Читать книгу Trees, Fruits and Flowers of Minnesota, 1916 - Various - Страница 2
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ОглавлениеPresident's Greeting, Annual Meeting, 1915.
Annual Meeting, 1915, Minnesota State Horticultural Society.
Prof. N. E. Hansen, Toastmaster.
Award of Premiums, Annual Meeting, 1915, Minnesota State Horticultural Society.
Judging Contest of Hennepin County High Schools.
(Held at Annual Meeting, December 9, 1915.)
(At Annual Meeting, December, 1915.)
Annual Report, 1915, Collegeville Trial Station.
FRANCIS JAGER, APIARIST, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
The Currant as a Market Garden Product.
B. WALLNER, JR., WEST ST. PAUL.
Report of Committee on Examination of Minnesota State Fruit-Breeding Farm for the Year 1915.
DR. O. M. HUESTIS, MINNEAPOLIS; FRANK H. GIBBS, ST. ANTHONY PARK.
Marketing Fruit by Association.
A. N. GRAY, MGR. BAY LAKE FRUIT GROWERS' ASSN., DEERWOOD.
Evergreens for Both Utility and Ornament.
EARL FERRIS, NURSERYMAN, HAMPTON, IOWA.
Annual Report, 1915, Executive Board.
Annual Report of Treasurer, 1915.
GEO. W. STRAND, TAYLORS FALLS, TREASURER.
Annual Meeting, 1915, N. E. Iowa Horticultural Society.
C. E. SNYDER, PRESTON, DELEGATE
RICHARD WELLINGTON, ASST. HORTICULTURIST, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
My Experience with a Young Orchard.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR THE USE OF COAL ASHES—
Minnesota State Horticultural Society
GEO. J. KELLOGG, RETIRED NURSERYMAN, JANESVILLE, WIS.
Northeast Demonstration Farm and Station.
W. J. THOMPSON, SUPT., DULUTH.
Annual Report, 1915, West Concord Trial Station.
FRED COWLES, SUPT., WEST CONCORD.
Annual Report, 1915, Duluth Trial Station.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Tenth Congressional District.
M. H. HEGERLE, SUPT., ST. BONIFACIUS.
GUST JOHNSON, RETIRED FRUIT GROWER, MINNEAPOLIS.
Annual Report, 1915, Nevis Trial Station.
New Fruits Originated at Minnesota Fruit-Breeding Farm.
CHAS. HARALSON, SUPT., EXCELSIOR.
Annual Meeting, 1915, Wisconsin Horticultural Society.
CHAS. HARALSON, EXCELSIOR, MINN., DELEGATE.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
Conducted by Francis Jager , Professor of Apiculture, University Farm, St. Paul.
My Orchard Crop of 1915 from Start to Finish.
HAROLD SIMMONS, ORCHARDIST, HOWARD LAKE.
Annual Meeting. 1915, S. D. State Horticultural Society.
WM. PFAENDER, JR., NEW ULM, MINN., DELEGATE.
Annual Report, 1915, Sauk Rapids Trial Station.
Ravages of the Buffalo Tree Hopper.
Growing Tomatoes in Northern Minnesota.
REV. GEO. MICHAEL, WALKER, MINN.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Fourth Congressional District.
J. K. DIXON, NORTH ST. PAUL, MINN.
Annual Report, 1915, Mandan, N. D., Trial Station.
W. A. PETERSON, SUPT., MANDAN, N. D.
Fruit Growing a Successful Industry in Minnesota.
A. W. RICHARDSON, FRUIT GROWER, HOWARD LAKE, MINN.
Report of Committee on Horticultural Building.
S. P. CROSBY, CHAIRMAN, ST. PAUL.
Tomatoes for the Kitchen Garden.
C. W. PURDHAM, MARKET GARDENER, BROOKLYN CENTER.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, First Congressional District.
F. I. HARRIS, LA CRESCENT, MINN.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Seventh Congressional District.
P. H. PETERSON, ATWATER, MINN.
HON. H. M. DUNLAP, SAVOY, ILLS.
GEO. J. KELLOGG, JANESVILLE, WIS.
IN MEMORIAM—Mrs. Melissa J. Harris
FRUIT NOTES.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
Cypripedia , by Miss Clara Leavitt.
IMPORTANCE OF GOOD QUEENS.
RABBITS; RABBIT-PROOF FENCES; FIELD MICE.
PREPAREDNESS FOR (INSECT) WAR.
