Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
12022At one station some little black urchins came to gaze, and I said to one boy, apparently seven years old,"What is your name?"
12022I said,"How old are you?"
7123Does that seem like too much work?
7123Or why not grow a few extra fancy strawberries in the well cultivated spots about these trees?
7123Why then, the reader may ask at this point, another garden book?
472631?_( syn.
472631?_= 2.=_ U.
472633, 349 Early Cream, 349 Early Cronesteyn, 349 Early Curtis, 349 Early Downton, 349_ Early Favourite?_( syn.
47263_ Early Favourite?_= 5.= Mas_ Pom.
47263_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_= 3.=_ Lond.
47263_ Frühe Montagne?_= 9.= Liegel_ Anweisung_ 68.
47263_ Newington Magdalene?_= 5.= Dochnahl_ Führ.
47263_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_= 8.= Thomas_ Guide Prat._ 50.
47263_ Scott Cling?_= 3.=_ Del.
47263_ Williams New York?_= 5.=_ Lond.
47263by, 492 Williams Catherine, 492 Williams Cling, 492 Williams Early Purple, 492_ Williams New York?_( syn.
47263of Beers Late Red Rareripe), 306 Beers Smock, 306_ Béguine de Termonde?_( syn.
47263of Early Purple), 351 Pourprée Joseph Norin, 444 Pourprée Tardive de Lyon, 444_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_( syn.
47263of Falcon), 358 Faut, 358 Favier, 358 Favourite, 358_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_( syn.
47263of Frühe Mignonne), 364 Frühe May von Brigg, 364 Frühe Mignonne, 364_ Frühe Montagne?_( syn.
47263of Jarle Late), 390 Jarrell Late Yellow, 390 Jarretts Late White, 390 Jaune d''Agen, 390_ Jaune d''Amerique?_( syn.
47263of Old Newington), 429_ Newington Magdalene?_( syn.
47263of Scott October), 463_ Scott Cling?_( syn.
29058And if fruit- trees last to this age, how many ages is it to be supposed, strong and huge timber- trees will last?
29058And what hurt, if that part of the tree, that before was shadowed, be now made partaker of the heat of the Sunne?
29058And what other things is a vineyard, in those countries where vines doe thriue, than a large Orchard of trees bearing fruit?
29058And where see we greater trees of bulke and bough, then standing on or neere the waters side?
29058And where, or when, did you euer see a great tree packt on a wall?
29058And who can deny, but the principall end of an Orchard, is the honest delight of one wearied with the works of his lawfull calling?
29058But what hath shortned them?
29058But why do I wander out of the compasse of mine Orchard, into the Forrests and Woods?
29058Can there be deuised any way by nature, or art, sooner or soundlier to seeke out, and take away the heart and strength of earth, then by great trees?
29058For who is able to manure an whole Orchard plot, if it be barren?
29058How many apples would these haue borne?
29058How many forrests and woods?
29058If you aske me what vse shall be made of that waste ground betwixt tree and tree?
29058If you aske why the plaines in_ Holderns_, and such countries are destitute of woods?
29058Let all grow, and they will beare more fruit: and if you lop away superfluous boughes, they say, what a pitty is this?
29058Nay, who did euer know a tree so vnkindly splat, come to age?
29058Or what difference is there in the iuice of the Grape, and our Cyder& Perry, but the goodnes of the soile& clime where they grow?
29058Page 95"_ Cur moritur homo, cum saluia crescit in horto?_"not changed.
29058See you here an whole Army of mischeifes banded in troupes against the most fruitfull trees the earth beares?
29058The gods of the earth, resembling the great God of heauen in authority, Maiestie, and abundance of all things, wherein is their most delight?
29058What else are trees in comparison with the earth: but as haires to the body of a man?
29058What is there of all these few that I haue reckoned, which doth not please the eye, the eare, the smell, and taste?
29058What liuing body haue you greater then of trees?
29058What more delightsome then an infinite variety of sweet smelling flowers?
29058What rottennesse?
29058What shall I say?
29058What was_ Paradise_?
29058and dying branches shall you see euery where?
29058but a Garden and Orchard of trees and hearbs, full of pleasure?
29058but into their Orchards?
29058curtailed trunkes?
29058drouping boughes?
29058what dead armes?
29058what hollownesse?
29058what loads of mosses?
29058whither?
29058withered tops?
46327( Horticultural) 44 × 88?
463271885, as a synonym under_ Cerasus pseudocerasus_?
463271888?
463271893?
463271908?
463271909?
463271909?
46327= Adlington.= Species?
46327= Affane.= Species?
46327= Albertine Millet.= Species?
46327= Andrews.= Species?
46327= Baylor.= Species?
46327= Belle Bosc.= Species?
46327= Belle Defay.= Species?
46327= Belle Vezzouris.= Species?
46327= Belle de Boskoop.= Species?
46327= Belle de Rochelle.= Species?
46327= Bicolor Van Mons.= Species?
46327= Black American.= Species?
46327= Black Margaret.= Species?
46327= Black Prolific.= Species?
46327= Blasse Johanni Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Bocage.= Species?
46327= Bon Bon.= Species?
46327= Book.= Species?
46327= Bount Dantzic.= Species?
46327= Boyd Early Black.= Species?
46327= Byrnville.= Species?
46327= Cameleon.= Species?
46327= Catskill.= Species?
