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 |
---|---|
12022 | At one station some little black urchins came to gaze, and I said to one boy, apparently seven years old,"What is your name?" |
12022 | I said,"How old are you?" |
7123 | Does that seem like too much work? |
7123 | Or why not grow a few extra fancy strawberries in the well cultivated spots about these trees? |
7123 | Why then, the reader may ask at this point, another garden book? |
47263 | 1?_( syn. |
47263 | 1?_= 2.=_ U. |
47263 | 3, 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. |
47263 | by, 492 Williams Catherine, 492 Williams Cling, 492 Williams Early Purple, 492_ Williams New York?_( syn. |
47263 | of Beers Late Red Rareripe), 306 Beers Smock, 306_ Béguine de Termonde?_( syn. |
47263 | of Early Purple), 351 Pourprée Joseph Norin, 444 Pourprée Tardive de Lyon, 444_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_( syn. |
47263 | of Falcon), 358 Faut, 358 Favier, 358 Favourite, 358_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_( syn. |
47263 | of Frühe Mignonne), 364 Frühe May von Brigg, 364 Frühe Mignonne, 364_ Frühe Montagne?_( syn. |
47263 | of Jarle Late), 390 Jarrell Late Yellow, 390 Jarretts Late White, 390 Jaune d''Agen, 390_ Jaune d''Amerique?_( syn. |
47263 | of Old Newington), 429_ Newington Magdalene?_( syn. |
47263 | of Scott October), 463_ Scott Cling?_( syn. |
29058 | And if fruit- trees last to this age, how many ages is it to be supposed, strong and huge timber- trees will last? |
29058 | And what hurt, if that part of the tree, that before was shadowed, be now made partaker of the heat of the Sunne? |
29058 | And what other things is a vineyard, in those countries where vines doe thriue, than a large Orchard of trees bearing fruit? |
29058 | And where see we greater trees of bulke and bough, then standing on or neere the waters side? |
29058 | And where, or when, did you euer see a great tree packt on a wall? |
29058 | And who can deny, but the principall end of an Orchard, is the honest delight of one wearied with the works of his lawfull calling? |
29058 | But what hath shortned them? |
29058 | But why do I wander out of the compasse of mine Orchard, into the Forrests and Woods? |
29058 | Can 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? |
29058 | For who is able to manure an whole Orchard plot, if it be barren? |
29058 | How many apples would these haue borne? |
29058 | How many forrests and woods? |
29058 | If you aske me what vse shall be made of that waste ground betwixt tree and tree? |
29058 | If you aske why the plaines in_ Holderns_, and such countries are destitute of woods? |
29058 | Let all grow, and they will beare more fruit: and if you lop away superfluous boughes, they say, what a pitty is this? |
29058 | Nay, who did euer know a tree so vnkindly splat, come to age? |
29058 | Or what difference is there in the iuice of the Grape, and our Cyder& Perry, but the goodnes of the soile& clime where they grow? |
29058 | Page 95"_ Cur moritur homo, cum saluia crescit in horto?_"not changed. |
29058 | See you here an whole Army of mischeifes banded in troupes against the most fruitfull trees the earth beares? |
29058 | The gods of the earth, resembling the great God of heauen in authority, Maiestie, and abundance of all things, wherein is their most delight? |
29058 | What else are trees in comparison with the earth: but as haires to the body of a man? |
29058 | What is there of all these few that I haue reckoned, which doth not please the eye, the eare, the smell, and taste? |
29058 | What liuing body haue you greater then of trees? |
29058 | What more delightsome then an infinite variety of sweet smelling flowers? |
29058 | What rottennesse? |
29058 | What shall I say? |
29058 | What was_ Paradise_? |
29058 | and dying branches shall you see euery where? |
29058 | but a Garden and Orchard of trees and hearbs, full of pleasure? |
29058 | but into their Orchards? |
29058 | curtailed trunkes? |
29058 | drouping boughes? |
29058 | what dead armes? |
29058 | what hollownesse? |
29058 | what loads of mosses? |
29058 | whither? |
29058 | withered tops? |
46327 | ( Horticultural) 44 × 88? |
46327 | 1885, as a synonym under_ Cerasus pseudocerasus_? |
46327 | 1888? |
46327 | 1893? |
46327 | 1908? |
46327 | 1909? |
46327 | 1909? |
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 | ?" |
46327 | Armenia, Georgia, Himalaya? |
46327 | Bigarreau( Golden)? |
46327 | Himalaya? |
46327 | How are the cherries described in the passage from Pliny related to those of modern culture? |
46327 | In what respects is it easier to grow cherries on the Mahaleb in the nursery than on the Mazzard? |
46327 | It is described as"being the blackest"but whether_ Prunus avium_ or_ Prunus cerasus_, sweet or sour, who can tell? |
46327 | Received from Belgium without description; its value is questioned in_ Guide Pratique._= Alexandrine Béon.= Species? |
46327 | Species? |
46327 | What fruit better adapted to the uses of colonists than the cherry? |
46327 | Why has the Mahaleb supplanted the Mazzard? |
46327 | X.= 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_? |
46327 | cerasus?_= 1.=_ Lond. |
46327 | cerasus_), 24 44 × 48? |
46327 | neglecta_), 17_ Prunus zappeyana_, 20_ Prunus zappeyana? |
46327 | pumila × P.?_= 1.=_ Can. |
46327 | szechuanica_, var.?" |
18183 | What can I do for hardy pears? |
18183 | What crop do you consider the best green manure? |
18183 | What experiments are being conducted by the University of Minnesota with orchard and other horticultural crops? |
18183 | 1 and 2? |
18183 | 1017 everbearing strawberry plants? |
18183 | 4? |
18183 | 5 What is Hardiness? |
18183 | 8 How May University Farm and the Minnesota State Horticultural Society be Mutually Helpful in Developing the Farms and Homes of the Northwest? |
18183 | A Member: Are your trees still as far apart as they were at first? |
18183 | A Member: Common corn land, is that fit for raising asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: Did I understand some one to say that the mulberry was not hardy? |