AN IMPORTANT DISCOVERY IN ENTOMOLOGY.
DR. O. M. HUESTIS, MINNEAPOLIS.
Plums That We Already Have and Plums That Are on the Way.
The Brown Rot (Monilia) a Controlling Factor.
PROF. E. C. STAKMAN, MINN. EXP. STATION, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
How Mr. Mansfield Grows Tomatoes.
MRS. JENNIE STAGER, SAUK RAPIDS.
Annual Report, 1915, Central Trial Station.
PROFS. LE ROY CADY AND R. WELLINGTON, UNIVERSITY FARM.
MARTIN FRYDHOLM, ALBERT LEA, MINN.
E. W. RECORD, MARKET GARDENER, BROOKLYN CENTER.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Second Congressional District.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Fifth Congressional District.
CHAS. H. RAMSDELL, MINNEAPOLIS.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Sixth Congressional District.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Ninth Congressional District.
Annual Report, 1915, Madison Trial Station.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
PROF. N. E. HANSEN, HORTICULTURIST, BROOKINGS, S. D.
Standardizing Minnesota Potatoes.
A. W. AAMODT, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
Annual Report, 1915, Vice-President, Eighth Congressional District.
Annual Report, 1915, Paynesville Trial Station.
Annual Report, 1915, Jeffers Trial Station.
Annual Report, 1915, Montevideo Trial Station.
The Growing of Vegetables for Canning.
M. H. HEGERLE, PRES. CANNING FACTORY, ST. BONIFACIUS.
AN EXERCISE LED BY A. J. PHILIPS, WEST SALEM, WIS., AT 1915 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY.
HON. H. M. DUNLAP, SAVOY, ILLS.
The Value of Horticulture to the Farm.
MRS. CLARENCE WEDGE, ALBERT LEA.
Secretary's Annual Report, 1915.
Secretary's Financial Report, 1915.
Premium List, Summer Meeting, 1916.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
SUGGESTIONS TO PARTIES PLANNING TO PURCHASE NURSERY STOCK.
CROWN GALL ON RASPBERRIES BLACKBERRIES.
THE DESTRUCTION OF A CARLOAD OF DISEASED POTATOES.
COMB HONEY, EXTRACTED HONEY, AND INCREASE.
The State Flower and State Flag of Minnesota.
E. A. SMITH, VICE PRES. JEWELL NURS. CO., LAKE CITY.
Wisconsin State Horticultural Society.
REMARKS AT ANNUAL MEETING BY SECY. F. CRANEFIELD, MADISON, WIS.
A Satisfactory Marketing System.
A Successful Cold Storage for Apples.
H. F. HANSEN, ORCHARDIST, ALBERT LEA.
EDWARD A. NELSON, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
Increasing the Fertility of the Land.
PROF. F. J. ALWAY, DIVISION OF SOILS, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
NOTICE OF SUMMER MEETING, 1916
Premium List, Summer Meeting, 1916.
No Duplicating of Varieties Permitted.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
A SILVER PRUNE IN BLOOM AT MINNETONKA.
THE WHITE PINE BLISTER RUST IN MINNESOTA.
COMB HONEY, EXTRACTED HONEY, AND INCREASE.
Minnesota State Horticultural Society
Award of Premiums, Summer Meeting, 1916.
Experiment Work of Chas. G. Patten, Charles City, Ia.
GEO. J. KELLOGG, LAKE MILLS, WIS.
(Northern Great Plains Field Station.)
DISCUSSION LED BY PROF. RICHARD WELLINGTON, UNIVERSITY FARM.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
INCREASING COLONIES (Continued from June No.)
A. F. WOODS, DEAN AND DIRECTOR, DEPT. OF AGRI., UNIVERSITY OF MINN., ST. PAUL.
C. S. HARRISON, NURSERYMAN, YORK, NEB.
The Newer Fruits in 1915 and How Secured.
PROF. N. E. HANSEN, STATE COLLEGE, BROOKINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA.
Manufacture of Cider Vinegar from Minnesota Apples.
PROF. W. G. BRIERLY, HORT. DEPT., UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
MRS. GERTRUDE ELLIS SKINNER, AUSTIN.
Bringing the Producer and Consumer Together.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
HARDY CHRYSANTHEMUMS.
The Pergola—Its Use and Misuse, Convenience and Expense.
CHAS. H. RAMSDELL, LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT, MINNEAPOLIS.
H. M. DUNLAP, PRES. ILL. ORCHARD CO., SAVOY, ILLS.
P. L. KEENE, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
Support for an Overloaded Fruit Tree.
