The Hawaiian Forester and Agriculturist: A Quarterly Magazine of Forestry, Entomology, Plant Inspection and Animal Industry, Volume 8Advertiser Publishing Company, Limited, 1912 |
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
acres Agriculture and Forestry Aleyrodidae Animal Industry banana biennial period ending Board of Agriculture Board of Commissioners Cane cents Circular coffee Commissioners of Agriculture crop cultivation dairy DANIEL LOGAN Deputy Territorial Veterinarian disease District Division of Animal Division of Entomology Division of Forestry Ehrhorn ending December 31 Eucalyptus Experiment Station farm fertilizer Fifth Report Forest and Ornamental Forest Nurseryman Fourth Report fruit fungus Garden Glanders Government Nursery Governor of Hawaii growers Haleakala Hawaiian Forester Hilo Homestead Honolulu Hosmer Imported Live Stock infested Inspection Inspector Islands Jacob Kotinsky Kauai land manganese Maui ment method milk month Newell Oahu Ornamental Tree Ornamental Tree Seed P. O. BOX pests pineapple plantation plates plats Press Bulletin rubber Rule seedlings shipments soil species sugar Superintendent of Entomology Superintendent of Forestry tapping taro Territory of Hawaii text figures Third Report tion tuberculosis vegetable Wailuku
Popular passages
Page 38 - YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS • DESIGNS ... COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable.
Page 263 - Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. largest circulation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year ; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. ;...;&Co.36iBroadwa'
Page 72 - Forestryv for the year ending December 31, 1906; 212 pp.; 3 plates; 4 maps; 7 text figures. Fourth Report of the Board o£ Commissioners of Agriculture and Forestry, for-the year ending December 31, 1907 ; 202 pp. ; 7 plates. "Notice- to Importers,
Page 131 - We press their memory too soon, and puzzle, strain, and load them with words and rules ; to know grammar and rhetoric, and a strange tongue or two, that it is ten to one may never be useful to them ; leaving their natural genius to mechanical and physical or natural knowledge uncultivated and neglected ; which would be of exceeding use and pleasure to them through the whole course of their life.
Page 104 - The Board of Commissioners of Agriculture and Forestry of the Territory of Hawaii...
Page 72 - Third Report of the Board of Commissioners of Agriculture and Forestry, for the year ending December 31, 1906; 212 pp.; 3 plates; 4 maps; 7 text figures.
Page 282 - ... evident that amounts of saccharin may readily be consumed which will, through continual use, produce digestive disturbances. In every food in which saccharin is used, some other sweetening agent known to be harmless to health can be substituted, and there is not even a pretense that saccharin is a necessity in the manufacture of food products. Under the Food and Drugs Act, articles of food are adulterated if they contain added poisonous or other added deleterious ingredients which may render...
Page 273 - If the herd is found to be extensively infected, as shown by the tuberculin test or clinical examination, even the apparently healthy animals in it should be regarded with suspicion until they have been separated from the reacting animals for at least three months. If, after the expiration of this time, they do not react to the tuberculin test, they may be considered healthy and dealt with accordingly.
Page 167 - I teach The earth and soil To them that toil, The hill and fen To common men That live just here; The plants that grow, The winds that blow, The streams that run In rain and sun Throughout the year; • The shop and mart, The craft and art, The men to-day, The part they play In humble sphere; And then I lead Thro' wood and mead By bench and rod Out unto God With love and cheer.
Page 274 - They fully realize that in the event of the policy of which their recommendations form the framework, being anywhere adopted even in its entirety, much greater benefit will be derived, at least for some time, from its educative than from Its executive features. The control, to say nothing of the eradication of bovine tuberculosis, is impossible of achievement, without the hearty cooperation of the men who are actually engaged in the cattle industry.