Biennial Report, Volume 20 |
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Results 1-5 of 16
Page 5
... selling and faults of transportation . WILLIAM H. BARNES , Topeka . FRED . ESPENLAUB , Rosedale . C. H. LONGSTRETH , Lakin . Small Fruits . To study and report on new varieties and new methods of planting , growing , harvesting and ...
... selling and faults of transportation . WILLIAM H. BARNES , Topeka . FRED . ESPENLAUB , Rosedale . C. H. LONGSTRETH , Lakin . Small Fruits . To study and report on new varieties and new methods of planting , growing , harvesting and ...
Page 9
... selling to them varieties of fruit - trees and plants that are entirely unsuited to our climate , as well as under erroneous names . By uniting together we shall acquire strength for ourselves , and be enabled to impart that kind of ...
... selling to them varieties of fruit - trees and plants that are entirely unsuited to our climate , as well as under erroneous names . By uniting together we shall acquire strength for ourselves , and be enabled to impart that kind of ...
Page 22
... sell for hundreds of dollars more than a place which stands out alone in the glaring sun all the long summer day . An orchard increases $ 1 every year for each apple - tree . If 500 trees are planted , $ 500 each year is added to the ...
... sell for hundreds of dollars more than a place which stands out alone in the glaring sun all the long summer day . An orchard increases $ 1 every year for each apple - tree . If 500 trees are planted , $ 500 each year is added to the ...
Page 28
... sell at 10 to 122 cents each , while oak posts sell at 6 to 7 cents . They are more durable than Osage posts ( ? ) . The black locust throws a mass of sprouts , forming a dense wind- break . The Russian olive ( ? ) is also a vigorous ...
... sell at 10 to 122 cents each , while oak posts sell at 6 to 7 cents . They are more durable than Osage posts ( ? ) . The black locust throws a mass of sprouts , forming a dense wind- break . The Russian olive ( ? ) is also a vigorous ...
Page 29
... sell for less than their real value .. The most careful berry - pickers are females ; they handle the berries well if once shown how . Noisy berry - pickers are a nuisance . The berries they handle and don't put in their mouths are a ...
... sell for less than their real value .. The most careful berry - pickers are females ; they handle the berries well if once shown how . Noisy berry - pickers are a nuisance . The berries they handle and don't put in their mouths are a ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres annual meeting apple-trees B. F. Smith Barnes barrels beautiful Ben Davis apples berries better blackberries bushel cents cherry City cold storage condition corn crates cultivation Davis December 11 deep plowing drought E. J. Holman early Edwardsville Edwin Taylor experience farm feet flowers Fort Scott fruit-growing full crop G. W. Bailey garden grapes ground grow grower hardy Hill's Chili Holsinger horticultural Horticultural Society horticulturists Houk inches irrigation J. C. Evans J. W. Robison Kansas State Horticultural keep land landscape-gardening Lawrence Leavenworth Leavenworth county Manhattan Missouri Pippin moisture Nature Osage county peaches pears planted plums President Prof profitable pump railroad rain rainfall Raspberries reservoir roots S. C. Mason Samuel Reynolds season seedlings sell ship small fruits soil sold spring Stayman strawberries subsoil Topeka trees varieties vegetables vine vinegar Wellhouse western Kansas Winesap winter yield
Popular passages
Page 94 - GOD might have made the earth bring forth Enough for great and small, The oak-tree and the cedar-tree, Without a flower at all.
Page 79 - Let us take it then •as the type of all true art in landscape gardening — which selects from natural materials that abound in any country, its best sylvan features, and by giving them a better opportunity than they could otherwise obtain, brings about a higher beauty of development and a more perfect expression than nature itself offers.
Page 49 - Horticulture is defined as the most perfect method of tilling the earth so as to produce the best results, whether the products are objects of utility or of beauty. Literally it means gardening, gardening for pleasure and gardening for profit, gardening of every kind and in every place. Caring for the cheap plants in the window of the poor laboring man's cottage, and...
Page 79 - Here everything that could be desired in gardens •was presented to their eyes in one landscape, and yet without contradiction or confusion, — flowers, fruits, water, sunny hills, descending woods, retreats into corners and grottos: and what put the last loveliness upon the scene was, that the art which did all was nowhere discernible.
Page 79 - You might have supposed (so exquisitely was the wild and the cultivated united) that all had somehow happened, not been contrived. It seemed to be the art of Nature herself; as though, in a fit of playfulness, she had imitated her imitator. But the temperature of the place, if nothing else, was plainly the work of magic, for blossoms and fruit abounded at the same time. The ripe and the budding fig grew on the same bough ; green apples were clustered upon those with red cheeks ; the vines in one...
Page 93 - I seek to remind you of the ancient truth that the life is more than meat and the body than raiment.
Page 75 - It could lie done without interfering with the traffic in the State, and it would give you a speedway there that would be unsurpassed, and would lead up to within a reasonable distance of both the Oak Ridge and the Paducah atomic bomb plants. Mr. Chairman, I will be glad to answer any questions if you have any to ask, if not, I want you to hear my distinguished Senator here. Senator Stennis. STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN C. STENNIS, A UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI ACQUISITION OF RIGHTS-OF-WAY...
Page 96 - On motion, the thanks of the Society were tendered to the president and secretary of the Missouri State Horticultural Society for their presence and assistance during the meeting.
Page 66 - Major Sankey* reported that the percentage of the whole area of Mysore under the tank system was 59.7, while the total area of the state is 27,300 square miles.
Page 67 - ... the ordinary pumps are hardly met with in the most important and oldest establishments. All these machines and their installation differ nothing from those which are found all over the world; it is then useless to describe them. According to the statistics collected by the ministry of public works there were in 1882, in the whole of Lower Egypt, 2,500 machines representing a total of 25,000 horse-power, among which three hundred and sixty permanent machines have a total of 6,000 horse-power.