18183 | A Member: Did you ever grow any Crusset Wax? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they break right off from the main stalk in laying down? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they form new branches on the sides when you pinch off the ends? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you recommend testing your seeds before you plant them? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you think in covering them with a plow you might disturb the roots? |
18183 | A Member: Do you advise spraying for them? |
18183 | A Member: Do you face both ends of the barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you pack all one- size of apples in a barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use clear cider for vinegar? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use very nearly the same size apples in a barrel, or do you put large ones at the top and bottom? |
18183 | A Member: Does n''t most of that trouble arise from the low prices? |
18183 | A Member: Does the German? |
18183 | A Member: Have you ever tried mulching them with corn stalks? |
18183 | A Member: Have you tried out the Baroness Schroeder? |
18183 | A Member: How about cowpeas? |
18183 | A Member: How about the hairy vetch? |
18183 | A Member: How large do the trees have to be to be of benefit? |
18183 | A Member: How many years have you maintained a bed? |
18183 | A Member: How much distance would you allow for the roots? |
18183 | A Member: How would you start a new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean in preparing your patch for the new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean seeds generally, corn, etc.? |
18183 | A Member: I want to ask if many put salt on asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if a person on clay soil could use sawdust to work in? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if you have any difficulty in getting your cider vinegar up to the requirements of the law? |
18183 | A Member: If you were going to do it again would you put them 30x30? |
18183 | A Member: Is it practicable to grow soy beans in this soil? |
18183 | A Member: Madam President, why should it not be the flag itself and not a picture of the flag? |
18183 | A Member: The heavy land I suppose would n''t be good for it? |
18183 | A Member: What are the majority of your forest trees? |
18183 | A Member: What causes the rot in the iris? |
18183 | A Member: What do these apple graders cost? |
18183 | A Member: What fertilizer is good? |
18183 | A Member: What grader do you recommend? |
18183 | A Member: What is the best of the green kind? |
18183 | A Member: What is the matter with the Hardy? |
18183 | A Member: What kind is that? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of heaters do you use? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of varieties would you suggest for the ordinary home garden, best dozen varieties? |
18183 | A Member: What sort of apples go to the canneries? |
18183 | A Member: When do you cut those sucker canes? |
18183 | A Member: When do you spray? |
18183 | A Member: Where can ground bone be obtained? |
18183 | A Member: Where do you buy your heaters? |
18183 | A Member: Will it improve that land by fertilizing with top dressing? |
18183 | A Member: With the soy bean do you have to plow in the whole of it? |
18183 | A Member: Would it be practicable to feed soy beans in an orchard? |
18183 | A Member: Would n''t fertilize the first season? |
18183 | A Member: You do n''t ship them, so do n''t consider the packing? |
18183 | A Member: You mean to say you could grow them for fifteen years without fertilizing? |
18183 | A Member: Your manure would be all gone then? |
18183 | A born farmer assumes that everybody knows how to handle a hoe or a plow, but why should they, not having had practical experience? |
18183 | A good rainfall is one inch, which is a thousand barrels to the acre, so what can you do with a sprinkling cart? |
18183 | A member: How far apart do you plant your beans in the row? |
18183 | And spray them every year? |
18183 | And the question naturally comes, why any new ones? |
18183 | And what have we learned from the"summer in our garden?" |
18183 | Another question: How many rows of trees make a good windbreak? |
18183 | Are the anthers well or poorly formed? |
18183 | Are the blossoms pistillate or staminate? |
18183 | Are the children of the farmers looking forward with interest to farming as a business, and life in the country as attractive? |
18183 | Are the petals large or small? |
18183 | Are the petals pure white or slightly crimson? |
18183 | Are the stamens long or short? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any remarks? |
18183 | Are there many fruit buds to the stalk, or but few? |
18183 | Are there many runners, or few, or none? |
18183 | Are they golden wax? |
18183 | Are we sure, as has been said, that God forgot to put a soul in flowers? |
18183 | Are you a member of the Garden Flower Society? |
18183 | Are you ready for the question, that those gentlemen suggested be made honorary life members? |
18183 | But how is it down here? |
18183 | But where are they today? |
18183 | But why do you come to me with this? |
18183 | By advertising? |
18183 | Ca n''t we make it an even hundred for this year? |
18183 | Can they be gotten at a reasonable price, and can we mature them here? |
18183 | Can they be successfully cultivated? |
18183 | Can we use a deformed apple? |
18183 | Can you think of the possibilities of Minnesota? |
18183 | Did you attend the 1915 meeting of this association, held in the West Hotel, Minneapolis, four days, December 7- 10 inclusive? |
18183 | Did you ever pass a farm home in the winter that was protected by a good evergreen grove and notice how beautiful it looked? |
18183 | Did you ever sit down in your kingdom and see what a royal throne you occupied? |
18183 | Did you ever think of the royal position of the florist and horticulturist? |
18183 | Did you have any trouble like that? |
18183 | Do n''t you glut the market unless you have cold storage? |
18183 | Do n''t you think so, Mr. Brackett? |
18183 | Do n''t you use dormant sprays? |
