you ever grow any Crusset Wax? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they break right off from the main stalk in laying down? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they form new branches on the sides when you pinch off the ends? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you recommend testing your seeds before you plant them? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you think in covering them with a plow you might disturb the roots? |
18183 | A Member: Do you advise spraying for them? |
18183 | A Member: Do you face both ends of the barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you pack all one- size of apples in a barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use clear cider for vinegar? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use very nearly the same size apples in a barrel, or do you put large ones at the top and bottom? |
18183 | A Member: Does n''t most of that trouble arise from the low prices? |
18183 | A Member: Does the German? |
18183 | A Member: Have you ever tried mulching them with corn stalks? |
18183 | A Member: Have you tried out the Baroness Schroeder? |
18183 | A Member: How about cowpeas? |
18183 | A Member: How about the hairy vetch? |
18183 | A Member: How large do the trees have to be to be of benefit? |
18183 | A Member: How many years have you maintained a bed? |
18183 | A Member: How much distance would you allow for the roots? |
18183 | A Member: How would you start a new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean in preparing your patch for the new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean seeds generally, corn, etc.? |
18183 | A Member: I want to ask if many put salt on asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if a person on clay soil could use sawdust to work in? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if you have any difficulty in getting your cider vinegar up to the requirements of the law? |
18183 | A Member: If you were going to do it again would you put them 30x30? |
18183 | A Member: Is it practicable to grow soy beans in this soil? |
18183 | A Member: Madam President, why should it not be the flag itself and not a picture of the flag? |
18183 | A Member: The heavy land I suppose would n''t be good for it? |
18183 | A Member: What are the majority of your forest trees? |
18183 | A Member: What causes the rot in the iris? |
18183 | A Member: What do these apple graders cost? |
18183 | A Member: What fertilizer is good? |
18183 | A Member: What grader do you recommend? |
18183 | A Member: What is the best of the green kind? |
18183 | A Member: What is the matter with the Hardy? |
18183 | A Member: What kind is that? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of heaters do you use? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of varieties would you suggest for the ordinary home garden, best dozen varieties? |
18183 | A Member: What sort of apples go to the canneries? |
18183 | A Member: When do you cut those sucker canes? |
18183 | A Member: When do you spray? |
18183 | A Member: Where can ground bone be obtained? |
18183 | A Member: Where do you buy your heaters? |
18183 | A Member: Will it improve that land by fertilizing with top dressing? |
18183 | A Member: With the soy bean do you have to plow in the whole of it? |
18183 | A Member: Would it be practicable to feed soy beans in an orchard? |
18183 | A Member: Would n''t fertilize the first season? |
18183 | A Member: You do n''t ship them, so do n''t consider the packing? |
18183 | A Member: You mean to say you could grow them for fifteen years without fertilizing? |
18183 | A Member: Your manure would be all gone then? |
18183 | A born farmer assumes that everybody knows how to handle a hoe or a plow, but why should they, not having had practical experience? |
18183 | A good rainfall is one inch, which is a thousand barrels to the acre, so what can you do with a sprinkling cart? |
18183 | A member: How far apart do you plant your beans in the row? |
18183 | And spray them every year? |
18183 | And the question naturally comes, why any new ones? |
18183 | And what have we learned from the"summer in our garden?" |
18183 | Another question: How many rows of trees make a good windbreak? |
18183 | Are the anthers well or poorly formed? |
18183 | Are the blossoms pistillate or staminate? |
18183 | Are the children of the farmers looking forward with interest to farming as a business, and life in the country as attractive? |
18183 | Are the petals large or small? |
18183 | Are the petals pure white or slightly crimson? |
18183 | Are the stamens long or short? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any remarks? |
18183 | Are there many fruit buds to the stalk, or but few? |
18183 | Are there many runners, or few, or none? |
18183 | Are they golden wax? |
18183 | Are we sure, as has been said, that God forgot to put a soul in flowers? |
18183 | Are you a member of the Garden Flower Society? |
18183 | Are you ready for the question, that those gentlemen suggested be made honorary life members? |
18183 | But how is it down here? |
18183 | But where are they today? |
18183 | But why do you come to me with this? |
18183 | By advertising? |
18183 | Ca n''t we make it an even hundred for this year? |
18183 | Can they be gotten at a reasonable price, and can we mature them here? |
18183 | Can they be successfully cultivated? |
18183 | Can we use a deformed apple? |
18183 | Can you think of the possibilities of Minnesota? |
18183 | Did you attend the 1915 meeting of this association, held in the West Hotel, Minneapolis, four days, December 7- 10 inclusive? |
18183 | Did you ever pass a farm home in the winter that was protected by a good evergreen grove and notice how beautiful it looked? |
18183 | Did you ever sit down in your kingdom and see what a royal throne you occupied? |
18183 | Did you ever think of the royal position of the florist and horticulturist? |
18183 | Did you have any trouble like that? |
18183 | Do n''t you glut the market unless you have cold storage? |
18183 | Do n''t you think so, Mr. Brackett? |
18183 | Do n''t you use dormant sprays? |
18183 | Do n''t you want your name added to this life roll? |
18183 | Do the children in your school know what flower is common in the northern part of the state as well as in the southern part of the state? |
18183 | Do the new runners bear blossoms and fruit? |
