Report, Volumen3New Hampshire Department of Agriculture, 1873 |
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Página 24
... sell at prices we are willing to pay . We must raise them ; and in so doing we must select those breeds and those families that are adapted to our immediate purpose . Ayrshires , Jerseys and Short Horns are the only bloods that dairymen ...
... sell at prices we are willing to pay . We must raise them ; and in so doing we must select those breeds and those families that are adapted to our immediate purpose . Ayrshires , Jerseys and Short Horns are the only bloods that dairymen ...
Página 25
... selling lambs and wool . He made it a prime object to keep healthy sheep , not pure bloods , and to so breed as to be constantly increasing the size and vigor of the animals and the amount and quality of the wool . His fleeces averaged ...
... selling lambs and wool . He made it a prime object to keep healthy sheep , not pure bloods , and to so breed as to be constantly increasing the size and vigor of the animals and the amount and quality of the wool . His fleeces averaged ...
Página 27
... sell so high . The burden of taxes was great on the farmer , be-- cause his property cannot be kept away from the appraiser . Help was more expensive than formerly , and laborers did less work . He advised farmers to employ oxen in ...
... sell so high . The burden of taxes was great on the farmer , be-- cause his property cannot be kept away from the appraiser . Help was more expensive than formerly , and laborers did less work . He advised farmers to employ oxen in ...
Página 33
... sell stock year by year and not exhaust the soil . We must replace in part what we remove . He referred to the effect of different kinds of stock on pasture ground . Sheep kept the ground in good condition , while neat - stock ...
... sell stock year by year and not exhaust the soil . We must replace in part what we remove . He referred to the effect of different kinds of stock on pasture ground . Sheep kept the ground in good condition , while neat - stock ...
Página 39
... sell it unless it brought a given value which would enable him to replace it by plaster and other fertilizers . He composts liberally . He would not feed out corn that cost him seventy - five cents a bushel when he could buy for sixty ...
... sell it unless it brought a given value which would enable him to replace it by plaster and other fertilizers . He composts liberally . He would not feed out corn that cost him seventy - five cents a bushel when he could buy for sixty ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acre agricultural ammonia amount animals apples appraised ashes better buildings birch birds blood neat stock Board bones breed bushels cash value cattle cent coffin-bone Coos County corn Cotswold cows cultivation disease last fall dogs taxed dollars fair farmers feed fertilizers fifty foot formerly fruit Grafton County grass grow Hampshire Hampton Falls hemlock horse disease horses in town hundred improved income insects intelligent keep labor land larvæ leave the farm less lime manufactured manure maple Merrimack County money at interest Moultonborough nearly neat stock oats old growth one-half pasture pears phosphoric acid pine plant plow potash potatoes present profit raise reason Reported Rollinsford Secretary seed Selectmen sell sheep killed society soil stock horses stock in town Strafford County supply thousand tion town is covered trees twenty valuable varieties vegetable Warren Brown wheat winter wood and timber young
Pasajes populares
Página 402 - On the third day he became too weak to leave the lodge, and as he lay gazing upwards he saw a spirit come down in the shape of a beautiful young man, dressed in green and having green plumes on his head, who told him to arise and wrestle with him, as this was the only way in which he could obtain his wishes. He did so, and found his strength renewed by the effort. This visit and the trial of wrestling were repeated for four days, the youth feeling at each trial that, although his bodily strength...
Página 384 - The rule requires something more than mere juxta-position ; as, that the soil shall have been displaced for the purpose of receiving the article, or that the chattel should be cemented, or otherwise fastened to some fabric previously attached to the ground (r).
Página 310 - They are found upon almost all parts of plants, the roots, stems, young shoots, buds, and leaves, and there is scarcely a plant which does not harbor one or two kinds peculiar to itself. They are, moreover, exceedingly prolific, for Reaumur has proved that one individual, in five generations, may become the progenitor of nearly six thousand millions of descendants.
Página 308 - Insects and birds have been carefully classified according to their several species; their habits of feeding have been closely observed, and the results ascertained and computed. It has been concluded that by no agency save that of little birds can the ravages of insects be kept down. There are some birds which live exclusively upon insects and grubs, and the quantity which they destroy is enormous. There are others which live partly on grubs and partly on grain, doing some damage, but providing...
Página 331 - Let the farmer forevermore be honored in his calling; for they who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God.
Página 313 - ... increase of weight, though its feathers had grown longer and smoother. Its food had been weighed daily, and averaged fifteen dwt. of meat, two or three earthworms, and a small quantity of bread each day; the whole being equal to eighteen dwt. of beef, or thirty-six dwt. of earth-worms; and it has continued to eat this amount to the present time.
Página 302 - Cuckoos rarely build nests of their own but lay their eggs in the nests of other "birds.
Página 312 - ... or fifteen per cent, less than the food he had eaten in that time; the length of these worms, if laid end to end, would be about fourteen feet, or ten times the length of the intestines.
Página 230 - An acquaintance with the manner in -which these "trials of speed" are got up leads to the conclusion that they are chiefly designed as means for making money for hotel-keepers, horse-dealers, and gamblers; and the contests are, in principle, nothing more than those instituted by gambling associations, where horses compete for purses. In...
Página 402 - Iresh and soft, and in due time was gratified by beholding the matured plant, bending with its golden fruit and gracefully waving its green leaves and yellow tassels in the wind. He then invited his parents to the spot to behold the new plant. " It is Mondamin," replied his father, "it is the spirit's grain.