The Cultivator: A Monthly Publication, Devoted to Agriculture, Band 7L. Tucker, 1850 |
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Seite 33
... practical man can raise good crops and good animals , can keep his farm supplied with good implements , but could he not work to better advantage and with more certainty , if he knew more as to the nature of his animals , the com ...
... practical man can raise good crops and good animals , can keep his farm supplied with good implements , but could he not work to better advantage and with more certainty , if he knew more as to the nature of his animals , the com ...
Seite 54
... practical spirit of the age . Hamilton college certainly deserves well of the community , for its readiness to comply with the demand for those kinds of learning which are suited to the real wants of life . Time was , when Latin and ...
... practical spirit of the age . Hamilton college certainly deserves well of the community , for its readiness to comply with the demand for those kinds of learning which are suited to the real wants of life . Time was , when Latin and ...
Seite 61
... practical information , touching the resources and productions of the country . AYRSHIRE CATTLE FOR OHIO . - Messrs . WM . H. LADD and J. R. CUNNINGHAM , of Richmond , Jefferson county , Ohio , have purchased of E. P. PRENTICE , Esq ...
... practical information , touching the resources and productions of the country . AYRSHIRE CATTLE FOR OHIO . - Messrs . WM . H. LADD and J. R. CUNNINGHAM , of Richmond , Jefferson county , Ohio , have purchased of E. P. PRENTICE , Esq ...
Seite 62
... Practical Agriculture . 2d . The relation of Meteorology to Practical Agriculture . 3d . The relation of Botany and Zoology to Prac- tical Agriculture . 4th . General relations of Geology to Practical Agriculture . 5th . Relation of ...
... Practical Agriculture . 2d . The relation of Meteorology to Practical Agriculture . 3d . The relation of Botany and Zoology to Prac- tical Agriculture . 4th . General relations of Geology to Practical Agriculture . 5th . Relation of ...
Seite 66
... practical calling , have raised themselves to eminence in the empire of knowledge . In them , we find realized that most . desirable , but quite too rare union , of studious hab- its with a practical business . Their example is most ...
... practical calling , have raised themselves to eminence in the empire of knowledge . In them , we find realized that most . desirable , but quite too rare union , of studious hab- its with a practical business . Their example is most ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Agricultural Agricultural Society Albany American animals apple applied better blood bones Boston breed Buckthorn bull bushels bushels per acre cattle cents Cherry clover corn cows crop cultivation culture dollars Dorking Drill Duke of Cambridge early exhibition fair farm farmer favorable feet fence fertile fowls Fruit Trees furnished furrow Garden give grain Grape grass ground growth Horse Power important improvement inches J. J. THOMAS kind labor land late lime LUTHER TUCKER machine Malay manufacturers manure ment Merino Mills Morgan Horse New-York Nurseries Ohio Ornamental Trees Osage Orange peach Pear plants plow Plum potatoes Poultry pounds practical premium produce Prof profitable purchased quantity ringbone roots season seed Seedling sheep Short-horns soil sold specimens spring straw subscriber Threshing tion valuable varieties vegetable wheat winter wire wool
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 155 - ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY ; or, Year Book of Facts in Science and Art, exhibiting the most important Discoveries and Improvements in Mechanics, Useful Arts, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Astronomy, Meteorology, Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, Geography, Antiquities, etc.
Seite 57 - I went by the field of the slothful, and by the vineyard of the man void of understanding ; and, lo, it was all grown over with thorns, and nettles had covered the face thereof, and the stone wall thereof was broken down.
Seite 67 - ... ideas. And although kingdoms and provinces may be wrested from the hands that hold them, in the same manner they were obtained; although ordinary and vulgar power may, in human affairs, be lost as it has been won; yet it is the glorious prerogative of the empire of knowledge, that what it gains it never loses.
Seite 38 - To DIFFUSE KNOWLEDGE. It is proposed— 1. To publish a series of periodical reports on the progress of the different branches of knowledge ; and, 2. To publish occasionally separate treatises on subjects of general interest.
Seite 215 - ... Increased usefulness, such as permanency in dyes, improved forms and arrangements in articles of utility, &c. Superior quality, or superior skill in workmanship. New use of known materials. Use of new materials. New combinations of materials, as in metals and pottery. Beauty of design in form, or colour, or both, with reference to utility. Cheapness, relatively to excellence of production. In the department of SCULPTURE, MODELS, and the PLASTIC ART, the rewards will have reference to the beauty...
Seite 103 - Ill carcass and appearance I hesitate not to say they are the most unsightly flock of the kind I ever met with. The Spaniards entertained an opinion that a looseness of skin under the throat, and other parts, contributed to the increase of fleece. This system the French have so much enlarged on that they have produced, in this flock, individuals with dewlaps almost down to the knees, and folds of skin on the neck, like frills, covering nearly the head. Several of these animals seem to possess pelts...
Seite 37 - FOR THE INCREASE AND DIFFUSION OF KNOWLEDGE AMONG MEN.
Seite 216 - OR, THE CONNECTION BETWEEN SCIENCE AND THE ART OF PRACTICAL Farming. Prize Essay of the New York State Agricultural Society. By JOHN P. NORTON, MA, Professor of Scientific Agriculture in Yale College. Adapted to tb
Seite 57 - Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep ; so shall thy poverty come as one that travelleth, and thy want as an armed man.
Seite 225 - ... of matter soluble in water is contained in it. This is assuredly at an earlier period of its growth than when it has shot into seed, for it is then that woody matter predominates ; a substance totally insoluble in water, and therefore less calculated to serve as food to animals than substances capable of assuming a soluble condition. This is the first point for consideration in the production of hay, since it ought to be the object of the farmer to preserve the hay for winter use in the condition...