18183 | Do they need anything besides drainage?" |
18183 | Do they understand the conditions required in the state and the purpose of the selection sufficiently well to enable them to select intelligently? |
18183 | Do you find it the best way to hoe them after you get through cutting? |
18183 | Do you know what the state flag of Minnesota looks like? |
18183 | Do you plow them after you get them down or do you cover them with a shovel? |
18183 | Do you really know what a delicious beverage can be made from the juice of rhubarb mixed in cool water? |
18183 | Do you sell all the fruit you raise on the place? |
18183 | Do you think I was gwine to have that money around the house wid dat strange nigger there? |
18183 | Do you understand that? |
18183 | Do you wish to ask him any questions? |
18183 | Does it grow here? |
18183 | Does it include simply marketing alone? |
18183 | Ever troubled with the mice at your place, Mr. Weld? |
18183 | First, what kind of covering? |
18183 | For instance, do the canners in your country buy deformed apples-- I mean lacking in roundness? |
18183 | Has any one tried anything new in the garden that will stand our climate? |
18183 | Have they responded to Cultivation? |
18183 | Have you had any difficulty in raising them? |
18183 | Have you taken any photographs of your garden, its individual flowers, or wild flowers for our photographic contest? |
18183 | Have you the following all ready for use? |
18183 | Have you tried planting your bulbs with any of the ground cover plants that will take away the bare look that most bulb beds have? |
18183 | He said:"Is that so? |
18183 | He said:"Where are your passengers?" |
18183 | He was trying to bore a beetle head and could not hold it; a foolish boy came along and said,"Why do n''t you put it in the hog trough?" |
18183 | How Can the Garden Flower Society Co- operate with It? |
18183 | How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co- Operate? |
18183 | How can those roots send up the golden tints, the snowy white and the red, and never have the colors mixed? |
18183 | How do you get these bushy bushes to lie down? |
18183 | How is it possible to pick out of the dull soil, Nature''s eternal drab, that brilliant color for your peony? |
18183 | How many members have you? |
18183 | How much of each? |
18183 | How often do you hear concerning some gardener, that if he"only touches a thing, it is bound to live?" |
18183 | How was that sweetness and purity ever extracted from the scentless soil? |
18183 | I could not raise anything-- Mr. Alway: Did the plants grow? |
18183 | I have another question here: What would you plant around the garden? |
18183 | I submit to you the question: Are school children qualified to choose a flower as an emblem of the state? |
18183 | I think I have reason to ask what would we have for apples today if there had not been any seedlings raised? |
18183 | I would like to ask what success you have had with growing tritoma, the flame flower? |
18183 | If he used that, why does he need props? |
18183 | If so, when do they commence to bud and bloom? |
18183 | In regard to iris, did any one have any trouble with their iris coming a little ahead of time last year and being frozen? |
18183 | In regard to the variety proposition, is n''t it true that you are growing too many perishable apples in Minnesota? |
18183 | Is Professor Mackintosh in the room? |
18183 | Is anyone going to allow weeds to outdo him? |
18183 | Is bone meal good? |
18183 | Is he in the room? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for men? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for women? |
18183 | Is it necessary to burn the tops when they are cut off? |
18183 | Is n''t that considered a rather short- lived tree? |
18183 | Is n''t this really a wonderful thing where so many are concerned, emphasizing as it does the large interest felt in the work of the society? |
18183 | Is that sufficient for a winter protection without the straw or leaves? |
18183 | Is the garden to receive the undivided attention of one or more members of each family, so that all members and guests may share its fruits? |
18183 | Is the plum curculio causing much damage to the fruit growing industry of this country? |
18183 | Is the receptacle on which the pistils sit well formed and capable of being developed into a perfect berry, or do they look ungainly in shape? |
18183 | Is there any kind better than those two? |
18183 | J. Kimball, Duluth Opening Song Trafford N. Jayne, Minneapolis Why Wake Up the Dreamers-- Aren''t They Getting Their Share? |
18183 | May I ask if Mr. Peterson, of Chicago, is here? |
18183 | Miss White: Madam President, if we could not vote as a society, could we not vote to recommend this resolution to the Horticultural Society? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Dandelions? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Did they make lots of runners? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Was it any deeper than that? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Are your returns satisfactory shipping to the Minneapolis market? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do n''t you take out any dirt on the sides? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do you bend them north or south or any way? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How far have you got yours planted apart? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How late can you plant them and be sure of a crop? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: I would like to ask what you pay for beans for canning purposes? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: What are your gross receipts per acre for beans? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Where are you located? |
18183 | Mr. Andrews: Are the roots exposed in some cases? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: How deep do you put the plant below the surface in transplanting? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: You mean to say that putting manure on top makes the asparagus crooked? |