MISS NELLIE B. PENDERGAST, DULUTH.
What Frisky is Telling the Veteran Horticulturist.
CHAS. F. GARDNER, OSAGE, IOWA.
O. W. MOORE, VETERAN HORTICULTURIST, SPRING VALLEY.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
GARDEN HELPS FOR SEPTEMBER.
A CONFERENCE OF HORTICULTURAL EXTENSION WORKERS.
HORTICULTURAL TOUR IN WESTERN IOWA AND EASTERN NEBRASKA.
Camping on the Yellowstone Trail.
CLARENCE WEDGE, NURSERYMAN, ALBERT LEA, MINN.
A QUESTION AND ANSWER EXERCISE LED BY J. P. ANDREWS, NURSERYMAN, FARIBAULT.
City "Foresters" and Municipal Forests.
PROF. E. G. CHENEY, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
H. W. HARRISON, ROCHESTER, MINN. SO. MINN. HORT. SOCIETY.
How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co-Operate?
GEO. E. VINCENT, PRESIDENT MINN. STATE UNIVERSITY, MINNEAPOLIS.
The Shelter Belt for Orchard and Home Grounds.
A DISCUSSION LED BY JOHN W. MAHER, NURSERYMAN, DEVILS LAKE, N. DAK.
MRS. R. P. BOYINGTON, NEMADJI.
My Experience in Grape Culture.
JOSEPH TUCKER, AUSTIN. SO. MINN. HORT. SOCIETY
Protect the Garden against Winter Weather.
A DISCUSSION LED BY E. W. RECORD, MARKET GARDENER, BROOKLYN CENTER.
PROF. C. B. WALDRON, HORTICULTURIST, AGRI. COLLEGE, N. D.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
A. M. BRAND, NURSERYMAN, FARIBAULT.
Fruit Retail Methods and Costs.
CLARENCE W. MOOMAW AND M. M. STEWART, FRUIT AND PRODUCE MARKETERS, PORTLAND, OREGON.
F. C. ERKEL, FRUIT GROWER, ROCKFORD.
(AN EXERCISE LED BY G. C. HAWKINS, FLORIST, MINNEAPOLIS, AT THE 1915 ANNUAL MEETING.)
MISS GRACE E. KIMBALL, WALTHAM.
Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples?
ISAAC JOHNSON, WEST UNION, IA.
Planting for Color Effects in the Garden.
MRS. H. B. TILLOTSON, MINNEAPOLIS.
The Fall-Bearing Strawberries.
CHARLES F. GARDNER, NURSERYMAN, OSAGE, IA.
G. D. BLACK, GLADIOLUS SPECIALIST, INDEPENDENCE, IA.
MRS. ALBERTSON, PRES. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE, AUSTIN.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
Perennial Garden at Carmarken, White Bear.
The Minnesota State Fruit-Breeding Farm.
CHAS. HARALSON, SUPT., EXCELSIOR.
Color Combinations in the Garden.
MISS ELIZABETH STARR, 2224 FREMONT SO., MINNEAPOLIS.
Truck Crop and Garden Insects.
AN EXERCISE LED BY PROF. WM. MOORE, ENTOMOLOGICAL DEPARTMENT, UNIVERSITY FARM, ST. PAUL.
Law Fixes Standards for Containers for Fruits, Berries and Vegetables in Interstate Commerce.
(TAKEN FROM "WISCONSIN HORTICULTURE," THE ORGAN OF WIS. STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY.)
The Greenhouse versus Hotbeds.
FRANK H. GIBBS, MARKET GARDENER, ST. ANTHONY PARK.
An Ideal Flower Garden for a Country Home.
M. H. WETHERBEE, FLORIST, CHARLES CITY, IOWA.
The Planting and Care of Hardy Perennials.
MISS GRACE E. KIMBALL, WALTHAM. (SO. MINN. HORT. SOCIETY.)
PASSED JULY 15, 1916. AGED 59 YEARS.
Our Semi-Centennial Anniversary
Minnesota State Horticultural Society,
PREMIUM LIST, ANNUAL MEETING, 1916.
Conducted by Minnesota Garden Flower Society
JOURNAL OF ANNUAL MEETING, 1915
Minnesota State Horticultural Society
Held on Second Floor of the West Hotel, Minneapolis, December 7, 8, 9 and 10, 1915.
Records of Executive Board for 1916.
Additions to Society Library, 1916.