18183 | Do n''t you want your name added to this life roll? |
18183 | Do 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? |
18183 | Do the new runners bear blossoms and fruit? |
18183 | Do they need anything besides drainage?" |
18183 | Do they understand the conditions required in the state and the purpose of the selection sufficiently well to enable them to select intelligently? |
18183 | Do you find it the best way to hoe them after you get through cutting? |
18183 | Do you know what the state flag of Minnesota looks like? |
18183 | Do you plow them after you get them down or do you cover them with a shovel? |
18183 | Do you really know what a delicious beverage can be made from the juice of rhubarb mixed in cool water? |
18183 | Do you sell all the fruit you raise on the place? |
18183 | Do you think I was gwine to have that money around the house wid dat strange nigger there? |
18183 | Do you understand that? |
18183 | Do you wish to ask him any questions? |
18183 | Does it grow here? |
18183 | Does it include simply marketing alone? |
18183 | Ever troubled with the mice at your place, Mr. Weld? |
18183 | First, what kind of covering? |
18183 | For instance, do the canners in your country buy deformed apples-- I mean lacking in roundness? |
18183 | Has any one tried anything new in the garden that will stand our climate? |
18183 | Have they responded to Cultivation? |
18183 | Have you had any difficulty in raising them? |
18183 | Have you taken any photographs of your garden, its individual flowers, or wild flowers for our photographic contest? |
18183 | Have you the following all ready for use? |
18183 | Have you tried planting your bulbs with any of the ground cover plants that will take away the bare look that most bulb beds have? |
18183 | He said:"Is that so? |
18183 | He said:"Where are your passengers?" |
18183 | He 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?" |
18183 | How Can the Garden Flower Society Co- operate with It? |
18183 | How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co- Operate? |
18183 | How can those roots send up the golden tints, the snowy white and the red, and never have the colors mixed? |
18183 | How do you get these bushy bushes to lie down? |
18183 | How is it possible to pick out of the dull soil, Nature''s eternal drab, that brilliant color for your peony? |
18183 | How many members have you? |
18183 | How much of each? |
18183 | How often do you hear concerning some gardener, that if he"only touches a thing, it is bound to live?" |
18183 | How was that sweetness and purity ever extracted from the scentless soil? |
18183 | I could not raise anything-- Mr. Alway: Did the plants grow? |
18183 | I have another question here: What would you plant around the garden? |
18183 | I submit to you the question: Are school children qualified to choose a flower as an emblem of the state? |
18183 | I think I have reason to ask what would we have for apples today if there had not been any seedlings raised? |
18183 | I would like to ask what success you have had with growing tritoma, the flame flower? |
18183 | If he used that, why does he need props? |
18183 | If so, when do they commence to bud and bloom? |
18183 | In regard to iris, did any one have any trouble with their iris coming a little ahead of time last year and being frozen? |
18183 | In regard to the variety proposition, is n''t it true that you are growing too many perishable apples in Minnesota? |
18183 | Is Professor Mackintosh in the room? |
18183 | Is anyone going to allow weeds to outdo him? |
18183 | Is bone meal good? |
18183 | Is he in the room? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for men? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for women? |
18183 | Is it necessary to burn the tops when they are cut off? |
18183 | Is n''t that considered a rather short- lived tree? |
18183 | Is 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? |
18183 | Is that sufficient for a winter protection without the straw or leaves? |
18183 | Is 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? |
18183 | Is the plum curculio causing much damage to the fruit growing industry of this country? |
18183 | Is 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? |
18183 | Is there any kind better than those two? |
18183 | J. Kimball, Duluth Opening Song Trafford N. Jayne, Minneapolis Why Wake Up the Dreamers-- Aren''t They Getting Their Share? |
18183 | May I ask if Mr. Peterson, of Chicago, is here? |
18183 | Miss White: Madam President, if we could not vote as a society, could we not vote to recommend this resolution to the Horticultural Society? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Dandelions? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Did they make lots of runners? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Was it any deeper than that? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Are your returns satisfactory shipping to the Minneapolis market? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do n''t you take out any dirt on the sides? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do you bend them north or south or any way? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How far have you got yours planted apart? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How late can you plant them and be sure of a crop? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: I would like to ask what you pay for beans for canning purposes? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: What are your gross receipts per acre for beans? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Where are you located? |
18183 | Mr. Andrews: Are the roots exposed in some cases? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: How deep do you put the plant below the surface in transplanting? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: You mean to say that putting manure on top makes the asparagus crooked? |