18183 | Mr. Berry: Do you fertilize and how and when? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Are they still in business? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you ever found any ground with too much leaf mold on it to grow good strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you got any pocket- gophers that do not make mounds? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: How many of those large limbs could you cut off in one year and graft? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: If you had Virginia trees twelve years old would you top- work them? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: In other words, they ca n''t pay over 35 or 30 cents a bushel? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is n''t that a general opinion in the West where they make a business of planting large orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is that in the nursery row? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Suppose the limbs were too big on the stock you are going to top- work, how would you do then? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What age do you commence the grafting? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What can a cannery afford to pay for apples? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Where you put in more than one scion in a limb, is it feasible to leave more than one to grow? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Would you advocate the extensive planting of apples in this climate? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: You showed the difference in size there, those top- worked and those not-- don''t you think that is because of cutting the top back? |
18183 | Mr. Cadoo: Do angleworms hurt house plants? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: Have you had any experience in using orchard heaters to save plums in cold nights? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: You said a pressure of 200 pounds ought to be used? |
18183 | Mr. Clausen: Do n''t you have trouble with the mice? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: What number do you hold that red grape under? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: Which is that for, for the brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Crawford: Can you raise asparagus successfully in the shade or a partial shade? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: How would you keep those scions? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: In getting scions are there any distinguishing marks between a vigorous scion and one not vigorous? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: What kind of a graft do you usually make? |
18183 | Mr. Durand: What is the best spray for leaf- spot and rust in strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: Do you know anything about it? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to ask if you have ever used arsenate of lead for spraying plums? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to know about what quantity of arsenate of lead and lime- sulphur combined would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: In connection with that I would like to ask if you have used or would recommend pulverized lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: What pressure would you recommend in spraying for codling moth where arsenate of lead is used? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Is the Duchess a good stock to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Would it be practical to use water shoots for scions? |
18183 | Mr. Glenzke: What would be the consequence of the berries being planted after tomatoes had been planted there the year before? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: Did you ever try capsicum, sprinkling that on the heads? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: The cabbage butterfly, does that come from the same maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What do you do for that? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What is your method of harvesting your beans? |
18183 | Mr. Graves( Wisconsin): Do you use your black leaf 40 in conjunction with your Bordeaux or lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: Does n''t it counteract the result? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: You say you got the same results from black leaf 40 in that mixture? |
18183 | Mr. Hall: I would like to ask you what you spray with and when you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: Do you know of any plum that has never had brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: What distance apart ought those apple trees to be? |
18183 | Mr. Harrison: Any special rule about multiplying or dividing? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Has any one had experience in raising trollius? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Mrs. Gould, can you give us any enlightenment? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: What would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Have you ever carried over lime- sulphur from one year to another? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Is there much danger of evaporation so it would be too strong to use next year? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What proportion of the lime- sulphur and arsenate of lead do you use? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What would you advise for plants that are infected with aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would n''t you have an open space in those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would you have an open space outside of those twenty trees for the snow to lodge in? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you know whether the mulberry is hardy in Minnesota or not? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you think that it weakens the stem of the apples? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Does Mr. Dunlap attribute the general dropping of apples to the scab fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: How would the golden elder do as a hedge? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: Is there anything you can suggest to control the yellows in asters? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: You think that irregular watering might make any difference or very solid rooting? |
