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NORTHERN
NUT GROWERS ASSOCIATION
INCORPORATED
Affiliated with
THE AMERICAN HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
Thirty-fourth Annual Report 1943
CONTENTS
OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION
DIRECTORS
COMMITTEES
DEAN OF THE ASSOCIATION
FIELD SECRETARY
EDITOR OF PUBLICATIONS
OFFICIAL JOURNAL
State Vice Presidents
Northern Nut Growers Association
Members as of May 19, 1944
CONSTITUTION
Article I
Article II
Article III
Article IV
Article V
Article VI
Article VII
Article VIII
BY-LAWS
Article I
Article II
Article III
Article IV
Article V
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE NORTHERN NUT GROWERS ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED
REPORT OF THE SECRETARY FOR 1942-43
Treasurer's Report
REPORT OF THE TREASURER—AUG. 15, 1942 to SEPT. 1, 1943
The Status of Nut Growing in 1943
SURVEY REPORT
John Davidson, Chairman of Committee
Side-lights on the 1943-4 Survey
Juglone—The Active Agent in Walnut Toxicity
SUMMARY
LITERATURE CITED
Possible Black Walnut Toxicity on Tomato and Cabbage
New York State Agricultural Experiment Station
Preliminary Studies on Catkin Forcing and Pollen Storage of Corylus and Juglans
L. G. Cox, Cornell University
Table 1. Percentage germination after 24 hours of Filbert pollen forced at different temperatures and humidities.
Table II. The effect of storage temperature and humidity on percentage germination of Corylus and Juglans pollen
Storage and Germination of Nuts of Several Species of Juglans
W. C. Muenscher and Babette I. Brown
Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Summary
Table 1. Germination of nuts of Juglans spp. after stratifying in peat over winter, at 1-3°C.
A Key to Some Seedlings of Walnuts
W. C. Muenscher and Babette I. Brown
Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Further Tests with Black Walnut Varieties
L. H. MacDaniels and J. E. Wilde, Cornell University
TABLE 1
Variation in the score of tests of duplicate samples made by the same operators. Twenty-five nut samples. Nuts grown at Ithaca, N. Y.
1942. Black Walnuts.
TABLE 2
Cracking tests by single operator with 10 random replicate samples of Snyder black walnuts. 1942 crop. 25 nut samples.
TABLE 3
Tests by the same operator of duplicate samples of Ohio black walnuts, treated in various ways before cracking. 25 nut samples. 1942 crop.
TABLE 4
Variation in score of replicate samples of 3 varieties of Black Walnuts tested by different operators and of same varieties from different sources
TABLE 5
Tests by different operators on duplicate samples of black walnuts, soaked and unsoaked. 25 nut samples. 1942 crop.
TABLE 6
Tests and Scores of Black Walnut Varieties from Various Sources. 25 nut samples unless otherwise indicated. All scores figured on basis of 25 nuts.
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES CITED
Shelling Black Walnuts
Better Butternuts, Please
S. H. Graham, Ithaca, N. Y.
The Use of Fertilizer in a Walnut Orchard
Lime and Fertilizers for Our Black Walnut Trees
The Propagation of Black Walnuts Through Budding
Northern Nut Growing
The Black Walnut
Persian Walnuts
Filberts, Hazels and Their Hybrids
Chestnuts
Propagating Nut Trees
Butternut and Japanese Walnuts and Their Hybrids
The Hicans and Hickories
Nut Puttering in an Off Year
Nut Nursery Notes
Report from the Tennessee Valley
Report from Minnesota—Letter from Carl Weschcke to Miss Mildred Jones
Be Thrifty with Nut Trees
Report of Season 1943
American Walnut Manufacturers Association Carries Out Industrial Forestry Program
The Crath Carpathian Walnut in Illinois
Ohio Nut Growers' Meeting
Walnut and Heartnut Varieties Notes and Remarks
Letters
Experiment Station Investigates Tree Believed to be the Oldest Chestnut in Connecticut
Progress Report from Connecticut Experiment Station, Dated November 15, 1943
Report of Committee of Ohio Nut Growers
A. A. Bungart, Chairman
CONCLUSION
OBITUARY
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