18183 | Mr. Berry: Do you fertilize and how and when? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Are they still in business? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you ever found any ground with too much leaf mold on it to grow good strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you got any pocket- gophers that do not make mounds? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: How many of those large limbs could you cut off in one year and graft? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: If you had Virginia trees twelve years old would you top- work them? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: In other words, they ca n''t pay over 35 or 30 cents a bushel? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is n''t that a general opinion in the West where they make a business of planting large orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is that in the nursery row? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Suppose the limbs were too big on the stock you are going to top- work, how would you do then? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What age do you commence the grafting? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What can a cannery afford to pay for apples? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Where you put in more than one scion in a limb, is it feasible to leave more than one to grow? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Would you advocate the extensive planting of apples in this climate? |
18183 | Mr. 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? |
18183 | Mr. Cadoo: Do angleworms hurt house plants? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: Have you had any experience in using orchard heaters to save plums in cold nights? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: You said a pressure of 200 pounds ought to be used? |
18183 | Mr. Clausen: Do n''t you have trouble with the mice? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: What number do you hold that red grape under? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: Which is that for, for the brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Crawford: Can you raise asparagus successfully in the shade or a partial shade? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: How would you keep those scions? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: In getting scions are there any distinguishing marks between a vigorous scion and one not vigorous? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: What kind of a graft do you usually make? |
18183 | Mr. Durand: What is the best spray for leaf- spot and rust in strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: Do you know anything about it? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to ask if you have ever used arsenate of lead for spraying plums? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to know about what quantity of arsenate of lead and lime- sulphur combined would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: In connection with that I would like to ask if you have used or would recommend pulverized lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: What pressure would you recommend in spraying for codling moth where arsenate of lead is used? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Is the Duchess a good stock to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Would it be practical to use water shoots for scions? |
18183 | Mr. Glenzke: What would be the consequence of the berries being planted after tomatoes had been planted there the year before? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: Did you ever try capsicum, sprinkling that on the heads? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: The cabbage butterfly, does that come from the same maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What do you do for that? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What is your method of harvesting your beans? |
18183 | Mr. Graves( Wisconsin): Do you use your black leaf 40 in conjunction with your Bordeaux or lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: Does n''t it counteract the result? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: You say you got the same results from black leaf 40 in that mixture? |
18183 | Mr. Hall: I would like to ask you what you spray with and when you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: Do you know of any plum that has never had brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: What distance apart ought those apple trees to be? |
18183 | Mr. Harrison: Any special rule about multiplying or dividing? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Has any one had experience in raising trollius? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Mrs. Gould, can you give us any enlightenment? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: What would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Have you ever carried over lime- sulphur from one year to another? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Is there much danger of evaporation so it would be too strong to use next year? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What proportion of the lime- sulphur and arsenate of lead do you use? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What would you advise for plants that are infected with aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would n''t you have an open space in those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would you have an open space outside of those twenty trees for the snow to lodge in? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you know whether the mulberry is hardy in Minnesota or not? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you think that it weakens the stem of the apples? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Does Mr. Dunlap attribute the general dropping of apples to the scab fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: How would the golden elder do as a hedge? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: Is there anything you can suggest to control the yellows in asters? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: You think that irregular watering might make any difference or very solid rooting? |
