British Farmer's Magazine, Issue 25James Ridgway, 1854 |
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Page 36
... believe it will be generally admitted by all practical farmers , that it is a matter of serious importance , in order that farm stock may at all times be kept in a healthy and thriving state , that a proper mode of ventilation ought to ...
... believe it will be generally admitted by all practical farmers , that it is a matter of serious importance , in order that farm stock may at all times be kept in a healthy and thriving state , that a proper mode of ventilation ought to ...
Page 38
... believe are entirely new , I shall have much pleasure indeed in showing them . I suppose the most of you may have seen , or , at all events , may have heard , of the large and well- arranged steading of Nafferton , which in some ...
... believe are entirely new , I shall have much pleasure indeed in showing them . I suppose the most of you may have seen , or , at all events , may have heard , of the large and well- arranged steading of Nafferton , which in some ...
Page 55
... believe we are justified in saying that if Mr. Hobbs had a prejudice at starting with them , it was in favour of the Cochin Chinas . The result of his experience comes to what we advanced twelve months since - not only the same argument ...
... believe we are justified in saying that if Mr. Hobbs had a prejudice at starting with them , it was in favour of the Cochin Chinas . The result of his experience comes to what we advanced twelve months since - not only the same argument ...
Page 61
... believe him when he said he shared in their anxiety . He trusted , however , that the Royal Agricultural Society , which this year he had the honour to represent , and certainly it was a high honour for a private individual like himself ...
... believe him when he said he shared in their anxiety . He trusted , however , that the Royal Agricultural Society , which this year he had the honour to represent , and certainly it was a high honour for a private individual like himself ...
Page 66
... believe what we see , but yet more and more extending . It is , though , a mania no longer . It is gradually losing that ab- surdity of excess , by which it was at one time so strongly characterized . We are getting to the best and most ...
... believe what we see , but yet more and more extending . It is , though , a mania no longer . It is gradually losing that ab- surdity of excess , by which it was at one time so strongly characterized . We are getting to the best and most ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres agriculturists ammonia animals appears average barley beans better Black Sea breed breeder bushels cattle cloudy cloudy clover Club considerable corn crop cultivation disease districts ditto draining drill early effect England exhibited experience farm farmers favour feeding fish flax give grain grass guano harvest hear horses important improved inches increase kind labour land less lime Lincolnshire liquid manure London Lord Lord Berners machine manure matter Mechi meeting ment mode month oats object obtained offal opinion parish plants plough potatoes practical present prize produce profitable quantity question returns roots Royal Agricultural Society Scotland season seed sheep shorthorn silica silver medal Sir John Shelley Smithfield Club soil sowing statistics straw superphosphate supply tion tons trade turnips week wheat whole wurzel
Popular passages
Page 224 - And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
Page 426 - Majesty that it may be enacted, and be it enacted . . . that whereas by reason of some defects in the law poor people are not restrained from going from one parish to another, and therefore do endeavour to settle themselves in those parishes where there is the best stock, the largest commons or wastes to build cottages, and the most woods for them to burn and destroy...
Page 393 - A Treatise on Cobbett's Corn, containing Instructions for Propagating and Cultivating the Plant, and for Harvesting and Preserving the Crop ; and also an Account of the several Uses to which the Produce is applied, with Minute Directions relative to each Mode of Application.
Page 305 - HORTUS GRAMINEUS WOBURNENSIS : Or, an Account of the Results of Experiments on the Produce and Nutritive Qualities of different Grasses, and other Plants, used as the Food of the more valuable Domestic Animals : instituted by John Duke of Bedford.
Page 404 - HENDERSON. The Young Estate Manager's Guide. By RICHARD HENDERSON, Member (by Examination) of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, and the Surveyors Institution.
Page 215 - Of all obstacles to improvement, ignorance is the most formidable, because the only true secret of assisting the poor is to make them agents in bettering their own condition, and to supply them, not with a temporary stimulus, but with a permanent energy.
Page 404 - ... does not double the produce ; or, to express the same thing in other words, every increase of produce is obtained by a more than proportional increase in the application of labor to the land.
Page 404 - ... it is the law of production from the land, that in any given state of agricultural skill and knowledge...
Page 396 - Committee, laid before the Council the Monthly Report on the accounts of the Society; from which it appeared, that...