Gardeners' Chronicle, Part 2Haymarket Publishing, 1906 - Gardening |
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Page 13
... seen to great advantage with such a fine environment . Mr. Lester Morse , the great American hybridist , who has given to the world many interesting varieties , recently sent to me from San Francisco , just before the conflagration , a ...
... seen to great advantage with such a fine environment . Mr. Lester Morse , the great American hybridist , who has given to the world many interesting varieties , recently sent to me from San Francisco , just before the conflagration , a ...
Page 15
... seen any- thing to approach . All tender leaves which began to develop a month or six weeks ago are stunted , twisted , and curled . Mildew is almost universal . Even Laurels have it all over the tenderer leaves , and in many instances ...
... seen any- thing to approach . All tender leaves which began to develop a month or six weeks ago are stunted , twisted , and curled . Mildew is almost universal . Even Laurels have it all over the tenderer leaves , and in many instances ...
Page 19
... seen in the market , and trade in all pot plants is very uncertain . Flowering plants of best quality make fair prices . I find Kalosanthes ( Crassula ) coccinea realise from 18s . to 24s . per dozen , but the hybrid varieties of this ...
... seen in the market , and trade in all pot plants is very uncertain . Flowering plants of best quality make fair prices . I find Kalosanthes ( Crassula ) coccinea realise from 18s . to 24s . per dozen , but the hybrid varieties of this ...
Page 21
... seen cases with trees of this variety where the disease was of long standing , and little pruning had been done , where the shoots had become so full of the fungus that the bark was ruptured over com- paratively large areas , and was ...
... seen cases with trees of this variety where the disease was of long standing , and little pruning had been done , where the shoots had become so full of the fungus that the bark was ruptured over com- paratively large areas , and was ...
Page 22
... seen by comparing fig . 12 ( 1 ) with fig . 12 ( 2 ) . On Pear leaves the fungus produces the same velvety , dark , olive - green patches . " Scabby " Pears , however , crack , and become more deformed than scabby " Apples . Young Pears ...
... seen by comparing fig . 12 ( 1 ) with fig . 12 ( 2 ) . On Pear leaves the fungus produces the same velvety , dark , olive - green patches . " Scabby " Pears , however , crack , and become more deformed than scabby " Apples . Young Pears ...
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Common terms and phrases
1st prize Apples Average Average Average Wholesale Prices Award of Merit bad Average beautiful beds Begonias blooms border Botanical Bouvardias bulbs bunches Carnations Cattleya Chrysanthemums collection colour Covent Garden cultivation culture Cypripedium Dahlias disease dozen early exhibit feet Ferns Flora foliage frost fruit crops fungus Gladiolus Grapes ground growers growing grown growth hardy flowers hybrid inches July labellum late leaves Lilium loam Madresfield Court manure Medal Montbretias Muscat of Alexandria Nectarines Nurseries Odontoglossum Orchids Park Peaches Pears Pelargoniums petals pink plants Plums Potatos pots Primula purple remarkable ripening roots Roses Royal Horticultural Royal Horticultural Society season seed seedlings seen sepals shade shown by Messrs shrubs Silver Society soil SONS species specimens spikes sprays spring staged stems Strawberries Sweet Peas tion trees tubers varieties vegetables weather week winter yellow
Popular passages
Page 135 - Agriculture, the general design and duties of which shall be to acquire and to diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture, in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word and to procure, propagate, and distribute among the people new and valuable seeds and plants.
Page 167 - Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon Pour'd forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain...
Page 136 - Bureau collects and distributes information in regard to the fruit interests of the United States; investigates the habits and peculiar qualities of fruits; their adaptability to various soils and climates, and conditions of culture. It...
Page 135 - Agriculture to acquire and preserve in his Department all information concerning agriculture which he can obtain by means of books and correspondence, and by practical and scientific experiments (accurate records of which experiments shall be kept in his office,) by the collection of statistics, and by any other appropriate means within his power; to collect, as he may be able, new and valuable seeds and plants...
Page 131 - These sayings are true at all times, and equally true that " a little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men.
Page 136 - Congress, and shall also make special reports whenever required to do so by the President or either House of Congress...
Page 136 - The Bureau of Entomology obtains and disseminates information regarding injurious insects affecting field crops, fruits, small fruits, and truck crops, forest and forest products,* and stored products; studies insects in relation to diseases of man and other animals and as animal parasites; experiments with the introduction of beneficial insects and with the fungous and other diseases of insects, and conducts experiments and tests with insecticides...
Page 51 - Every person who sells for use as a fertiliser of the soil any article which has been...
Page 112 - ... by lightning would seem to be now exploded. Six men were sheltering under a beech tree in the Midlands during last week's severe storm ; two were killed, and the others struck down insensible. At the inquest the coroner said he had specially examined the tree, as for years he had read and understood that there was no record of a beech tree being struck by lightning. In this case the lightning had not injured the tree to the extent of damaging a leaf, but it was an accepted fact that six men were...
Page 71 - The uniformity of the figures in this table is quite striking. It would appear from these data that the relative proportions of the different plant-food constituents are approximately the same for these different varieties of fruit trees. This means that, under like conditions of soil fertility, a mixture of nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash which would meet the requirements of one variety would also meet the needs of the other varieties, so far as the supply of these plant-food constituents is...