Transactions of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society |
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Page 268
... year . Nearly all the prizes offered were competed for . The show of vegetables at the May exhibition on the 6th of the month , brought out a fine display of the different varieties usually seen at that season , most of which , however.
... year . Nearly all the prizes offered were competed for . The show of vegetables at the May exhibition on the 6th of the month , brought out a fine display of the different varieties usually seen at that season , most of which , however.
Page 311
... arranged . The varieties were well selected . The other houses in the range contained a miscellaneous collection of plants , such as is usually found in a private place . Mr. W. REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON GARDENS . 311.
... arranged . The varieties were well selected . The other houses in the range contained a miscellaneous collection of plants , such as is usually found in a private place . Mr. W. REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON GARDENS . 311.
Page 312
Massachusetts Horticultural Society. is usually found in a private place . Mr. W. N. Craig is the gardener and has been there about a year . It will be noticed that we have devoted considerable time and space to the Chrysanthemum . Never ...
Massachusetts Horticultural Society. is usually found in a private place . Mr. W. N. Craig is the gardener and has been there about a year . It will be noticed that we have devoted considerable time and space to the Chrysanthemum . Never ...
Page 12
... usually inconspicuous because of the minute size of the component hyphæ , and because , from the office which it serves , it is usually buried in the sub- stratum upon which the fungus grows ; nevertheless , either as single hyphæ or ...
... usually inconspicuous because of the minute size of the component hyphæ , and because , from the office which it serves , it is usually buried in the sub- stratum upon which the fungus grows ; nevertheless , either as single hyphæ or ...
Page 13
... usually attributed to some more visible agency . Perhaps the most intelligible method of getting at the character- istic points of the Ascomycetes , will be to follow out the life- history of some common form , You are all familiar with ...
... usually attributed to some more visible agency . Perhaps the most intelligible method of getting at the character- istic points of the Ascomycetes , will be to follow out the life- history of some common form , You are all familiar with ...
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Common terms and phrases
00 Second 00 Third A. D. Wood Aaron Low Agriculture Annual Report apple awarded Benjamin G bloom Boston Botanic Brackett Brookline buds Bulletin Bussey Institution C. G. Weld Carnation Charles Charles E Chrysanthemum Collection colored plates Committee crop cultivation Cut Flowers E. M. Gill Exhibition experience feet foliage Francis Brown Hayes fruit fungi fungous fungus garden Gardner George glass grafting grape Gratuities gray green cloth greenhouse growers growing grown growth H. H. Hunnewell H. R. Kinney hardy Hunnewell inches insects Isaac E Jamaica Plain John Joseph H Kidder larvæ lettuce light London manure Massachusetts Horticultural Society mushrooms Nathaniel Pamphlet Park Pears plants pots Prizes purlin Rhododendrons Rose Roxbury Samuel Hartwell scion season Secretary seed Seedling shrubs soil species specimens spores tomato trees Varnum Frost vegetables vines Walter Russell Warren Fenno Warren Heustis Washington White William Doran William H Winter Brothers
Popular passages
Page 112 - Boast not against the branches. But if thou boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee.
Page 112 - And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be graffed in: for God is able to graff them in again. For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree which is wild by nature, and wert graffed contrary to nature into a good olive tree: how much more shall these, which be the natural branches, be graffed into their own olive tree?
Page 2 - The Art of Perfumery, and the Methods of Obtaining the Odours of Plants ; the Growth and general Flower Farm System of Raising Fragrant Herbs ; with Instructions for the Manufacture of Perfumes &c.
Page 107 - Annual Report of the State Botanist of the State of New York, Albany 1891, S.
Page 147 - Heat the solution of soap and add it boiling hot to the kerosene. Churn the mixture by means of a force pump and spray nozzle for five or ten minutes. The emulsion, if perfect, forms a cream which thickens on cooling and should adhere without oiliness to the surface of the glass. Dilute, before using, one part of the emulsion with nine parts of cold water.
Page 147 - ... Heat the solution of soap and add it boiling hot to the kerosene. Churn the mixture by means of a force-pump and spray-nozzle for five or ten minutes. The emulsion, if perfect, forms a cream, which thickens on cooling, and should adhere without oiliness to the surface of glass. Dilute, before using, one part of the emulsion with nine parts of cold water. The above formula gives three gallons of emulsion, and makes, when diluted, thirty gallons of wash.
Page 4 - Jose, duly seconded, it was voted that the Report of the Committee on the Revision of the Constitution and By-Laws, presented at the Stated Meeting on the fifth of January and then postponed to this meeting, be taken up.
Page 8 - Population of an Old Pear Tree. From the French of E. VAN BRUYSSEL. Edited by the Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe.
Page 401 - The spelling reform; by Francis A. March. A revision and enlargement of the author's pamphlet published by the US Bureau of education in 1881.
Page 5 - Jersey road system, passed, almost unanimously, an act to provide for the construction of roads by local assessment, county and State aid.