18183 | Mr. Johnson: Is it doing well now? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Are those honest representations of the different apples from the dwarf and the standard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Did you ever hear of them dying? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Do you find any trouble with too much protection for orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does it blight any? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does spraying injure the bees? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Have you tested the Douglas spruce? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How do you get rid of the waste apples that would rot in the orchard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How large were the wagons? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How soon do your dwarf trees pay for themselves? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is n''t it better to dehorn it and get some new shoots to graft? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is there such a thing as a pedigreed strawberry plant that is taken from runners? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Too big a growth on the graft is liable to be injured in the winter, is it not? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What do you know about the Surprise? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the best spray you know of, how often do you apply it and when? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the matter with the old Wilson strawberry? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is your best windbreak? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the condition of that tree where Dartt put in four scions? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the trouble where I could n''t raise strawberries on new wood soil? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Would scions from bearing trees with the blossom buds on do you any good? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: You have been surprised with it? |
18183 | Mr. Latham: Do you wish to have the report read or have it published later? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Are the rings put on the outside or the inside of the trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do I understand that you have to lay down and cover up those red raspberries? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do you mulch the ground? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How far do you put them apart in the hedge row? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How many years is the planting of the King raspberry good for? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How old are your Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I want to ask if you recommend the bamboo poles for general propping of trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I would like to know what you advise for that commercial orchard, what varieties? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: It was n''t embalmed? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What has been your experience with the Ocheeda? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is the difference between the brown rot and the plum pocket fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is your average cost per tree for thinning? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What peculiar method have you for keeping those apples? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: When do you do that? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Would it be policy to leave that on and let the strawberries come up through, to keep them clean? |
18183 | Mr. M''Clelland: Have you anything as good? |
18183 | Mr. Maher: It spread too much? |
18183 | Mr. Marien: I think that is a wax bean? |
18183 | Mr. McCall: What is peat lacking in? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: What time do you uncover your strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: Will they come through the mulch all right? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I should think the germination of that seed would run out? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I suppose the idea of putting that in the bottom is that it is so hard to cultivate the manure on the top without doing as you mentioned? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg if he advises covering the strawberries in the winter after snow has fallen and with what success? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: In saving your seed from year to year, is there any danger of the seed running out in time? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: Then you can use the black leaf forty? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: What do you do for root aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: The radishes and turnips are attacked and the cabbages are not? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: What variety do you raise? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: Which do you raise, early cabbages? |
18183 | Mr. Moyer: What do those black soils in the western part of the state need? |
18183 | Mr. Pfeiffer: Your location is where? |
18183 | Mr. Philips: Which was blighted, the Hibernal? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen( Wisconsin): What trouble have you experienced with overhead irrigation with the strawberries in the bright sunshine? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: Did you say the same fly attacks the onion and the cabbage? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: What is the spray for the cabbage and onion maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Reckstrom: Would bone do that was bought for the chickens? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: Did you ever know the plum pocket to come unless we had cold weather about the time of blossoming and lots of east wind? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many apple trees have you? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many growers are there in your neighborhood growing fruit commercially? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: Is the mulberry hardy with you? |
