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Page 9
... leaves the Association in a condition to put further permanent improve- ments on the grounds , in the doing of which much thought should be given to those improvements as will be of a character to add to the comfort of our patrons , for ...
... leaves the Association in a condition to put further permanent improve- ments on the grounds , in the doing of which much thought should be given to those improvements as will be of a character to add to the comfort of our patrons , for ...
Page 91
... leaves , and thus we supply to the plants these three elements . They make up from 90 to 95 per cent of the total dry weight of ordinary agricultural plants . These three elements make up 90 to 95 per cent of every ton of hay or corn ...
... leaves , and thus we supply to the plants these three elements . They make up from 90 to 95 per cent of the total dry weight of ordinary agricultural plants . These three elements make up 90 to 95 per cent of every ton of hay or corn ...
Page 122
... leaves to protect the body of the trees from the scorching sun , We should assist nature by removing all decaying limbs and branches and thin out where they grow too thick . When the trees are young you must keep watch for bunny . He ...
... leaves to protect the body of the trees from the scorching sun , We should assist nature by removing all decaying limbs and branches and thin out where they grow too thick . When the trees are young you must keep watch for bunny . He ...
Page 129
... leaves or tops may be very good feed but must be fed carefully , or they will cause the milk to have a peculiar smell . They should not be fed heavily if cows are kept in the barn all the time on account of the strange odor they cause ...
... leaves or tops may be very good feed but must be fed carefully , or they will cause the milk to have a peculiar smell . They should not be fed heavily if cows are kept in the barn all the time on account of the strange odor they cause ...
Page 147
... leaves appear , and is closely followed by the red and yellow Flowering Currant . Then comes the Lilacs , too well known to need description , and which may be had in many varieties , with double and single , white and purple flowers ...
... leaves appear , and is closely followed by the red and yellow Flowering Currant . Then comes the Lilacs , too well known to need description , and which may be had in many varieties , with double and single , white and purple flowers ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant migrant acre agricultural alfalfa alfalfa hay April Aughey average Bassett Beatrice beets better Bill bird breast breeding brown brownish Bruner buffy bushels cattle cement cent Cherry county color committee common migrant common summer resident crop crown cultivation Dakota City Dawes counties early eastern Nebraska Fair farm farmers feed Furnas gain gray grayish ground head Holt county inches long July June kernel late Lincoln loam Long Pine male matured McIntyre middle milk Missouri river Neligh nest Niobrara northern October Omaha outer tail feather paler Peru pigs plant plats Platte pounds President produced profit rare record resident and breeder Richardson county Sandpiper Sandy loam seed September Sherman County Sioux county soil Sparrow species specimen Speed Premium spring steers streaked sugar beets tail-coverts tarsus throat tree Upland variety Vireo Warbler week West Point western wing yellow yield young
Popular passages
Page 26 - The forest problem is in many ways the most vital internal problem in the United States. The more closely this statement is examined the more evident its truth becomes. In the arid region of the West, agriculture depends first of all upon the available water supply. In such a region forest protection alone can maintain the stream flow necessary for irrigation, and can prevent the great and destructive floods so ruinous to communities farther down the same streams that head in the arid regions.
Page 25 - You must convince the people of the truth — and it is the truth — that the success of home makers depends in the long run upon the wisdom with which the nation takes care of its forests.
Page 77 - I move that the rules be suspended and that the secretary be instructed to cast the vote of the association for Mr.
Page 77 - I move you that the rules be suspended and the Secretary be instructed to cast the ballot of the Association for Mr.
Page 80 - The PRESIDENT. The question is upon the adoption of the report of the committee, except so far as it relates to the State of Virginia.
Page 82 - ... mysterious galleries in the bosom of the rock itself, half-way up, or lie so close on the line of the sea, as to be lost sight of amongst the hulls of the vessels around. The promontory consists of a vast rock, rising from twelve hundred to fourteen hundred feet above the sea; is about three miles in length, and from one-half to three-quarters of a mile in width, and is joined to the mainland by a low sandy isthmus, about a mile and a half in length. On the north side, fronting the isthmus, the...
Page 21 - Although reported by no other observers, Mr. Savage's long experience as a collector and observer of bird migrations makes this record appear an authentic one." The species was reported in Bruner's list as a Nebraska bird on the authority of a specimen shot supposedly near Omaha, but it has since developed that the bird may have been secured either in Iowa or Missouri (Rev. Bds. Neb., 21-22). Family PHALACROCORACID^E. Cormorants. A single species of this family is found in Iowa. The Cormorants are...
Page 11 - Bibio, which feed on the roots of grasses, etc., etc. Birds, like all other animals, feed upon that food which is most readily obtained, hence the insectivorous kinds destroy those insects which are most numerous — the injurious species.
Page 59 - ... limited to a migration from its summer home in British America to the United States, where it remains during the winter, returning in the spring. . . . Individuals have been known to occur in northern Illinois, but are seldom seen south of latitude 40°" (Bird Migr. in Miss. Val., 188485, p. 129). It has been taken three times in the state, twice at Omaha, once by IS Trostler, December 15, 1895, and again by FJ Breese, and at Dakota City by Wallace Bruner (Rev. Bds. Neb., P- 59)Genus SPHYRAPICUS...
Page 117 - Is there any further business to be brought before the meeting? If not, a motion to adjourn is in order. (On motion the meeting adjourned.) FIRST DAY — EVENING SESSION.