Report of [E. Holmes] the Secretary and Transactions of the County Agricultural Societies, for 1855: 1850-52 |
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Página 8
... means of support and of wealth which can hardly be found amidst the profuse blessings that the God of Nature has poured upon the fields and floods of our nobler State . Why is this so ? Must it always be so ? Can Maine not arise to the ...
... means of support and of wealth which can hardly be found amidst the profuse blessings that the God of Nature has poured upon the fields and floods of our nobler State . Why is this so ? Must it always be so ? Can Maine not arise to the ...
Página 10
... means of going there and going ahead too with the rest . An enterprising young man , though begin- ning with no capital but his hands , will not stick at small obstacles when they come in the way of his strong desires . " Where there is ...
... means of going there and going ahead too with the rest . An enterprising young man , though begin- ning with no capital but his hands , will not stick at small obstacles when they come in the way of his strong desires . " Where there is ...
Página 12
... means of self - support . It may be questionable whether that policy should be adopted , though any policy can hardly be a bad one which increases the means of independent support , and instead of sending money out of the State , puts ...
... means of self - support . It may be questionable whether that policy should be adopted , though any policy can hardly be a bad one which increases the means of independent support , and instead of sending money out of the State , puts ...
Página 13
... means an attention would be secured begetting the highest respect for the cause of Agriculture ; and thenceforth farming would not be degraded as a clod - hopping drudgery , but looked upon as a most honorable business . And we all know ...
... means an attention would be secured begetting the highest respect for the cause of Agriculture ; and thenceforth farming would not be degraded as a clod - hopping drudgery , but looked upon as a most honorable business . And we all know ...
Página 16
... means contemptible . We have more good land in Maine than in all the rest of New England . And when the time comes - as come it will - it is inevitable - that our three hundred miles of sea - coast , trebled by the shores of its bays ...
... means contemptible . We have more good land in Maine than in all the rest of New England . And when the time comes - as come it will - it is inevitable - that our three hundred miles of sea - coast , trebled by the shores of its bays ...
Términos y frases comunes
50 cents 75 cents Agricultural Society animals apples Bangor beautiful Biddeford breed Buckfield bull bushels bushels per acre butter calf calves Cape Elizabeth cattle Chairman cheese committee award compost corn crop cultivation diploma Dixfield drain England entered for premium exhibited farm farmer feet fruit Fryeburg gratuity of $1 Green handsome horse improvement inches John Joseph Kennebec Kennebec County Kennebunkport kind labor land Lewiston manufactured manure Miss mium Norway old colt old heifers old steers oxen Oxford county pair pear planted plow plum Portland potatoes pounds premium of $2 presented produce profit quince raised Readfield recommend a gratuity respectfully submitted Ribston Pippin Rumford Russet Saco Samuel second best second premium seed sheep society's first premium soil South Berwick specimen superior Sweet swine third best third premium three years old trees variety vegetable Waterville Westbrook wheat William winter Winthrop wool Yellow
Pasajes populares
Página 844 - As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons. I sat down under his shadow with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste.
Página 847 - And Judah and Israel dwelt safely, every man under his vine and under his figtree, from Dan even to Beer-sheba, all the days of Solomon.
Página 60 - The world was sad ; the garden was a wild ! And man, the hermit, sighed, till woman smiled...
Página 117 - When water is heated from below, the portion first subjected to the heat rises to the surface, and every portion is successively subjected to the heat and rises, and each, having lost some of its heat at the surface, is in turn displaced. Constant motion is kept up, and a constant approximation to an equal temperature in the whole body. The application of superficial heat has no tendency to disturb the quiescence of water.
Página 635 - Honor and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honor lies.
Página 117 - The small portion warmed expands, becomes lighter than that below, consequently retains its position on the surface, and carries no heat downwards. To ascertain the mean heat of the air at the surface of the earth, over any extended space, and for a period of eight or nine months, is no simple operation. More elements enter into such a calculation than we have space or ability to enumerate ; but we know certainly that for seven months in the year, air, at the surface of the ground, is seldom lower...
Página 122 - ... feet, and as this latter is generally one or two degrees colder than water from a contiguous well several feet below, we can hardly avoid drawing the conclusion that the cold of evaporation has considerable influence at 30 inches, a much diminished influence at 4 feet, and little or none below that depth.
Página 120 - In respect of the depth at which drains may, with a certainty of action, be placed in a soil, I pretend to assign no rule ; for there cannot, in my opinion, be a more crude or mistaken idea than that one rule of depth is applicable with equal efficiency to soils of all kinds.
Página 44 - He that observeth the wind shall not sow; and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap.
Página 132 - Deep-drained lands never do burn. Nothing burns sooner than a few inches of soil on a very retentive clay. No land is less subject to burn than the same soil when by...