18183 | Mr. Rogers: Do you plant in the hedge row or in the hill system? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: About how long would you cook them? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: And what next? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Can the everbearing and the common varieties be planted together? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do n''t the flat ones bring a little more than the round ones? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you cover the King? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you have any trouble with those bursting the cans? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How about the Globe? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How does the powdered arsenate compare with the paste? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How far apart must they be planted? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How is the Malinda? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How long must they stand dissolved? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I want to set out 500 trees; what kind shall I set out? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I would like to know which is the best beans for canning, the yellow or the green? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is it a good seller? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Malinda and the Northwest Greening all right? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Okabena better than the Duchess? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you know of the paper cartons instead of flower pots? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you think of the Red Pear? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What form of packing for apples will bring the best prices? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What is your best raspberry? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What kind do you think is the best for an early variety? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What tomato do you find the best for canning? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Which is the best, the flat or the round of the wax? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: You think it best for anybody with a small orchard to make his own lime- sulphur solution? |
18183 | Mr. Simmons: What is the cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did the whole leaf turn brown? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: How strong did you use the lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: The flower or leaf? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: There was a perfect crop of new leaves? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Were you spraying for the pocket or brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What does your oil cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What kind of soil were they on? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did it happen? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: You did n''t get any injury to the plum trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: But the second year would you keep all of the growth in the graft? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Have you had any experience in budding in August or first of September on those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: How about the Brier''s Sweet crab? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Would you put it on the top or bottom side of the limb? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Did you have any red grapes growing there? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Is n''t it as good now as it was? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: What do you think the male parent was of the red grape? |
18183 | Mr. Wallace: Is the Patten Greening a good tree to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: Forest soil or prairie? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg and I think we would all be interested in knowing when he began growing strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Wellington: Have you been able to cross the European plum with the Japanese? |
18183 | Mr. Whiting: That is a hard question, but is n''t it a fact that you grow too many Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: How thick do you leave those canes set apart in the row, how many in a foot? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: I would like to ask the speaker, the way I understood him, why he could n''t raise as good strawberries on new ground as on old ground? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: So it would be better to plant on old ground or old breaking than new? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: You pinch the end of the tops, I think? |
18183 | Mr. Willis: Would it improve the plants, fertilize the plants, this lime? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: The maggots that attack the radishes and turnips are the same as the cabbage maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: Why is it I have no trouble with the cabbages, and yet I can raise no radishes or turnips in the same ground? |
18183 | Mrs. Cadoo: Can you graft onto a Martha crab and have success with that? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Do you cover them winters? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Will yucca filamentosa ever blossom in a garden in St. Paul? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Would n''t the hollyhock come under the heading of being perennial but not a permanent perennial? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Did you ever try poisoning them? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Do you put a canvas over the tree or leave it uncovered? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have they a string on the back? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have you ever tried Golden Pod? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: How do you manage to get the farmers to bring them in? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: What vegetables do you can? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Will you tell me the color of your beans? |
18183 | Mrs. Gould: Will you make that motion? |
18183 | Native Plants in the Garden Shall We Collect or Grow Our Native Plants? |
18183 | Now, the distance apart? |
18183 | Older: If you are going to mow it, why not mow the sweet clover same as the other? |
