Annual Report of the Wisconsin State Horticultural Society, Volumen6V. 40, pt. 1; v. 41, pt. 1; v. 42, pt. 2, and v. 43, pt. 2, are Constitution, by-laws, business transactions, etc., for distribution to members. Brief historical sketches of the society are given in the volume for 1864/68, p. [3]-8, and in v. 56, 1926, p. 21-22. List of members in [v. 1]-39, 1870/71-1909; v. 40, pt. 1; v. 41, pt. 1; v. 42, pt. 2; v. 43, pt. 2, 1910-13. |
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Página 7
... interests of horticulture in this section . President J. M. Smith , Green Bay . Secretary - W . Reynolds , Green Bay . FREEDOM HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY . The following are the officers of the Freedom Horticultural So- ciety for the present ...
... interests of horticulture in this section . President J. M. Smith , Green Bay . Secretary - W . Reynolds , Green Bay . FREEDOM HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY . The following are the officers of the Freedom Horticultural So- ciety for the present ...
Página 10
... interests of horticulture , rather than private , selfish interests each year will show certain and satisfactory progress . The task we have undertaken may seem to some impossible of accomplish- ment , and very many are even now ...
... interests of horticulture , rather than private , selfish interests each year will show certain and satisfactory progress . The task we have undertaken may seem to some impossible of accomplish- ment , and very many are even now ...
Página 14
... interest is a prominent , growing interest in our State . Prob- ably no State in the Union has as large an area of valuable cran- berry - lands as Wisconsin , and none more susceptible of improve- ment with as little cost . The day is ...
... interest is a prominent , growing interest in our State . Prob- ably no State in the Union has as large an area of valuable cran- berry - lands as Wisconsin , and none more susceptible of improve- ment with as little cost . The day is ...
Página 15
... interests of our State would be wrecked by their polar waves . The extreme severi- ty of the winter left little or no ground to hope for a crop of fruit the coming season , and most of us felt that when spring came , we should witness ...
... interests of our State would be wrecked by their polar waves . The extreme severi- ty of the winter left little or no ground to hope for a crop of fruit the coming season , and most of us felt that when spring came , we should witness ...
Página 16
... interest to consider . What are these conditions ? Why is it that some orchards have borne good crops of fruit , while others , perhaps in the same locality , have yielded little or none ? Why is it that , in some places , pear and plum ...
... interest to consider . What are these conditions ? Why is it that some orchards have borne good crops of fruit , while others , perhaps in the same locality , have yielded little or none ? Why is it that , in some places , pear and plum ...
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Términos y frases comunes
00 Second best A. G. Tuttle acre adapted annual apples Baraboo bark bearing beautiful Ben Davis berries Best show better bouquets bushels canker-worm climate color committee crabs cranberry crop cultivation culture Duchess Duchess of Oldenburg early exhibition fair Fameuse favorable flowers foliage frost fruit fruit-growing give Golden Russet Gould's Nursery Company grapes Green Bay ground grow grown growth hardy Horticultural Society horticulture hundred inches injured insects J. C. Plumb J. M. Smith Janesville Karzke Kate Peffer Kellogg killed Kitzrow lake land larva larvæ Madison marsh Mazomanie meeting Milwaukee moth mulching North Prairie Northern Spy northwest orchard past season pears Pewaukee plants plums President Tuttle produce profitable pruning Red Astrachan ripened Rock county roots seedling Siberian small-fruits soil spring Stickney strawberries success Third best timber Tolman Sweet trees varieties of apples vines winds winter Wisconsin wood worms yield
Pasajes populares
Página 88 - That palter with us in a double sense ; That keep the word of promise to our ear, And break it to our hope.
Página 158 - Congress; and that our secretary be instructed to forward a copy of this resolution to each member of Congress from this State.
Página 128 - These last are at first white, and all the parts soft as the pupa, and they frequently remain in the earth for weeks at a time, until thoroughly hardened, and then, on some favorable night in May, they rise in swarms and fill the air.
Página 116 - ... head and first segment, magnified; i, the cocoon which it spins; d, the chrysalis to which it changes; /, the moth which escapes from the chrysalis, as it appears when at rest; g, the moth with wings expanded.
Página 125 - It then stuffs the upper end of the passage with sawdustlike powder, and the lower part with curly fibres of wood, after which it rests from its labors. It thus finishes its gnawing work during the commencement of the third winter, but remains motionless in the larval state until the following spring, when it casts off its skin once more and becomes a pupa.
Página 93 - Though they smile in vain for what once was ours, They are love's last gift — bring ye flowers, pale flowers ! Bring flowers to the shrine where we kneel in prayer, They are nature's offering, their place is there ! They speak of hope to the fainting heart, With a voice of promise they come and part, They sleep in dust through the wintry hours, They break forth in glory — bring flowers, bright flowers ! THE CRUSADER'S RETURN. "Alas! the mother that him bare, If she had been in presence there,...
Página 125 - ... the following spring. On approach of the second winter, it is about one-half grown, and still living on the sap-wood, and it is at this time...
Página 126 - May, it is advisable to examine the trees in the fall, at which time the young worms that hatched through the summer may be generally detected and easily cut out without injury to the tree.
Página 128 - Soon after pairing, the female beetle creeps into the earth, especially wherever the soil is loose and rough, and after depositing her eggs, to the number of iorty or fifty — dies. These hatch in the course of a month, and, the grubs growing slowly, do not attain full size till the early spring of the third year, when they construct an ovoid chamber, lined with a gelatinous fluid ; change into pupae, and soon afterwards into beetles.
Página 6 - Its members shall consist of Annual members, paying an annual fee of one dollar; of Life members paying a fee of ten dollars at one time, and of Honorary members, who shall only be...