Annual Report of the Indiana State Horticultural Society; Proceedings of the Annual Session, Volume 17The Society., 1878 |
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Page 20
... season a full supply of all kinds of fruits , flowers and vegetables , at a very small cost and with a large per cent . of profit . By keeping alive this fraternal feeling , and by mutually recog- nizing the fact that each may be of ...
... season a full supply of all kinds of fruits , flowers and vegetables , at a very small cost and with a large per cent . of profit . By keeping alive this fraternal feeling , and by mutually recog- nizing the fact that each may be of ...
Page 23
... season . I sold about one hundred and twenty bushels of strawberries in Muncie , at a net average price of ten cents per quart . Picked the first berries on the ninth of June and the last on the sixth of July . The frost on the second ...
... season . I sold about one hundred and twenty bushels of strawberries in Muncie , at a net average price of ten cents per quart . Picked the first berries on the ninth of June and the last on the sixth of July . The frost on the second ...
Page 24
... season . Green Prolific and Kentucky are the only varieties that have been this season uniformly productive under all circum- stances ; in beds mulched and highly cultivated , or neglected and bare . The late period at which they ...
... season . Green Prolific and Kentucky are the only varieties that have been this season uniformly productive under all circum- stances ; in beds mulched and highly cultivated , or neglected and bare . The late period at which they ...
Page 25
... season the Green Prolific has been the most profitable ; have not tried the new varie- ties ; prefers wheat straw to flax ; the better way is to use old straw . MR . JOHNSON - I have a friend who uses sorghum stalks . DR . FURNAS - Has ...
... season the Green Prolific has been the most profitable ; have not tried the new varie- ties ; prefers wheat straw to flax ; the better way is to use old straw . MR . JOHNSON - I have a friend who uses sorghum stalks . DR . FURNAS - Has ...
Page 28
... season was very light , was abund- antly satisfactory to the State Board of Agriculture , and highly creditable to the society , while there can be no doubt but the interest of horticulture throughout our State was greatly encouraged ...
... season was very light , was abund- antly satisfactory to the State Board of Agriculture , and highly creditable to the society , while there can be no doubt but the interest of horticulture throughout our State was greatly encouraged ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid agriculture animals annual apples appointed Association attention beautiful become berries better birds Board called collection committee crop cultivation culture dark discussion display early essay exhibition experience fact Fair fall farmer field flowers forests friends fruit Furnas garden give grapes green ground grow habits hand held hold horticulturists hundred increase insects intelligence interest keep killed kind kitchen labor land Large live matter meeting mind nature observe officers orchards organism peach pears persons plants present President protection PVigorous quails question Ragan result Richmond season Secretary soil spreading strawberries Striped Sub acid success Sweet Table things trees true University varieties various vegetables White winter Yellow York
Popular passages
Page 10 - Any person violating the provisions of this section shall upon conviction thereof be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
Page 125 - Nevertheless he left not himself without witness, in that he did good, and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness.
Page 6 - The Treasurer shall collect and hold all funds of the Society, and pay •out the same only on the order of the Secretary, countersigned by the President.
Page 61 - THE mothers of our forest-land ! Stout-hearted dames were they ; With nerve to wield the battle-brand, And join the border-fray. Our rough land had no braver, In its days of blood and strife — Aye ready for severest toil, Aye free to peril life.
Page 61 - Their bosoms pillowed men ! And proud were they by such to stand, In hammock, fort, or glen ; To load the sure old rifle — To run the leaden ball — To watch a battling husband's place, And fill it should he fall.
Page 117 - It has been said that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one grew before is a benefactor to his species.
Page 11 - Any person violating the provisions of this Act shall upon conviction thereof be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than five years, or both. SEC. 2. As used in this Act the term "person...
Page 61 - MY GOD! thy boundless love I praise : How bright on high its glories blaze ! How sweetly bloom below ! It streams from thine eternal throne ; Through heaven its joys for ever run, And o'er the earth they flow. 2 'Tis love that paints the purple morn, And bids the clouds, in air upborne, Their genial drops distil ; In every vernal beam it glows, And breathes in every gale that blows, And glides in every rill. 3...
Page 11 - ... any game, whether deer, quails, pheasants, woodcock, wild duck, or prairie chickens, which shall have been killed, taken, or captured, or held in violation of the provisions of this Act. shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in the sum of...
Page 2 - March 10, 1880; examined by the Governor, and transmitted to the Secretary of State, to be filed and preserved in his office, and published as may be ordered by the Commissioners of the Public Printing and Binding.