46327= Cerise Albanes.= Species?
46327= Cerise Bellon.= Species?
46327= Cerise Rouge Sanguine.= Species?
46327= Cerise Royale Ordinaire.= Species?
46327= Cerise d''Angleterre Précoce.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Mai Double.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Mai Simple.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Martigné.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Tiercé.= Species?
46327= Cerise de l''Ardèche.= Species?
46327= Cerise du Prince Maurice.= Species?
46327= Cerisier Royal Tardif à Fruit Noir.= Species?
46327= Cerisier de Varenne.= Species?
46327= Champagne.= Species?
46327= Coeur de Pigeon Noir.= Species?
46327= Como.= Species?
46327= Comtesse de Médicis Spada.= Species?
46327= Condé.= Species?
46327= Courte- queue de Gaiberg.= Species?
46327= Crawford.= Species?
46327= Crown Prince.= Species?
46327= Datge.= Species?
46327= De Belleu.= Species?
46327= De Jacap.= Species?
46327= De Ravaene.= Species?
46327= De Sibérie à gros fruit et à rameaux pendans.= Species?
46327= De Vaux.= Species?
46327= Denner Black.= Species?
46327= Des Cheneaux.= Species?
46327= Ditst.= Species?
46327= Dobbeete Moreller.= Species?
46327= Doctay.= Species?
46327= Dorotheenkirsche.= Species?
46327= Doty.= Species?
46327= Dougall.= Species?
46327= Dove Bank.= Species?
46327= Du Comte Egger.= Species?
46327= Dumas.= Species?
46327= Dure Noir Grosse.= Species?
46327= Délicieuse.= Species?
46327= Early Eugene.= Species?
46327= Ebenter Cherry.= Species?
46327= Edouard Seneclause.= Species?
46327= Elfner Kirsche.= Species?
46327= English Gaskin.= Species?
46327= Frogmore Early Crown.= Species?
46327= Früheste der Mark.= Species?
46327= Gamdale.= Species?
46327= Gaskins.= Species?
46327= Golden Knob.= Species?
46327= Gormley.= Species?
46327= Governor Luce.= Species?
46327= Grafenburger Frühkirsche.= Species?
46327= Grande Ronde.= Species?
46327= Great Leafed.= Species?
46327= Griotte Tardive d''Annecy.= Species?
46327= Griotte de Schaarbeck.= Species?
46327= Grosse Friedrichskirsche.= Species?
46327= Grosse Transparente.= Species?
46327= Gubens Ehre.= Species?
46327= Guindoux Noir de Faix.= Species?
46327= Halifax.= Species?
46327= Hamell Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Hamels Arissen.= Species?
46327= Hartlib.= Species?
46327= Hartlippe.= Species?
46327= Hartz Mountain.= Species?
46327= Headley.= Species?
46327= Hedwigs Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Heintzen( Heintze''s) Frühe Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Hensel Early.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Léona Quesnel.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Trauben.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Wils Frühe.= Species?
46327= Holstein.= Species?
46327= Hâtive de Balis.= Species?
46327= Hâtive de St. Jean.= Species?
46327= Hâtive ou Précoce.= Species?
46327= Incomparable en Beauté.= Species?
46327= Jean Arendsen.= Species?
46327= Jerusalem Kirsche von der Natte.= Species?
46327= Kazan Seedling.= Species?
46327= Kentish Preserve.= Species?
46327= Kesterter Früh Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Kleine Natte.= Species?
46327= Knapp.= Species?
46327= Koeper.= Species?
46327= Korkovanyer Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Kostelniti.= Species?
46327= Kriek van den Broek.= Species?
46327= Kritzendorfer Einsiedekirsche.= Species?
46327= La Nappe.= Species?
46327= Laeder Kirsebaer.= Species?
46327= Langsurer Prachtweichsel.= Species?
46327= Large Guindolle.= Species?
46327= Large Spanish.= Species?
46327= Latham.= Species?
46327= Little Phil.= Species?
46327= Long Finger.= Species?
46327= Lothaunner Erfurter.= Species?
46327= Léopold( II).= Species?
46327= Magnifique de Daval.= Species?
46327= Magog.= Species?
46327= Manger.= Species?
46327= Marells Royal.= Species?
46327= Mazarine.= Species?
46327= Meissener Weisse.= Species?
46327= Merise Grosse Rose Oblongue.= Species?
46327= Merise Petite Ronda.= Species?
46327= Merisier Fastigié.= Species?
46327= Miller.= Species?
46327= Monkirsche Rote.= Species?
46327= Monstrueuse Hennequine.= Species?
46327= Morisco.= Species?
46327= Morten Seedling.= Species?
46327= New Royal.= Species?
46327= Nonpareil.= Species?
46327= Norfolk.= Species?
46327= Oliver.= Species?
46327= Orléa Smith.= Species?
46327= Pandys Glaskirsche.= Species?
46327= Parent.= Species?
46327= Pauline de Vigny.= Species?
46327= Peach- Blossomed.= Species?
46327= Polsted.= Species?
46327= Portugal.= Species?
46327= Prince Englebert.= Species?
46327= Prince Royal.= Species?
46327= Prince.= Species?
46327= Prunus zappeyana?
46327= Précoce de Marest.= Species?
46327= Précoce de Sabaret.= Species?
46327= Rainier French.= Species?
46327= Red Canada.= Species?
46327= Red Russian.= Species?
