Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, Volumes 27-29

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W.Y. Morgan, 1915
 

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Página 156 - A flavoring extract * is a solution in ethyl alcohol of proper strength of the sapid and odorous principles derived from an aromatic plant, or parts of the plant, with or without its coloring matter, and conforms in name to the plant used in its preparation.
Página 25 - ... that they should be relieved from the responsibility for the most part. These are the nominations of the committee: President, JE Todd; vice presidents, FG Agrelius and LD Havenhill; treasurer, Wm. A. Harshbarger; secretary emeritus, JT Lovewell; secretary, WW Swingle; elective members of the executive council, JA Yates, AJ Smith, JM McWharf, and JAG Shirk. You will note that this report recommends that the office of secretary emeritus be created for our esteemed secretary. This will give him...
Página 166 - ... the fruit used, and in its preparation not less than forty-five (45) pounds of fruit are used to each fifty-five (55) pounds of sugar.
Página 166 - Jelly is the sound, semisolid, gelatinous product made by boiling clean, sound, properly matured and prepared fresh fruit with water, concentrating the expressed and strained juice, to which sugar (sucrose) is added, and conforms in name to the fruit used in its preparation.
Página 161 - Place the required number of pounds of copper sulphate in a coarse bag — gunny sack or some equally loose mesh — and, attaching this to the stern of a rowboat near the surface of the water, row slowly back and forth over the reservoir, on each trip keeping the boat within ten to twenty feet of the previous path. In this manner about a hundred pounds of copper sulphate can be distributed in one hour.
Página 9 - SEC. 4. The officers of this Academy shall be chosen by ballot at the annual meeting, and shall consist of a president, two vice presidents, a secretary, and a treasurer, who shall perform the duties usually pertaining to their respective offices.
Página 97 - If this be true, the effect of malaria will be constantly to resist the invigorating influx which Nature has provided, and there are many facts in the history of India, Italy, and Africa which could be brought forward in support of this hypothesis. . . . " In prehistoric times Greece was certainly peopled by successive waves of Aryan invaders from the north — probably a fair-haired people — who made it what it became, who conquered Persia and Egypt, and who created the sciences, arts, and philosophies,...
Página 239 - Notes on the Geology of the Survey for the Extension of the Union Pacific Railway; Philadelphia, 1868.
Página 166 - First. If any substance has been mixed and packed with it so as to reduce or lower or injuriously affect its quality or strength.
Página 113 - ... of microscopic vision. Beyond these, according to Jordan, are the ultramicroscopic bacteria, beyond the range of vision, some of which can pass through a porcelain filter. If one-celled plants can be beyond the range of microscopic vision, is it any wonder that tiny messengers sent out by the chromatin of gland cells or any other cells of the body should escape observation? These messengers may be poured into the blood by any overworked cell and...

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