The Cultivator, Volumen7New York State Agricultural Society, 1850 |
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Página 6
... Spring , ... 311 246 ... 121 , 390 363 , 390 390 257 .... 376 195 , 275 , 312 185 359 ...... 79 278 281 273 185 393 Large Crop of ,. 330 , 398 , 403 100 Large Field of , ......... 330 ..... 79 , 214 243 106 , 121 86 Sugar Beets ...
... Spring , ... 311 246 ... 121 , 390 363 , 390 390 257 .... 376 195 , 275 , 312 185 359 ...... 79 278 281 273 185 393 Large Crop of ,. 330 , 398 , 403 100 Large Field of , ......... 330 ..... 79 , 214 243 106 , 121 86 Sugar Beets ...
Página 34
... spring plowing , is a subject of vast practical importance to the farmer . Each system has its ardent and decided champions , but like every controverted question , the truth belongs exclusively to neither extreme . Either plan , under ...
... spring plowing , is a subject of vast practical importance to the farmer . Each system has its ardent and decided champions , but like every controverted question , the truth belongs exclusively to neither extreme . Either plan , under ...
Página 44
... spring from under the snow , after a repose of four months . It is white on the inside , touched with red externally , and some times nearly three inches in diameter . In England it is called the Christmas Rose , but it has no affinity ...
... spring from under the snow , after a repose of four months . It is white on the inside , touched with red externally , and some times nearly three inches in diameter . In England it is called the Christmas Rose , but it has no affinity ...
Página 46
... spring . The parts united the same season , and neither the growth or fruitfulness of the tree seemed to be affected . Two years afterwards , in the coldest weather of the winter , the tree split again in the same manner , and was ...
... spring . The parts united the same season , and neither the growth or fruitfulness of the tree seemed to be affected . Two years afterwards , in the coldest weather of the winter , the tree split again in the same manner , and was ...
Página 50
... spring was evenly spread , and the ground plowed ; using on one - half of it a subsoil plow , that was driven eight inches deep , making a united depth of sixteen inches with both plows . It was then | That portion of the row , up to ...
... spring was evenly spread , and the ground plowed ; using on one - half of it a subsoil plow , that was driven eight inches deep , making a united depth of sixteen inches with both plows . It was then | That portion of the row , up to ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acre Agricultural Agricultural Society Agricultural Warehouse Albany American animals apple applied Bates better blood bones Boston breed Buckthorn bull bushels bushels per acre cattle cents chess clover corn cows crop cultivation culture dollars drain drouth Duchess Duke of Cambridge early experience farm farmer feet fence fertile field flax fowls Fruit Trees furnished Garden give grain grass ground growth guano Horse Power important improvement inches J. J. THOMAS kind knowledge labor land late lime LUTHER TUCKER machine manufacture manure Merino Morgan Horse New-York nursery Osage Orange peach pear plants plow plum potatoes Poultry pounds practical premium produce Prof profit quantity ringbone roots season seed Seedling sheep soil sold spring straw subscribers subsoil Threshing Threshing Machines tion turneps valuable varieties vegetable wheat winter wire wood wool
Pasajes populares
Página 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.
Página 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.
Página 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.
Página 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.
Página 402 - Nay, the farm-servant, or day-labourer, whether in his master's employ, or tending the concerns of his own cottage, must derive great practical benefit, — must be both a better servant, and a more thrifty, and therefore comfortable, cottager, for knowing something of the nature of soils and manures, which Chemistry teaches, and something of the habits of animals, and the qualities and growth of plants, which he learns from Natural History and Chemistry together.
Página 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.
Página 160 - Thomas; containing directions for the propagation and culture of Fruit Trees, in the Nursery, Orchard, and Garden; with descriptions of the principal American and Foreign varieties cultivated in the United States: with 300 accurate illustrations.
Página 38 - To stimulate men of talent to make original researches, by offering suitable rewards for memoirs containing new truths; and 2. To appropriate annually a portion of the income for particular researches, under the direction of suitable persons.
Página 133 - This fully explains the difference in the necessary methods of culture for different places ; since it is obvious that the essential elements of the soil must vary with the varieties of composition of the rocks, from the disintegration of which they originated. Wheat, clover, turnips, for example, each require certain elements from the soil ; they will not flourish where the appropriate elements are absent. Science teaches us what elements are essential to every species of plants by an analysis of...
Página 66 - My friend, to have thought far too little, we shall find among the capital faults in the review of life. To have in our nature a noble part that can think would be a cause for infinite exultation, if it actually did think as much and as well as it can think, and if to have an unthinking mind were not equivalent to having no mind at all. The mind might, and it should be, kept in a state of habitual exertion, that would save us. from needing to appeal for proof of its existence to some occasion yesterday...