Annual Report of the New Jersey State Agricultural Experiment Station and the ... Annual Report of the New Jersey Agricultural College Experiment Station ..., Volume 45 |
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Page 20
... its active ingredient , is being used . The samples examined consisted of the following : 14 samples of Paris green 11 samples of lead arsenate 20 NEW JERSEY STATE AGRICULTURAL . Inspection of Insecticides and Fungicides during 1923.
... its active ingredient , is being used . The samples examined consisted of the following : 14 samples of Paris green 11 samples of lead arsenate 20 NEW JERSEY STATE AGRICULTURAL . Inspection of Insecticides and Fungicides during 1923.
Page 21
... lead arsenate paste 9 samples of calcium arsenate 14 samples of bordeaux mixture 3 samples of lime - sulfur solution 6 samples of soluble - sulfur compounds 6 samples of sulfur mixtures 11 samples of nicotine preparations 39 samples of ...
... lead arsenate paste 9 samples of calcium arsenate 14 samples of bordeaux mixture 3 samples of lime - sulfur solution 6 samples of soluble - sulfur compounds 6 samples of sulfur mixtures 11 samples of nicotine preparations 39 samples of ...
Page 46
... lead arsenate at the rate of 111⁄2 pounds to 50 gallons of mixture was added to each treatment in the shuck fall application and again two weeks later . Stone lime at the rate of 5 pounds to 50 gal- lons of mixture was used with the ...
... lead arsenate at the rate of 111⁄2 pounds to 50 gallons of mixture was added to each treatment in the shuck fall application and again two weeks later . Stone lime at the rate of 5 pounds to 50 gal- lons of mixture was used with the ...
Page 47
... lead arsenate must be due to soluble arsenic liberated during the slow decomposition of the lead arsenate on the leaves . Furthermore , it seems that sudden weather changes from cool and damp to warm are more likely to cause injury from ...
... lead arsenate must be due to soluble arsenic liberated during the slow decomposition of the lead arsenate on the leaves . Furthermore , it seems that sudden weather changes from cool and damp to warm are more likely to cause injury from ...
Page 48
... lead arsenate , lime in the shuck fall and following appli- cation with an 80-20 sulfur - lime mixture in all subsequent applications . ( 2 ) 60-10-30 sulfur , lead arsenate , lime in the shuck fall and following appli- cation with an ...
... lead arsenate , lime in the shuck fall and following appli- cation with an 80-20 sulfur - lime mixture in all subsequent applications . ( 2 ) 60-10-30 sulfur , lead arsenate , lime in the shuck fall and following appli- cation with an ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid phosphate Agriculture alfalfa amount applied average yield barley Barnegat Bay bisulfide Bordeaux mixture Burr Leaming bushels carbon bisulfide club codling moth cooperation corn county agent cover crop cows culture dairy demonstrations disease dried blood dust Elberta Experiment Station extension farm farmers feeding fertilizer field frame brood fruit given in table grain growers grown growth inches increase infection inoculated investigations J. G. Lipman Jersey June large number larvæ lead arsenate legume lime manure material milk mosquito nitrate of soda nitrogen Number of Samples oats obtained orchard organism ounce oyster peach peach moth plants potash potatoes poultry pounds per acre production purebred records Remarks Honey rock phosphate root rot scab season Seed Piece side worm sodium nitrate soil soybeans specialist spray sulfate sulfur tion Total Number treatment trees varieties weight wheat wire-worms Yield per Acre
Popular passages
Page 36 - commercial feeding stuff" shall be held to include all feeding stuffs used for feeding live stock and poultry, except whole seeds or grains sold as such and the unmixed meals made directly from and composed of the entire grains of corn, wheat, rye, barley, oats, buckwheat, flaxseed, Kafir and milo; neither shall it include whole hays, straws, cottonseed hulls and corn stover when unmixed with other materials, nor shall it include any materials containing sixty per centum or more of water.
Page 36 - The unmixed meals made directly from and consisting of the entire grains of corn, wheat, rye, barley, oats, buckwheat, flaxseed, kafir, milo, and other seeds or grains.
Page xiii - SIR— I have the honor to submit herewith the Forty-fifth Annual Report of the New Jersey State Agricultural Experiment Station, as required by the law establishing the Station, which was approved March 10, 1880, and which is chapter 106 of the laws of that year.
Page 182 - Executive order, administered by the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture...
Page 38 - ... feeds. They show clearly that samples containing it average much higher in ash and silica than those in which it is absent. The finding of sand has been substantiated in every case by careful microscopical examination of the ash. COMPOSITION OF FEEDING STUFFS. A cattle food in its r61e as a " nutrient " is composed of groups of chemical compounds which have certain functions to perform in the production of energy and the building up of the animal body. The determination of the amounts of these...
Page 8 - Contribution to the chemistry of decomposition of proteins and amino acids by various groups of microorganisms.
Page xiii - Report of the operations of the department of the College which has been organized in accordance with said act of Congress, and is known as "The State Agricultural College Experiment Station.
Page 8 - Microbiological analysis of soil as an index of soil fertility. IX. Nitrogen fixation and mannite decomposition. Soil Sci.
Page xiii - March 5, 1888, I beg leave to submit, on behalf of the Trustees of Rutgers College in New Jersey, maintaining Rutgers Scientific School, the New Jersey State College for the benefit of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, the...
Page 373 - ... to this Department, where the results were tabulated and the information was made available. By means of this survey the Department was able to determine the earliest appearance, distribution, and severity of the various plant diseases, and to direct control work accordingly. This work was done in cooperation with the Plant Disease Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture. Six exhibits at state and county fairs, at state fruit meetings, and at the Rochester Exposition, were made...