46327= Reichart.= Species?
46327= Richardson Late Black.= Species?
46327= Richter Sämling.= Species?
46327= Rock.= Species?
46327= Rockland.= Species?
46327= Romaine.= Species?
46327= Ronald.= Species?
46327= Rose Charmeux.= Species?
46327= Rothe Glanzkirsche.= Species?
46327= Rouge Pâle Tardive.= Species?
46327= Royal American.= Species?
46327= Russie à Fruit Blanc.= Species?
46327= Sacramento.= Species?
46327= Saint- Laurent.= Species?
46327= Schneeberger Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Schwarze Oranienkirsche.= Species?
46327= Schöne von Brügge.= Species?
46327= Select Beauty.= Species?
46327= Short- stem May.= Species?
46327= Sleinhaus.= Species?
46327= Smidt Yellow.= Species?
46327= Soft- stone Cherry.= Species?
46327= Starr Prolific.= Species?
46327= Sweet Morello.= Species?
46327= Sächsische Frühe Maikirsche.= Species?
46327= Tardive Noire d''Espagne.= Species?
46327= Tardive de Brederode.= Species?
46327= Tardive de Peine.= Species?
46327= Thirty Day.= Species?
46327= Toctonne Précoce.= Species?
46327= Toronto.= Species?
46327= Transparente de Siebenfreund.= Species?
46327= Triomphe de Fausin.= Species?
46327= Turner Late.= Species?
46327= Twyford.= Species?
46327= Vanskike.= Species?
46327= Vaughn.= Species?
46327= Vistula.= Species?
46327= Warren Transparent.= Species?
46327= Washington Purple.= Species?
46327= Weis, Roth und Rosenfarbig Marmorirte Kramelkirsche.= Species?
46327= Weisse Mandelkirsche.= Species?
46327= White French.= Species?
46327= White Transparent.= Species?
46327= Winter Schwarze.= Species?
46327= Zweifarbige Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Zwitterkirsche.= Species?
46327?
46327?"
46327Armenia, Georgia, Himalaya?
46327Bigarreau( Golden)?
46327Himalaya?
46327How are the cherries described in the passage from Pliny related to those of modern culture?
46327In what respects is it easier to grow cherries on the Mahaleb in the nursery than on the Mazzard?
46327It is described as"being the blackest"but whether_ Prunus avium_ or_ Prunus cerasus_, sweet or sour, who can tell?
46327Received from Belgium without description; its value is questioned in_ Guide Pratique._= Alexandrine Béon.= Species?
46327Species?
46327What fruit better adapted to the uses of colonists than the cherry?
46327Why has the Mahaleb supplanted the Mazzard?
46327X.= Species?
46327_ Amber_?
46327_ Bigarreau rouge de Tilgener_?
46327_ Bigarreautier à fruit jaune?_= 7.= Noisette_ Man.
46327_ Cerise de Prusse noire?_= 6.=_ Ibid._= 11=:160.
46327_ Cerisier cuculle_?
46327_ Coeur de Boeuf nouveau_?
46327_ De Sibérie à fruit rond_?
46327_ Frühkirsche_?
46327_ Grosse Morelle double?_= 3.= Mas_ Pom.
46327_ Grosse Spanische Weichsel_?
46327_ Guigne à courte queue_?
46327_ Guignier à gros fruit noir_?
46327_ Impératrice Downton_?
46327_ Late Black Bigarreau_?
46327_ Late Honey_?
46327_ Petit Bigarreau Hâtif_?
46327_ Prunus tomentosa_,(?)
46327_ Summer''s Honey_?
46327_ Türkine_?
46327cerasus?_= 1.=_ Lond.
46327cerasus_), 24 44 × 48?
46327neglecta_), 17_ Prunus zappeyana_, 20_ Prunus zappeyana?
46327pumila × P.?_= 1.=_ Can.
46327szechuanica_, var.?"
18183What can I do for hardy pears?
18183What crop do you consider the best green manure?
18183What experiments are being conducted by the University of Minnesota with orchard and other horticultural crops?
181831 and 2?
181831017 everbearing strawberry plants?
181834?
181835 What is Hardiness?
181838 How May University Farm and the Minnesota State Horticultural Society be Mutually Helpful in Developing the Farms and Homes of the Northwest?
18183A Member: Are your trees still as far apart as they were at first?
18183A Member: Common corn land, is that fit for raising asparagus?
18183A Member: Did I understand some one to say that the mulberry was not hardy?
18183A Member: Did you ever grow any Crusset Wax?
18183A Member: Do n''t they break right off from the main stalk in laying down?
18183A Member: Do n''t they form new branches on the sides when you pinch off the ends?
18183A Member: Do n''t you recommend testing your seeds before you plant them?
18183A Member: Do n''t you think in covering them with a plow you might disturb the roots?
18183A Member: Do you advise spraying for them?
18183A Member: Do you face both ends of the barrel?
18183A Member: Do you pack all one- size of apples in a barrel?
18183A Member: Do you use clear cider for vinegar?
18183A Member: Do you use very nearly the same size apples in a barrel, or do you put large ones at the top and bottom?
18183A Member: Does n''t most of that trouble arise from the low prices?
18183A Member: Does the German?
18183A Member: Have you ever tried mulching them with corn stalks?
18183A Member: Have you tried out the Baroness Schroeder?
18183A Member: How about cowpeas?