18183 | Mr. Johnson: Is it doing well now? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Are those honest representations of the different apples from the dwarf and the standard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Did you ever hear of them dying? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Do you find any trouble with too much protection for orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does it blight any? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does spraying injure the bees? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Have you tested the Douglas spruce? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How do you get rid of the waste apples that would rot in the orchard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How large were the wagons? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How soon do your dwarf trees pay for themselves? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is n''t it better to dehorn it and get some new shoots to graft? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is there such a thing as a pedigreed strawberry plant that is taken from runners? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Too big a growth on the graft is liable to be injured in the winter, is it not? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What do you know about the Surprise? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the best spray you know of, how often do you apply it and when? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the matter with the old Wilson strawberry? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is your best windbreak? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the condition of that tree where Dartt put in four scions? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the trouble where I could n''t raise strawberries on new wood soil? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Would scions from bearing trees with the blossom buds on do you any good? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: You have been surprised with it? |
18183 | Mr. Latham: Do you wish to have the report read or have it published later? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Are the rings put on the outside or the inside of the trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do I understand that you have to lay down and cover up those red raspberries? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do you mulch the ground? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How far do you put them apart in the hedge row? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How many years is the planting of the King raspberry good for? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How old are your Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I want to ask if you recommend the bamboo poles for general propping of trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I would like to know what you advise for that commercial orchard, what varieties? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: It was n''t embalmed? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What has been your experience with the Ocheeda? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is the difference between the brown rot and the plum pocket fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is your average cost per tree for thinning? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What peculiar method have you for keeping those apples? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: When do you do that? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Would it be policy to leave that on and let the strawberries come up through, to keep them clean? |
18183 | Mr. M''Clelland: Have you anything as good? |
18183 | Mr. Maher: It spread too much? |
18183 | Mr. Marien: I think that is a wax bean? |
18183 | Mr. McCall: What is peat lacking in? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: What time do you uncover your strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: Will they come through the mulch all right? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I should think the germination of that seed would run out? |
18183 | Mr. 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? |
18183 | Mr. 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? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: In saving your seed from year to year, is there any danger of the seed running out in time? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: Then you can use the black leaf forty? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: What do you do for root aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: The radishes and turnips are attacked and the cabbages are not? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: What variety do you raise? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: Which do you raise, early cabbages? |
18183 | Mr. Moyer: What do those black soils in the western part of the state need? |
18183 | Mr. Pfeiffer: Your location is where? |
18183 | Mr. Philips: Which was blighted, the Hibernal? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen( Wisconsin): What trouble have you experienced with overhead irrigation with the strawberries in the bright sunshine? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: Did you say the same fly attacks the onion and the cabbage? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: What is the spray for the cabbage and onion maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Reckstrom: Would bone do that was bought for the chickens? |
18183 | Mr. 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? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many apple trees have you? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many growers are there in your neighborhood growing fruit commercially? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: Is the mulberry hardy with you? |
