Care should be taken not to water the plants at nightfall, especially in dull and cold weather, but to give them water in the morning, when the sun will soon bring the temperature up to its normal state.
Care should be taken to pinch out the tops of the young plants while growing in the pot, and later while in the ground, causing them to grow stocky and send out new growths along the stem.
Care should be taken to cut just below a joint, as a cutting made between two joints will not form tubers.
The frames should be protected by mats, boards, or other covering through the severe cold, and as the sun gains strength, care should be taken to keep them from heaving by alternate thawing and freezing.
Care should be taken, when covering the tops, to keep the edges of the beds as high as the middle; otherwise the water from heavy showers will run off, and the crop suffer from drought.
Care should be taken not to dry the nuts by too great a heat, as they shrivel and lose their full and marketable appearance.
In this operation, care should be taken, first of all, to separate the tender from the harder or riper layers of fibre.
Care should be taken not to "cut thru" when sanding.
Care should be taken to see that all knots and sappy streaks shall be covered with a coat of orange shellac.
Where sanding is done by machine, care should be taken not to sand the wood too much.
Care should be taken that plenty of time is allowed between coats for the paint to dry thoroly.
Care should be taken that plans are carefully made regarding the storage of stock and unfinished parts.
Whatever method is adopted, care should be taken to avoid cutting the plant, while holding it secure from damage in a high wind.
In gathering, care should be taken to pick separately the young leaves that are nearly full grown, and to take only one or two from each plant.
In ordering stock for planting, care should be exercised in making sure of the reliability of the nursery.
Care should be taken, in using these highly concentrated fertilizers, to avoid contact with tender roots.
Care should be taken in construction to prevent the birds from throwing out the mash with their beaks and thus wasting it.
In riveting, care should be taken to round up the heads of the rivets nicely as a good mechanic would.
Care should be taken not to cut the holes too near the edge of the bag lest the lacing pull out.
Care should be taken when attaching the wires to get the center pole to stand perpendicular.
If the article is highly polished, care should be taken to prevent the hot water from coming in contact with anything but the cane.
Care should be exercised in handling the phosphorus, as it is very poisonous.
Where these are not employed, care should be taken to select the most economical kind of gas tips, and to see that when these become impaired by use they are replaced.
Care should be taken that the hole in the nipple is not too large, supplying more milk than the stomach can take care of as it comes, and so causing stomachic disorder.
Care should always be taken in turning out a gas-stove or a drop-light to do so at the fixture and not at the burner.
Since the cheap grades of kerosene approach these products in quality, care should be taken to see that it is of high "proof" in order to prevent explosions.
Since the room is designed primarily for sleeping, care should be taken that the bed be placed in such a position that the light falls from behind the sleeper's head.
Care should be used to go over all the surfaces of the teeth in this manner.
Care should be taken to select occupations suited to the patient's physical condition, to his age, tastes, and mental development.
Care should be taken not to apply them too tightly, or in such a way as to cause pressure on the genitals.
Care should be exercised that none of the feathery, tough, gill-like particles found under the body shell get mixed with the meat, as they are indigestible and have caused much trouble.
In making an omelet, care should be taken that the omelet pan is hot and dry.
In carving fish, care should be taken to help it in perfect flakes; for if these are broken the beauty of the fish is lost.
Care should be taken when carving not to break the flakes of the fish, as that impairs its appearance.
If a pulverized sample is used, care shouldbe taken to admit oxygen slowly to prevent blowing the coal out of the pan.
Care should be taken where this fuel is used to install a suitable apparatus for straining it before it is fed to the burner.
No stoker will satisfactorily handle all classes of fuel, and in making a selection, care should be taken that the type is suited to the fuel and the operating conditions.
As in all games in the schoolroom in which part of the players are seated while others run, care should be taken that there are no feet in the aisle over which the runners might trip.
Care should be taken that the hopping be not always done on the same foot, though a fox may change his hopping from one foot to the other.
Care should be taken, however, to avoid any mushroom which is old or partly decayed, as its condition then is analogous to that of putrid meat.
Care should be taken not to increase the quantity of flour.
Care should be taken that plates for the hot dishes are warm, but not hot, and that for the cold dishes they are not lukewarm.
With high elevations, or when rolling, care should be taken that the shell does not slip down the bore before this is done.
The ramrod should not be sprung with unnecessary force, for fear of injuring the corners of the grooves; and, in stacking arms, care should be taken not to injure the bayonets by forcibly straining the edges against each other.
Care should be taken that the valve is loaded with the proper weight for proof.
Care should be taken to have a number of napkins, a pot of fresh lard, and the basket containing the scissors, ligature, bandage, etc.
Care should be taken to get the common fresh wheat-flour, not the finest, because the former is richest in starch.
Even in a warm atmosphere, care should be taken, both after and during the ablution, that the wet skin of the infant be not exposed to the air.
When one portion of the body is being exercised, care should be taken that the other parts remain quiet as far as the conformation of the body will allow.
But in the beginning, while the situation is uncertain, care should be taken not to engage too large a proportion of the command.
While trees add very much to the comfort of a camp, care should be exercised not to pitch tents near trees whose branches or trunks might fall.
Three reliefs are required for the sentinel or sentinels at the post of the supports, so care should be taken to establish but one post, if it can do all that is required.
Care should be exercised in keeping the flag in front of the body in making "front," the figure-of-eight is necessarily very flat.
Care should be taken in finishing a cut to hold up firmly the part of the wood which is being sawn off so that it will not split off or splinter.
In stop boring, as in boring for dowels or in making a blind mortise, care should be taken not to bore thru the piece.
In replacing the cutter and cap in the plane, care should be taken not to injure the edge and to see that the Y adjustment lever fits into the little slot in the cap; then finally the lever is thrown down tight.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "care should" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.