British Farmer's Magazine, Issue 25James Ridgway, 1854 |
From inside the book
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Page 8
... quantity as a natural product , except by M. Sauvage , a French chemist in the same geolo- gical formation in France as that in which it has been discovered by Messrs . Way and Paine in England ; and though silica exists , as we have ...
... quantity as a natural product , except by M. Sauvage , a French chemist in the same geolo- gical formation in France as that in which it has been discovered by Messrs . Way and Paine in England ; and though silica exists , as we have ...
Page 14
... quantity . The pro- portion of fat considerably exceeds what it should do . The animals were not only fed to the greatest pitch while growing , but they were also fed after bone and muscle had ceased to grow ; so that dur . The ...
... quantity . The pro- portion of fat considerably exceeds what it should do . The animals were not only fed to the greatest pitch while growing , but they were also fed after bone and muscle had ceased to grow ; so that dur . The ...
Page 16
... quantity . The waste of fat thus deposited separately in layers , instead of being grained in the lean , is great in the butcher's - shop , and still more so when placed before the fire . The quantity of fat which the butcher daily cuts ...
... quantity . The waste of fat thus deposited separately in layers , instead of being grained in the lean , is great in the butcher's - shop , and still more so when placed before the fire . The quantity of fat which the butcher daily cuts ...
Page 26
... quantity of guano would not be suf- ficient to last more than eight or nine years . The Royal Agricultural Society had done its best to obtain from the Peruvian government , and indeed from every other available source , a supply of ...
... quantity of guano would not be suf- ficient to last more than eight or nine years . The Royal Agricultural Society had done its best to obtain from the Peruvian government , and indeed from every other available source , a supply of ...
Page 34
... quantity of tops being so much less , the greater quantity of bulbs is required . The cutting of swedes for young sheep seems indispensable . They are usually at this period ( the early spring , which is the time this crop is com- monly ...
... quantity of tops being so much less , the greater quantity of bulbs is required . The cutting of swedes for young sheep seems indispensable . They are usually at this period ( the early spring , which is the time this crop is com- monly ...
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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...
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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.
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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...