18183 | Older: What do you consider the best to seed down with, clover or alfalfa? |
18183 | Older: Where you have an orchard ten years old, is it best to seed it down or still continue to cultivate it? |
18183 | Older: Which kind of seeding down would you prefer, what kind of clover? |
18183 | One prominent Minnetonka fruit grower said this to me about them:"Mr. Cook, what is the use of making all of this fuss about these new plums? |
18183 | Or does the success of it depend principally upon the varieties of fruit set out together with the after cultivation, pruning and spraying? |
18183 | President Cashman: Anything further before we pass to the next subject? |
18183 | President Reeves: Is Mr. Hegerle in the room? |
18183 | Question: If the above treatment had been given every second or third row throughout orchard, what would the results have been? |
18183 | SEND IN A NEW MEMBER.--Have you noticed the advertisement on the inside of the back cover page of this and also the January issues of our monthly? |
18183 | Second, how much? |
18183 | Some may ask, why not use the Virginia crab? |
18183 | The President: Any one wish to make any comments on this report? |
18183 | The President: Can you tell us something more about your experience in marketing direct? |
18183 | The President: Do you accept that as a substitute? |
18183 | The President: Do you add any Paris green at any time or arsenate of lead? |
18183 | The President: Do you break off many canes by covering them? |
18183 | The President: How did you get it? |
18183 | The President: How is your wild strawberry? |
18183 | The President: How many years ago? |
18183 | The President: How much? |
18183 | The President: I suppose that is automobile trade? |
18183 | The President: Is Professor Waldron in the room? |
18183 | The President: That is, 2- 1/2 pounds to 50 gallons of water with the other ingredients? |
18183 | The President: What is the remedy, Mr. Kellogg? |
18183 | The President: What temperature do you keep in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: What will you do with the report of the treasurer? |
18183 | The President: You have a heater in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: You take out all the old wood every year? |
18183 | The Reverend Mr. Reisenour(?) |
18183 | The first question I will read is--"What would you advise about covering in the garden in a season like this?" |
18183 | The mystery of the selection in this state is, why was a flower chosen which is not common to any part of the state? |
18183 | The next question is--"Are the black peat or muck soils first class? |
18183 | The next question is--"Should apple raisers use commercial fertilizers?" |
18183 | The question with pears is, will they stand blight or not? |
18183 | Then I thought,"What if I had planted forty acres?" |
18183 | Then did you vow once more to destroy the beetles when you saw the roses begin to wither from punctures made by the beetle in the stem? |
18183 | There is still room in this list for others, and why not instead of paying annual membership year after year make one payment and have done with it? |
18183 | This thing is to go on, and how? |
18183 | Tucker; 388 Gray, A. N., Marketing Fruit by Association; 27 H Hansen, Prof. N. E., What is Hardiness? |
18183 | Virginia crab is an early bloomer, and would grafting it with Wealthy make it bloom earlier? |
18183 | Was it the new soil? |
18183 | Was it your idea that we report next year or that the plan be put in operation? |
18183 | Was n''t that a great thing to make a fuss about? |
18183 | We have members, I think, in every county of the state, have n''t we, President Cashman? |
18183 | What about the farm and home garden for 1916? |
18183 | What are the results? |
18183 | What can we say about the crowning event of our meeting, the annual banquet? |
18183 | What do we raise and how do we do it? |
18183 | What is blight? |
18183 | What is it and is there a remedy?" |
18183 | What is the best in this country? |
18183 | What is the occasion of this? |
18183 | What is the reason? |
18183 | What is the second one? |
18183 | What is your opinion of the Delicious? |
18183 | What shall I do? |
18183 | What shall be done with the old bed? |
18183 | What variety shall I choose? |
18183 | What was the beginning of the civic league and the city beautiful? |
18183 | What was the matter, was it the mixture or the sprayer? |
18183 | What was the result? |
18183 | What would be the consequence as to the white grub that follows the tomatoes, and other insects? |
18183 | When do the berries begin to ripen? |
18183 | Where is the grocer who would go back to those days, and where is the public that would patronize him? |
18183 | Who are the people that are going to take your places? |
18183 | Who can do better than that? |
18183 | Who is to have a gold watch given him fifty years from now-- or given to her fifty years from now? |
18183 | Who would have thought it possible that in spite of all the frost and cold rains we would get a pretty good crop of cherries? |
18183 | Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples? |
18183 | Why do n''t you come and enjoy this most entertaining event of the meeting? |
18183 | Why not grow evergreens in the place of willows? |
18183 | Why not others? |
18183 | Will not each member make an especial effort to bring in a new member at that time or before? |
18183 | Will some one enlighten me? |
18183 | Will that be all right? |
18183 | Will they take nitrogen the same as clover? |
18183 | With over 2,000 varieties should n''t we be satisfied? |
18183 | Would it be five or six years before I receive any benefit, or seven or eight years? |
18183 | Would it be policy to put that on? |
18183 | Would it be worth while to put that on or would that overdo the thing? |
18183 | Would you want the Alsike clover or sweet clover for an apple orchard? |
18183 | You have got to punish the whole on account of the few? |
18183 | You may ask why? |
18183 | You throw a heavy growth in there, which makes the fruit that much larger? |
18183 | You would n''t put them all together? |
18183 | [ Illustration: American Elm windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] Mr. Kellogg: What is the reason there are so few of them really blue? |
18183 | [ Illustration: Norway Poplar windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] I have a question here: How long should a shelter- belt be cultivated? |