The kernels come out with little or no corky substance on the kernel.
The main thought was to get away from the corky substance adhering to the kernel of the most of the filberts.
Marengo in Crawford County was also free from corky ridges.
Medium to large sized trees with light gray bark, not regularly fissured, scaly at least above; twigs and branchlets more or less distinctly 4-angled, the angles of vigorous shoots develop corky wings about 2 mm.
Large trees; branchlets of young trees generally develop corky wings which are usually absent on mature trees; leaves on petioles 1-2 cm.
Branches (at least some of them) with corky wings; at least one side of the samara pubescent.
All of the branches examined were free from corky ridges, and only a few corky excrescences were present.
Gibson County growing in low sandy soil which was destitute of corky branches so far as could be seen from the ground.
It is to be noted that specimens that grow in these conditions and those that acquire a large size do not develop such conspicuous corky branches.
Such specimens usually have the corky ridges well developed on all of the branches and the tree presents a weird appearance.
The stems are coated with a grey corky bark, and the younger divisions of the branches show an angular section when cut.
Sure, I know who Corky Dyer is--an' no good of him, neither.
But, what's Corky Dyer got to do with Mike Gillum an' the old man's money?
Oh, dat wan pair wool sock Slue Foot sen' down to Corky Dyer for ke'p he's feet wa'm.
I hated to think of poor Corky wearing those dirty wet socks, and I didn't want Frenchy to get an awful bawling out from Slue Foot for not taking care of his package, so I just took a new pair out of the wanagan and sent them to him.
Then he exploded angrily: "What in thunder d'ye s'pose I care about Corky Dyer's socks?
I was only thinking I hope Corky can keep his feet warm this winter, I sent him down a nice pair of wool socks today.
I'd give a hull lot to be where I could seeCorky Dyer's face when he unwrops that package of socks!
Seed-like fruit of bur reed with corky lining ready to float on water, and a naked seed, such as sinks promptly.
In some instances the sack is rather small, but a corky growth below the grain helps to buoy it on water.
Grains of lyme grass with two corky empty glumes attached, which serve as a raft.
Seed-like fruit of arrowhead with corky margins to float on water.
Seed of milkweed with a corky margin enabling it to float; a seed with such margin removed sinks at once.
After the second year the twigs often develop 2 to 4 corky projections of the bark, which give them a winged appearance.
Its twigs often have corky ridges and the winter buds are somewhat hairy.
The bark is a light gray, roughened by corky scales, later becoming deeply furrowed.
Corky stood there, looking at the door, and then he turned to me and began to get it off his chest.
I first got to know Corky when I came to New York.
He turned on Corky like an untamed tiger of the jungle who has just located a chunk of meat.
The old boy shook hands with me, slapped Corky on the back, said that he didn't think he had ever seen such a fine day, and whacked his leg with his stick.
The uncle had written Muriel a letter so dripping with the milk of human kindness that if he hadn't known Mr. Worple's handwriting Corky would have refused to believe him the author of it.
What Corky kicked at was the way the above Worple used to harry him.
We foundCorky near the door, looking at the picture, with one hand up in a defensive sort of way, as if he thought it might swing on him.
Corky was glaring at the picture, and making a sort of dry, sucking noise with his mouth.
The twigs are provided with corky wings, or flattened keels of bark, along their sides.
Branches which are two or three years old develop corky wings, two or three in number.
The small shoots are equipped with flat, corky keels, similar to but much smaller than those of the wing elm.
This is perhaps due to the formation of a protective corky cell layer over wound surfaces.
New granulation tissue would then find some degree of mechanical obstacle in the presence of a corky cell layer at first.
The capsule is two-celled, smooth, and of a golden yellow, and the seeds are each covered with a thick corky skin.
The trunk is covered with a very thick corky bark; the wood is white, finely grained, and durable.
Stem= hard and corky within, externally spongy-tomentose, colored like the pileus, the central substance often transversely zoned especially near the top.
Often gregarious; soft when young, corky and dry at maturity.
But the interior cells do not produce this corky substance, because it would be injurious to the plant if they did.
Every tuber of a potato plant is covered with a light skin composed of a corky substance intended to protect the internal structure from injury.
Such were the more or less plausible suppositions to whichCorky Joe had arrived since he formed part of the expedition.
Nothing more closely resembles a good servant than a hypocritical one, and between ourselves, I must own thatCorky Joe has no winning countenance, better ones have hung a man.
She was so liked after this, that the men would have rebelled if she had been silenced by the Captain, or Corky Joe, though, to tell the truth, these smiled patronizingly on her efforts.
Either you have swallowed the old trapper's drunken mouthings for gospel, or you have let Corky Joe here get you in a coil!
After having thus given vent to anger and indignation long contained, Corky Joe felt calmness return to his mind.
Meanwhile Captain Kidd strayed into his tent very thoughtfully after having enjoined Corky Joe to exercise the utmost vigilance.
That infernal Corky Joe was lucky this time; it is long since I have had a solid house where I could feel comfortable and, mainly, safe.
Plants= corkyor woody (placed by some in Polyporaceæ).
Flowers autumnal, appearing in the axils of leaves of the year; branchlets furnished with corky wings; fruit hirsute.
Trees with simple or branched stems prolonged by axillary naked buds, dark thick corky bark, light fibrous wood in concentric layers, and large stout horizontal roots; or often stemless.
I next exhibit a section taken in the same plane of the corky portion of the bark.
It has no proper corky layer; but the whole is covered by a transparent skin or epidermis, resembling that of the stem.
The CORKY LAYER or Outer Bark, the cells of which contain no chlorophyll, and are of the nature of cork.
Common cork is the thick corkylayer of the bark of the Cork-Oak of Spain.
Corky excrescences on leaves occur occasionally in the Gooseberry, Holly and other plants, for which no cause has been discovered.
A score of named varieties are in cultivation in this country, some with very corky bark, others with curled leaves, and still others with weeping branches.
When these young and larval forms are full grown, each excavates a cavity or cell at the end of its burrow and next to the outer corky bark.
Rip, with enthusiasm and every one laughed, Corky the loudest of all.
As a society parasite, Corky had learned that it is easier to fool a man who has brains than it is to fool one who hasn't any at all.
Corky and I have been going over the list of invitations this week.
Corky was to be seen everywhere with the Grand Duchess.
At five o'clock that morning, Corky stood before the mirror in his bed-chamber and stared very intently at his somewhat wavering features.
Corky couldn't help thinking how dangerous it was for the lady to wear such a fortune at Maxim's.
We already know that Mrs. Corky Van Winkle longed for a seat among the lofty, and that Mrs. Bleecker Van Winkle had married at least two gentlemen of Gotham in the struggle to feel at home there.
Corky congratulated himself on getting a long start over them.
She is amazing," said Corky for the third time during supper.
Corky was not satisfied to accept rumour as fact, so he undertook an investigation on his own account.
Five minutes later Corky was drinking his own health in the presence of the Grand Duchess from Wisconsin.
Comparisons: The cork elm is another tree that possesses corky ridges along its twigs, but this differs from the sweet gum in wanting the spiny fruit and its other distinctive traits.
The corkynature of this region of the bark was likely richer in carbonizable elements than the wood properly so called, and had, in consequence, to undergo much less shrinkage.