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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1913)
7 to 0 indie acros its f,ur as now tr,ui formed by him He ilouliti'il the sue anil mult i(licl al most infinitely the color of the Ciladi olus; anil because of the extra weight if the flowers hail to increase the ic of the t a t k which lore them He pro ilitct.il the Shasta l)ai) front the two m Mguiticaut parent' shown below. iul there is hardly a llower which (!rmi to which in some way or another Mr Iturb.iuk has not added size, or bril liancy, or delicacy, or shapeliness, or scent. Through flowers, too, Mr. llurhaiik' Ins ferretcil out tunny of the deeply hidden scircts of plant life which he has turned to K'K'il account in his breeding of the o tailed useful plants. lor. above all other forms of plant life, flowers exemplify Nature' device f r elf iiiiproeiueut. Mr llurl.ank says that the flowers, as tf knowing that they depend uhmi tut t -ttrt'icn and hees for the pollination whuh is to perpttttiate them, advertise fir tlice little pollen carriers adver tise through their colors, thrir .nit ami the nc tar whiih tlie urn in mum And that those Mowers whnh ate the biggest and brighten! and the most per feet tif their kinds, being the best adver tisers, are surrst to attract the attention of the visiting injects -and thus are Mtrcst of perpetuation. While the pate, the poor and the de formed of the .species, with less clTcctivc advertising, and less appeal to the in sects upon which they depend, arc apt to wither and die without nllspriug. My the same simple, eleiueiit.il methods which the bees teach, the plant breeder can accomplish definite, concrete, aiuat iug results of which Nature, after ecu tunes of ponderous work, has only suc ceeded in giving the faintest hint. Ilesidc the bees and bulterllles, Nature, in many ingenious ways, strives to carry on her slow elimination of the unlit. Her rainy seasons serve to drown cer tain of her plants that are unworthy to survive. Her windstorms, droughts, freeiiug spells and a hundred other iiilliieners t. i ' i fiitiiu.il tin p. nit t'r K.ak .out I' t I'ltnlllliil .IIIH'iig llrr plillt .So that those whlih have the greatest light to survival may be given the best opportunity iiurrowded to live and tcptodiKc and multiply Again the skill and science of the breeder of plants may be applied to pro titter in a single season the result winch Nature might never, with irnturies of wind, and snow, ami hail, and thought, and rain, be able to aitoinphslt lly planting a thousand, or hundred thousand seeds, the plant breeder, in a few brief weeks, may selrtt the six or the right or the tell resulting plants which show their stiiwriorily over their fellows along the line be wishes to cultivate. To those who have seen I other llur bank at hi work, his amainu skill and knowledge of the eharat terutu of the useful plants at once bet nine evident; but as he goes about amonii Ins Hovsrrs, his tenderness and s)tupath) in haudliiiK them give evidence of more than skill .td know ledge they give evidence of love ami if perfect unilertjiiding IutHer BurbanK's SHasta Daisy .-s ajBfcfcP "liiiM. Lssssi EstssHHMstts9B''lssssssssssEr "'"WIR Xsl VHI and ith Tiny Parents M