18183 | Mr. Rogers: Do you plant in the hedge row or in the hill system? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: About how long would you cook them? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: And what next? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Can the everbearing and the common varieties be planted together? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do n''t the flat ones bring a little more than the round ones? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you cover the King? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you have any trouble with those bursting the cans? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How about the Globe? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How does the powdered arsenate compare with the paste? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How far apart must they be planted? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How is the Malinda? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How long must they stand dissolved? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I want to set out 500 trees; what kind shall I set out? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I would like to know which is the best beans for canning, the yellow or the green? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is it a good seller? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Malinda and the Northwest Greening all right? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Okabena better than the Duchess? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you know of the paper cartons instead of flower pots? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you think of the Red Pear? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What form of packing for apples will bring the best prices? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What is your best raspberry? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What kind do you think is the best for an early variety? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What tomato do you find the best for canning? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Which is the best, the flat or the round of the wax? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: You think it best for anybody with a small orchard to make his own lime- sulphur solution? |
18183 | Mr. Simmons: What is the cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did the whole leaf turn brown? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: How strong did you use the lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: The flower or leaf? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: There was a perfect crop of new leaves? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Were you spraying for the pocket or brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What does your oil cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What kind of soil were they on? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did it happen? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: You did n''t get any injury to the plum trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: But the second year would you keep all of the growth in the graft? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Have you had any experience in budding in August or first of September on those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: How about the Brier''s Sweet crab? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Would you put it on the top or bottom side of the limb? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Did you have any red grapes growing there? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Is n''t it as good now as it was? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: What do you think the male parent was of the red grape? |
18183 | Mr. Wallace: Is the Patten Greening a good tree to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: Forest soil or prairie? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg and I think we would all be interested in knowing when he began growing strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Wellington: Have you been able to cross the European plum with the Japanese? |
18183 | Mr. Whiting: That is a hard question, but is n''t it a fact that you grow too many Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: How thick do you leave those canes set apart in the row, how many in a foot? |
18183 | Mr. 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? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: So it would be better to plant on old ground or old breaking than new? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: You pinch the end of the tops, I think? |
18183 | Mr. Willis: Would it improve the plants, fertilize the plants, this lime? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: The maggots that attack the radishes and turnips are the same as the cabbage maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: Why is it I have no trouble with the cabbages, and yet I can raise no radishes or turnips in the same ground? |
18183 | Mrs. Cadoo: Can you graft onto a Martha crab and have success with that? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Do you cover them winters? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Will yucca filamentosa ever blossom in a garden in St. Paul? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Would n''t the hollyhock come under the heading of being perennial but not a permanent perennial? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Did you ever try poisoning them? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Do you put a canvas over the tree or leave it uncovered? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have they a string on the back? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have you ever tried Golden Pod? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: How do you manage to get the farmers to bring them in? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: What vegetables do you can? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Will you tell me the color of your beans? |