18183A Member: How about the hairy vetch?
18183A Member: How large do the trees have to be to be of benefit?
18183A Member: How many years have you maintained a bed?
18183A Member: How much distance would you allow for the roots?
18183A Member: How would you start a new planting?
18183A Member: I mean in preparing your patch for the new planting?
18183A Member: I mean seeds generally, corn, etc.?
18183A Member: I want to ask if many put salt on asparagus?
18183A Member: I would like to ask if a person on clay soil could use sawdust to work in?
18183A Member: I would like to ask if you have any difficulty in getting your cider vinegar up to the requirements of the law?
18183A Member: If you were going to do it again would you put them 30x30?
18183A Member: Is it practicable to grow soy beans in this soil?
18183A Member: Madam President, why should it not be the flag itself and not a picture of the flag?
18183A Member: The heavy land I suppose would n''t be good for it?
18183A Member: What are the majority of your forest trees?
18183A Member: What causes the rot in the iris?
18183A Member: What do these apple graders cost?
18183A Member: What fertilizer is good?
18183A Member: What grader do you recommend?
18183A Member: What is the best of the green kind?
18183A Member: What is the matter with the Hardy?
18183A Member: What kind is that?
18183A Member: What kind of heaters do you use?
18183A Member: What kind of varieties would you suggest for the ordinary home garden, best dozen varieties?
18183A Member: What sort of apples go to the canneries?
18183A Member: When do you cut those sucker canes?
18183A Member: When do you spray?
18183A Member: Where can ground bone be obtained?
18183A Member: Where do you buy your heaters?
18183A Member: Will it improve that land by fertilizing with top dressing?
18183A Member: With the soy bean do you have to plow in the whole of it?
18183A Member: Would it be practicable to feed soy beans in an orchard?
18183A Member: Would n''t fertilize the first season?
18183A Member: You do n''t ship them, so do n''t consider the packing?
18183A Member: You mean to say you could grow them for fifteen years without fertilizing?
18183A Member: Your manure would be all gone then?
18183A born farmer assumes that everybody knows how to handle a hoe or a plow, but why should they, not having had practical experience?
18183A good rainfall is one inch, which is a thousand barrels to the acre, so what can you do with a sprinkling cart?
18183A member: How far apart do you plant your beans in the row?
18183And spray them every year?
18183And the question naturally comes, why any new ones?
18183And what have we learned from the"summer in our garden?"
18183Another question: How many rows of trees make a good windbreak?
18183Are the anthers well or poorly formed?
18183Are the blossoms pistillate or staminate?
18183Are the children of the farmers looking forward with interest to farming as a business, and life in the country as attractive?
18183Are the petals large or small?
18183Are the petals pure white or slightly crimson?
18183Are the stamens long or short?
18183Are there any other questions?
18183Are there any other questions?
18183Are there any remarks?
18183Are there many fruit buds to the stalk, or but few?
18183Are there many runners, or few, or none?
18183Are they golden wax?
18183Are we sure, as has been said, that God forgot to put a soul in flowers?
18183Are you a member of the Garden Flower Society?
18183Are you ready for the question, that those gentlemen suggested be made honorary life members?
18183But how is it down here?
18183But where are they today?
18183But why do you come to me with this?
18183By advertising?
18183Ca n''t we make it an even hundred for this year?
18183Can they be gotten at a reasonable price, and can we mature them here?
18183Can they be successfully cultivated?
18183Can we use a deformed apple?
18183Can you think of the possibilities of Minnesota?
18183Did you attend the 1915 meeting of this association, held in the West Hotel, Minneapolis, four days, December 7- 10 inclusive?
18183Did you ever pass a farm home in the winter that was protected by a good evergreen grove and notice how beautiful it looked?
18183Did you ever sit down in your kingdom and see what a royal throne you occupied?
18183Did you ever think of the royal position of the florist and horticulturist?
18183Did you have any trouble like that?
18183Do n''t you glut the market unless you have cold storage?
18183Do n''t you think so, Mr. Brackett?
18183Do n''t you use dormant sprays?
18183Do n''t you want your name added to this life roll?
18183Do the children in your school know what flower is common in the northern part of the state as well as in the southern part of the state?
18183Do the new runners bear blossoms and fruit?
18183Do they need anything besides drainage?"
18183Do they understand the conditions required in the state and the purpose of the selection sufficiently well to enable them to select intelligently?
18183Do you find it the best way to hoe them after you get through cutting?
18183Do you know what the state flag of Minnesota looks like?
18183Do you plow them after you get them down or do you cover them with a shovel?
18183Do you really know what a delicious beverage can be made from the juice of rhubarb mixed in cool water?
18183Do you sell all the fruit you raise on the place?
18183Do you think I was gwine to have that money around the house wid dat strange nigger there?
18183Do you understand that?
18183Do you wish to ask him any questions?
18183Does it grow here?
18183Does it include simply marketing alone?
18183Ever troubled with the mice at your place, Mr. Weld?
18183First, what kind of covering?
18183For instance, do the canners in your country buy deformed apples-- I mean lacking in roundness?
18183Has any one tried anything new in the garden that will stand our climate?
18183Have they responded to Cultivation?
18183Have you had any difficulty in raising them?
18183Have you taken any photographs of your garden, its individual flowers, or wild flowers for our photographic contest?
18183Have you the following all ready for use?
