. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Real Dry Po^vdered LIME-SULFUR Not a substitute for Lime-Sulfur solutionâ^ virtually the same material in dry powdered form. The only real Dry Lime-Sulfur on the market. Just what growers have been wanting for years. Cheap to shipâeasy to use â can't freezeâthat's true of all Sher>vin-Williams Dry Po^'dered Insecticides and Fungicides Lime - Sulfur Arsenate of Lead Tuber-tonic Fungi-Bordo Send for our Spraying Literature All in Dry Pozvdered Form The Sherwin-Williams Co. Insecticide and Fungicide Malcers 707 Canal Road, Cleveland, O. Gravenstein and Mcintosh.


. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Real Dry Po^vdered LIME-SULFUR Not a substitute for Lime-Sulfur solutionâ^ virtually the same material in dry powdered form. The only real Dry Lime-Sulfur on the market. Just what growers have been wanting for years. Cheap to shipâeasy to use â can't freezeâthat's true of all Sher>vin-Williams Dry Po^'dered Insecticides and Fungicides Lime - Sulfur Arsenate of Lead Tuber-tonic Fungi-Bordo Send for our Spraying Literature All in Dry Pozvdered Form The Sherwin-Williams Co. Insecticide and Fungicide Malcers 707 Canal Road, Cleveland, O. Gravenstein and Mcintosh. Such vari- eties lend to bear annually. In the winter pruning which you would give young trees which have not as yet much spur development, the growth which occurs any one year varies more with the growth the trees made the previous year than on the amount of pruning. The amount of pruning does not control the amount of growth with such trees. The amount of pruning only determines the nature of the growth, as heavy pruning pro- duces strong sprouts and light pruning produces weaker sprouts, but more of them, so that the sum total is not changed. However, with mature trees that have much bearing area in the form of spurs, a different result might be obtained. In pruning trees in the winter the pruning naturally takes the form of either a heading back or a thinning out, or possibly a combination of the two. If one desires simply some strong sprouts, then heavy heading back will produce that result; but if one really desires more fruit develop- ment of spur and bud, then a moderate heading back would be much superior, since you would cut off a much smaller number of buds and spurs and would not discourage the formation of a large number of new ones which might be true in the heavy heading back. In the same way, heavy thinning out is only a question of mathematics, it re- moves a much larger number of bear- ing organs, such as buds and spurs, than would light thinning, and a co


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