18183 | Mrs. Gould: Will you make that motion? |
18183 | Native Plants in the Garden Shall We Collect or Grow Our Native Plants? |
18183 | Now, the distance apart? |
18183 | Older: If you are going to mow it, why not mow the sweet clover same as the other? |
18183 | Older: What do you consider the best to seed down with, clover or alfalfa? |
18183 | Older: Where you have an orchard ten years old, is it best to seed it down or still continue to cultivate it? |
18183 | Older: Which kind of seeding down would you prefer, what kind of clover? |
18183 | One 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? |
18183 | Or does the success of it depend principally upon the varieties of fruit set out together with the after cultivation, pruning and spraying? |
18183 | President Cashman: Anything further before we pass to the next subject? |
18183 | President Reeves: Is Mr. Hegerle in the room? |
18183 | Question: If the above treatment had been given every second or third row throughout orchard, what would the results have been? |
18183 | SEND 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? |
18183 | Second, how much? |
18183 | Some may ask, why not use the Virginia crab? |
18183 | The President: Any one wish to make any comments on this report? |
18183 | The President: Can you tell us something more about your experience in marketing direct? |
18183 | The President: Do you accept that as a substitute? |
18183 | The President: Do you add any Paris green at any time or arsenate of lead? |
18183 | The President: Do you break off many canes by covering them? |
18183 | The President: How did you get it? |
18183 | The President: How is your wild strawberry? |
18183 | The President: How many years ago? |
18183 | The President: How much? |
18183 | The President: I suppose that is automobile trade? |
18183 | The President: Is Professor Waldron in the room? |
18183 | The President: That is, 2- 1/2 pounds to 50 gallons of water with the other ingredients? |
18183 | The President: What is the remedy, Mr. Kellogg? |
18183 | The President: What temperature do you keep in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: What will you do with the report of the treasurer? |
18183 | The President: You have a heater in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: You take out all the old wood every year? |
18183 | The Reverend Mr. Reisenour(?) |
18183 | The first question I will read is--"What would you advise about covering in the garden in a season like this?" |
18183 | The mystery of the selection in this state is, why was a flower chosen which is not common to any part of the state? |
18183 | The next question is--"Are the black peat or muck soils first class? |
18183 | The next question is--"Should apple raisers use commercial fertilizers?" |
18183 | The question with pears is, will they stand blight or not? |
18183 | Then I thought,"What if I had planted forty acres?" |
18183 | Then 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? |
18183 | There 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? |
18183 | This thing is to go on, and how? |
18183 | Tucker; 388 Gray, A. N., Marketing Fruit by Association; 27 H Hansen, Prof. N. E., What is Hardiness? |
18183 | Virginia crab is an early bloomer, and would grafting it with Wealthy make it bloom earlier? |
18183 | Was it the new soil? |
18183 | Was it your idea that we report next year or that the plan be put in operation? |
18183 | Was n''t that a great thing to make a fuss about? |
18183 | We have members, I think, in every county of the state, have n''t we, President Cashman? |
18183 | What about the farm and home garden for 1916? |
18183 | What are the results? |
18183 | What can we say about the crowning event of our meeting, the annual banquet? |
18183 | What do we raise and how do we do it? |
18183 | What is blight? |
18183 | What is it and is there a remedy?" |
18183 | What is the best in this country? |
18183 | What is the occasion of this? |
18183 | What is the reason? |
18183 | What is the second one? |
18183 | What is your opinion of the Delicious? |
18183 | What shall I do? |
18183 | What shall be done with the old bed? |
18183 | What variety shall I choose? |
18183 | What was the beginning of the civic league and the city beautiful? |
18183 | What was the matter, was it the mixture or the sprayer? |
18183 | What was the result? |
18183 | What would be the consequence as to the white grub that follows the tomatoes, and other insects? |
18183 | When do the berries begin to ripen? |
18183 | Where is the grocer who would go back to those days, and where is the public that would patronize him? |
18183 | Who are the people that are going to take your places? |
18183 | Who can do better than that? |
18183 | Who is to have a gold watch given him fifty years from now-- or given to her fifty years from now? |
18183 | Who would have thought it possible that in spite of all the frost and cold rains we would get a pretty good crop of cherries? |
18183 | Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples? |
18183 | Why do n''t you come and enjoy this most entertaining event of the meeting? |
18183 | Why not grow evergreens in the place of willows? |
18183 | Why not others? |
18183 | Will not each member make an especial effort to bring in a new member at that time or before? |
18183 | Will some one enlighten me? |
18183 | Will that be all right? |
18183 | Will they take nitrogen the same as clover? |
18183 | With over 2,000 varieties should n''t we be satisfied? |
18183 | Would it be five or six years before I receive any benefit, or seven or eight years? |
18183 | Would it be policy to put that on? |
18183 | Would it be worth while to put that on or would that overdo the thing? |
18183 | Would you want the Alsike clover or sweet clover for an apple orchard? |
18183 | You have got to punish the whole on account of the few? |
18183 | You may ask why? |
18183 | You throw a heavy growth in there, which makes the fruit that much larger? |
18183 | You 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? |