18183Have you tried planting your bulbs with any of the ground cover plants that will take away the bare look that most bulb beds have?
18183He said:"Is that so?
18183He said:"Where are your passengers?"
18183He was trying to bore a beetle head and could not hold it; a foolish boy came along and said,"Why do n''t you put it in the hog trough?"
18183How Can the Garden Flower Society Co- operate with It?
18183How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co- Operate?
18183How can those roots send up the golden tints, the snowy white and the red, and never have the colors mixed?
18183How do you get these bushy bushes to lie down?
18183How is it possible to pick out of the dull soil, Nature''s eternal drab, that brilliant color for your peony?
18183How many members have you?
18183How much of each?
18183How often do you hear concerning some gardener, that if he"only touches a thing, it is bound to live?"
18183How was that sweetness and purity ever extracted from the scentless soil?
18183I could not raise anything-- Mr. Alway: Did the plants grow?
18183I have another question here: What would you plant around the garden?
18183I submit to you the question: Are school children qualified to choose a flower as an emblem of the state?
18183I think I have reason to ask what would we have for apples today if there had not been any seedlings raised?
18183I would like to ask what success you have had with growing tritoma, the flame flower?
18183If he used that, why does he need props?
18183If so, when do they commence to bud and bloom?
18183In regard to iris, did any one have any trouble with their iris coming a little ahead of time last year and being frozen?
18183In regard to the variety proposition, is n''t it true that you are growing too many perishable apples in Minnesota?
18183Is Professor Mackintosh in the room?
18183Is anyone going to allow weeds to outdo him?
18183Is bone meal good?
18183Is he in the room?
18183Is it entirely the work for men?
18183Is it entirely the work for women?
18183Is it necessary to burn the tops when they are cut off?
18183Is n''t that considered a rather short- lived tree?
18183Is n''t this really a wonderful thing where so many are concerned, emphasizing as it does the large interest felt in the work of the society?
18183Is that sufficient for a winter protection without the straw or leaves?
18183Is the garden to receive the undivided attention of one or more members of each family, so that all members and guests may share its fruits?
18183Is the plum curculio causing much damage to the fruit growing industry of this country?
18183Is the receptacle on which the pistils sit well formed and capable of being developed into a perfect berry, or do they look ungainly in shape?
18183Is there any kind better than those two?
18183J. Kimball, Duluth Opening Song Trafford N. Jayne, Minneapolis Why Wake Up the Dreamers-- Aren''t They Getting Their Share?
18183May I ask if Mr. Peterson, of Chicago, is here?
18183Miss White: Madam President, if we could not vote as a society, could we not vote to recommend this resolution to the Horticultural Society?
18183Mr. Alway: Dandelions?
18183Mr. Alway: Did they make lots of runners?
18183Mr. Alway: Was it any deeper than that?
18183Mr. Anderson: Are your returns satisfactory shipping to the Minneapolis market?
18183Mr. Anderson: Do n''t you take out any dirt on the sides?
18183Mr. Anderson: Do you bend them north or south or any way?
18183Mr. Anderson: How far have you got yours planted apart?
18183Mr. Anderson: How late can you plant them and be sure of a crop?
18183Mr. Anderson: I would like to ask what you pay for beans for canning purposes?
18183Mr. Anderson: What are your gross receipts per acre for beans?
18183Mr. Anderson: Where are you located?
18183Mr. Andrews: Are the roots exposed in some cases?
18183Mr. Baldwin: How deep do you put the plant below the surface in transplanting?
18183Mr. Baldwin: You mean to say that putting manure on top makes the asparagus crooked?
18183Mr. Berry: Do you fertilize and how and when?
18183Mr. Brackett: Are they still in business?
18183Mr. Brackett: Have you ever found any ground with too much leaf mold on it to grow good strawberries?
18183Mr. Brackett: Have you got any pocket- gophers that do not make mounds?
18183Mr. Brackett: How many of those large limbs could you cut off in one year and graft?
18183Mr. Brackett: If you had Virginia trees twelve years old would you top- work them?
18183Mr. Brackett: In other words, they ca n''t pay over 35 or 30 cents a bushel?
18183Mr. Brackett: Is n''t that a general opinion in the West where they make a business of planting large orchards?
18183Mr. Brackett: Is that in the nursery row?
18183Mr. Brackett: Suppose the limbs were too big on the stock you are going to top- work, how would you do then?
18183Mr. Brackett: What age do you commence the grafting?
18183Mr. Brackett: What can a cannery afford to pay for apples?
18183Mr. Brackett: Where you put in more than one scion in a limb, is it feasible to leave more than one to grow?
18183Mr. Brackett: Would you advocate the extensive planting of apples in this climate?
18183Mr. Brackett: You showed the difference in size there, those top- worked and those not-- don''t you think that is because of cutting the top back?
18183Mr. Cadoo: Do angleworms hurt house plants?
18183Mr. Cashman: Have you had any experience in using orchard heaters to save plums in cold nights?
18183Mr. Cashman: You said a pressure of 200 pounds ought to be used?
18183Mr. Clausen: Do n''t you have trouble with the mice?
18183Mr. Cook: What number do you hold that red grape under?
18183Mr. Cook: Which is that for, for the brown rot?
18183Mr. Crawford: Can you raise asparagus successfully in the shade or a partial shade?
18183Mr. Crosby: How would you keep those scions?
18183Mr. Crosby: In getting scions are there any distinguishing marks between a vigorous scion and one not vigorous?
18183Mr. Crosby: What kind of a graft do you usually make?
18183Mr. Durand: What is the best spray for leaf- spot and rust in strawberries?
18183Mr. Dyer: Do you know anything about it?
18183Mr. Dyer: I would like to ask if you have ever used arsenate of lead for spraying plums?
18183Mr. Dyer: I would like to know about what quantity of arsenate of lead and lime- sulphur combined would you recommend?
18183Mr. Dyer: In connection with that I would like to ask if you have used or would recommend pulverized lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Dyer: What pressure would you recommend in spraying for codling moth where arsenate of lead is used?
18183Mr. Erkel: Is the Duchess a good stock to graft onto?
18183Mr. Erkel: Would it be practical to use water shoots for scions?
18183Mr. Glenzke: What would be the consequence of the berries being planted after tomatoes had been planted there the year before?
18183Mr. Goudy: Did you ever try capsicum, sprinkling that on the heads?
18183Mr. Goudy: The cabbage butterfly, does that come from the same maggot?
18183Mr. Goudy: What do you do for that?
18183Mr. Goudy: What is your method of harvesting your beans?
18183Mr. Graves( Wisconsin): Do you use your black leaf 40 in conjunction with your Bordeaux or lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Graves: Does n''t it counteract the result?
18183Mr. Graves: You say you got the same results from black leaf 40 in that mixture?
18183Mr. Hall: I would like to ask you what you spray with and when you spray?
18183Mr. Hansen: Do you know of any plum that has never had brown rot?
18183Mr. Hansen: What distance apart ought those apple trees to be?
18183Mr. Harrison: Any special rule about multiplying or dividing?
18183Mr. Hawkins: Has any one had experience in raising trollius?
18183Mr. Hawkins: Mrs. Gould, can you give us any enlightenment?
18183Mr. Hawkins: What would you recommend?
18183Mr. Horton: Have you ever carried over lime- sulphur from one year to another?
18183Mr. Horton: Is there much danger of evaporation so it would be too strong to use next year?
18183Mr. Horton: What proportion of the lime- sulphur and arsenate of lead do you use?
18183Mr. Horton: What would you advise for plants that are infected with aphis?
18183Mr. Horton: Would n''t you have an open space in those trees?
18183Mr. Horton: Would you have an open space outside of those twenty trees for the snow to lodge in?
18183Mr. Huestis: Do you know whether the mulberry is hardy in Minnesota or not?
18183Mr. Huestis: Do you think that it weakens the stem of the apples?
18183Mr. Huestis: Does Mr. Dunlap attribute the general dropping of apples to the scab fungus?
18183Mr. Huestis: How would the golden elder do as a hedge?
18183Mr. Ingersoll: Is there anything you can suggest to control the yellows in asters?
18183Mr. Ingersoll: You think that irregular watering might make any difference or very solid rooting?
18183Mr. Johnson: Is it doing well now?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Are those honest representations of the different apples from the dwarf and the standard?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Did you ever hear of them dying?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Do you find any trouble with too much protection for orchards?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Does it blight any?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Does spraying injure the bees?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Have you tested the Douglas spruce?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How do you get rid of the waste apples that would rot in the orchard?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How large were the wagons?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How soon do your dwarf trees pay for themselves?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Is n''t it better to dehorn it and get some new shoots to graft?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Is there such a thing as a pedigreed strawberry plant that is taken from runners?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Too big a growth on the graft is liable to be injured in the winter, is it not?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What did you use?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What do you know about the Surprise?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is the best spray you know of, how often do you apply it and when?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is the matter with the old Wilson strawberry?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is your best windbreak?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What was the condition of that tree where Dartt put in four scions?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What was the trouble where I could n''t raise strawberries on new wood soil?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Would scions from bearing trees with the blossom buds on do you any good?
18183Mr. Kellogg: You have been surprised with it?
18183Mr. Latham: Do you wish to have the report read or have it published later?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Are the rings put on the outside or the inside of the trees?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Do I understand that you have to lay down and cover up those red raspberries?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Do you mulch the ground?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How far do you put them apart in the hedge row?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How many years is the planting of the King raspberry good for?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How old are your Wealthys?
18183Mr. Ludlow: I want to ask if you recommend the bamboo poles for general propping of trees?
18183Mr. Ludlow: I would like to know what you advise for that commercial orchard, what varieties?
18183Mr. Ludlow: It was n''t embalmed?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What has been your experience with the Ocheeda?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What is the difference between the brown rot and the plum pocket fungus?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What is your average cost per tree for thinning?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What peculiar method have you for keeping those apples?
18183Mr. Ludlow: When do you do that?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Would it be policy to leave that on and let the strawberries come up through, to keep them clean?
18183Mr. M''Clelland: Have you anything as good?
18183Mr. Maher: It spread too much?
18183Mr. Marien: I think that is a wax bean?
18183Mr. McCall: What is peat lacking in?
18183Mr. McClelland: What time do you uncover your strawberries?
18183Mr. McClelland: Will they come through the mulch all right?
18183Mr. Miller: I should think the germination of that seed would run out?
18183Mr. Miller: I suppose the idea of putting that in the bottom is that it is so hard to cultivate the manure on the top without doing as you mentioned?
18183Mr. Miller: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg if he advises covering the strawberries in the winter after snow has fallen and with what success?
18183Mr. Miller: In saving your seed from year to year, is there any danger of the seed running out in time?
18183Mr. Miller: Then you can use the black leaf forty?
18183Mr. Miller: What do you do for root aphis?
18183Mr. Moore: The radishes and turnips are attacked and the cabbages are not?
18183Mr. Moore: What variety do you raise?
18183Mr. Moore: Which do you raise, early cabbages?
18183Mr. Moyer: What do those black soils in the western part of the state need?
18183Mr. Pfeiffer: Your location is where?
18183Mr. Philips: Which was blighted, the Hibernal?
18183Mr. Rasmussen( Wisconsin): What trouble have you experienced with overhead irrigation with the strawberries in the bright sunshine?
18183Mr. Rasmussen: Did you say the same fly attacks the onion and the cabbage?
18183Mr. Rasmussen: What is the spray for the cabbage and onion maggot?
18183Mr. Reckstrom: Would bone do that was bought for the chickens?
18183Mr. Richardson: Did you ever know the plum pocket to come unless we had cold weather about the time of blossoming and lots of east wind?
18183Mr. Richardson: How many apple trees have you?
18183Mr. Richardson: How many growers are there in your neighborhood growing fruit commercially?
18183Mr. Richardson: Is the mulberry hardy with you?
18183Mr. Rogers: Do you plant in the hedge row or in the hill system?
18183Mr. Sauter: About how long would you cook them?
18183Mr. Sauter: And what next?
18183Mr. Sauter: Can the everbearing and the common varieties be planted together?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do n''t the flat ones bring a little more than the round ones?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do you cover the King?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do you have any trouble with those bursting the cans?
18183Mr. Sauter: How about the Globe?
18183Mr. Sauter: How does the powdered arsenate compare with the paste?
18183Mr. Sauter: How far apart must they be planted?
18183Mr. Sauter: How is the Malinda?
18183Mr. Sauter: How long must they stand dissolved?
18183Mr. Sauter: I want to set out 500 trees; what kind shall I set out?
18183Mr. Sauter: I would like to know which is the best beans for canning, the yellow or the green?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is it a good seller?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Malinda and the Northwest Greening all right?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Okabena better than the Duchess?
18183Mr. Sauter: What do you know of the paper cartons instead of flower pots?
18183Mr. Sauter: What do you think of the Red Pear?
18183Mr. Sauter: What form of packing for apples will bring the best prices?
18183Mr. Sauter: What is your best raspberry?
18183Mr. Sauter: What kind do you think is the best for an early variety?
18183Mr. Sauter: What tomato do you find the best for canning?
18183Mr. Sauter: Which is the best, the flat or the round of the wax?
18183Mr. Sauter: You think it best for anybody with a small orchard to make his own lime- sulphur solution?
18183Mr. Simmons: What is the cost?
18183Mr. Stakman: Did the whole leaf turn brown?
18183Mr. Stakman: Did you spray?
18183Mr. Stakman: How strong did you use the lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Stakman: The flower or leaf?
18183Mr. Stakman: There was a perfect crop of new leaves?
18183Mr. Stakman: Were you spraying for the pocket or brown rot?
18183Mr. Stakman: What did you use?
18183Mr. Stakman: What did you use?
18183Mr. Stakman: What does your oil cost?
18183Mr. Stakman: What kind of soil were they on?
18183Mr. Stakman: When did it happen?
18183Mr. Stakman: When did you spray?
18183Mr. Stakman: You did n''t get any injury to the plum trees?
18183Mr. Street: But the second year would you keep all of the growth in the graft?
18183Mr. Street: Have you had any experience in budding in August or first of September on those trees?
18183Mr. Street: How about the Brier''s Sweet crab?
18183Mr. Street: Would you put it on the top or bottom side of the limb?
18183Mr. Waldron: Did you have any red grapes growing there?
18183Mr. Waldron: Is n''t it as good now as it was?
18183Mr. Waldron: What do you think the male parent was of the red grape?
18183Mr. Wallace: Is the Patten Greening a good tree to graft onto?
18183Mr. Wedge: Forest soil or prairie?
18183Mr. Wedge: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg and I think we would all be interested in knowing when he began growing strawberries?
18183Mr. Wellington: Have you been able to cross the European plum with the Japanese?
18183Mr. Whiting: That is a hard question, but is n''t it a fact that you grow too many Wealthys?
18183Mr. Willard: How thick do you leave those canes set apart in the row, how many in a foot?
18183Mr. Willard: I would like to ask the speaker, the way I understood him, why he could n''t raise as good strawberries on new ground as on old ground?
18183Mr. Willard: So it would be better to plant on old ground or old breaking than new?
18183Mr. Willard: You pinch the end of the tops, I think?
18183Mr. Willis: Would it improve the plants, fertilize the plants, this lime?
18183Mr. Wintersteen: The maggots that attack the radishes and turnips are the same as the cabbage maggot?
18183Mr. Wintersteen: Why is it I have no trouble with the cabbages, and yet I can raise no radishes or turnips in the same ground?
18183Mrs. Cadoo: Can you graft onto a Martha crab and have success with that?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Do you cover them winters?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Will yucca filamentosa ever blossom in a garden in St. Paul?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Would n''t the hollyhock come under the heading of being perennial but not a permanent perennial?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Did you ever try poisoning them?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Do you put a canvas over the tree or leave it uncovered?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Have they a string on the back?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Have you ever tried Golden Pod?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: How do you manage to get the farmers to bring them in?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: What vegetables do you can?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Will you tell me the color of your beans?
18183Mrs. Gould: Will you make that motion?
18183Native Plants in the Garden Shall We Collect or Grow Our Native Plants?
18183Now, the distance apart?
18183Older: If you are going to mow it, why not mow the sweet clover same as the other?
18183Older: What do you consider the best to seed down with, clover or alfalfa?
18183Older: Where you have an orchard ten years old, is it best to seed it down or still continue to cultivate it?
18183Older: Which kind of seeding down would you prefer, what kind of clover?
18183One prominent Minnetonka fruit grower said this to me about them:"Mr. Cook, what is the use of making all of this fuss about these new plums?
18183Or does the success of it depend principally upon the varieties of fruit set out together with the after cultivation, pruning and spraying?
18183President Cashman: Anything further before we pass to the next subject?
18183President Reeves: Is Mr. Hegerle in the room?
18183Question: If the above treatment had been given every second or third row throughout orchard, what would the results have been?
18183SEND IN A NEW MEMBER.--Have you noticed the advertisement on the inside of the back cover page of this and also the January issues of our monthly?
18183Second, how much?
18183Some may ask, why not use the Virginia crab?
18183The President: Any one wish to make any comments on this report?
18183The President: Can you tell us something more about your experience in marketing direct?
18183The President: Do you accept that as a substitute?
18183The President: Do you add any Paris green at any time or arsenate of lead?
18183The President: Do you break off many canes by covering them?
18183The President: How did you get it?
18183The President: How is your wild strawberry?
18183The President: How many years ago?
18183The President: How much?
18183The President: I suppose that is automobile trade?
18183The President: Is Professor Waldron in the room?
18183The President: That is, 2- 1/2 pounds to 50 gallons of water with the other ingredients?
18183The President: What is the remedy, Mr. Kellogg?
18183The President: What temperature do you keep in your cellar?
18183The President: What will you do with the report of the treasurer?
18183The President: You have a heater in your cellar?
18183The President: You take out all the old wood every year?
18183The Reverend Mr. Reisenour(?)
18183The first question I will read is--"What would you advise about covering in the garden in a season like this?"
18183The mystery of the selection in this state is, why was a flower chosen which is not common to any part of the state?
18183The next question is--"Are the black peat or muck soils first class?
18183The next question is--"Should apple raisers use commercial fertilizers?"
18183The question with pears is, will they stand blight or not?
18183Then I thought,"What if I had planted forty acres?"
18183Then did you vow once more to destroy the beetles when you saw the roses begin to wither from punctures made by the beetle in the stem?
18183There is still room in this list for others, and why not instead of paying annual membership year after year make one payment and have done with it?
18183This thing is to go on, and how?
18183Tucker; 388 Gray, A. N., Marketing Fruit by Association; 27 H Hansen, Prof. N. E., What is Hardiness?
18183Virginia crab is an early bloomer, and would grafting it with Wealthy make it bloom earlier?
18183Was it the new soil?
18183Was it your idea that we report next year or that the plan be put in operation?
18183Was n''t that a great thing to make a fuss about?
18183We have members, I think, in every county of the state, have n''t we, President Cashman?
18183What about the farm and home garden for 1916?
18183What are the results?
18183What can we say about the crowning event of our meeting, the annual banquet?
18183What do we raise and how do we do it?
18183What is blight?
18183What is it and is there a remedy?"
18183What is the best in this country?
18183What is the occasion of this?
18183What is the reason?
18183What is the second one?
18183What is your opinion of the Delicious?
18183What shall I do?
18183What shall be done with the old bed?
18183What variety shall I choose?
18183What was the beginning of the civic league and the city beautiful?
18183What was the matter, was it the mixture or the sprayer?
18183What was the result?
18183What would be the consequence as to the white grub that follows the tomatoes, and other insects?
18183When do the berries begin to ripen?
18183Where is the grocer who would go back to those days, and where is the public that would patronize him?
18183Who are the people that are going to take your places?
18183Who can do better than that?
18183Who is to have a gold watch given him fifty years from now-- or given to her fifty years from now?
18183Who would have thought it possible that in spite of all the frost and cold rains we would get a pretty good crop of cherries?
18183Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples?
18183Why do n''t you come and enjoy this most entertaining event of the meeting?
18183Why not grow evergreens in the place of willows?
18183Why not others?
18183Will not each member make an especial effort to bring in a new member at that time or before?
18183Will some one enlighten me?
18183Will that be all right?
18183Will they take nitrogen the same as clover?
18183With over 2,000 varieties should n''t we be satisfied?
18183Would it be five or six years before I receive any benefit, or seven or eight years?
18183Would it be policy to put that on?
18183Would it be worth while to put that on or would that overdo the thing?
18183Would you want the Alsike clover or sweet clover for an apple orchard?
18183You have got to punish the whole on account of the few?
18183You may ask why?
18183You throw a heavy growth in there, which makes the fruit that much larger?
18183You would n''t put them all together?
18183[ Illustration: American Elm windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] Mr. Kellogg: What is the reason there are so few of them really blue?
18183[ Illustration: Norway Poplar windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] I have a question here: How long should a shelter- belt be cultivated?