Experiment Station Record, Volume 2U.S. Government Printing Office, 1891 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 99
Page 9
... sulphate of ammonia , 80 pounds , nitrate of soda , 100 pounds , and cotton - seed meal , 200 pounds ; for phosphoric acid , dissolved bone - black , 200 pounds ; and for potash , kainit , 100 pounds . Green cotton seed , 960 pounds per ...
... sulphate of ammonia , 80 pounds , nitrate of soda , 100 pounds , and cotton - seed meal , 200 pounds ; for phosphoric acid , dissolved bone - black , 200 pounds ; and for potash , kainit , 100 pounds . Green cotton seed , 960 pounds per ...
Page 13
... sulphate of copper , 10 pounds of lime , and 25 gallons of water , may be employed ; and a strong ( 25 per cent ) solution of sulphate of iron has been found of advantage for the same purpose . The apparatus for the application of ...
... sulphate of copper , 10 pounds of lime , and 25 gallons of water , may be employed ; and a strong ( 25 per cent ) solution of sulphate of iron has been found of advantage for the same purpose . The apparatus for the application of ...
Page 21
... sulphate of potash , 16 pounds ; muriate of potash , 16 pounds ; nitrate of soda , 16 pounds ; sulphate of ammonia , 13 pounds ; stable manure , two loads ; tobacco stems , 400 pounds . One plat of each series was left unmanured . As ...
... sulphate of potash , 16 pounds ; muriate of potash , 16 pounds ; nitrate of soda , 16 pounds ; sulphate of ammonia , 13 pounds ; stable manure , two loads ; tobacco stems , 400 pounds . One plat of each series was left unmanured . As ...
Page 24
... sulphate of copper on another . " In both plats the po- tato beetle larvæ were effectually destroyed . In plat No. 2 the growth of foliage was slightly checked , but the blight did not strike it quite as soon as that in plat No. 1. In ...
... sulphate of copper on another . " In both plats the po- tato beetle larvæ were effectually destroyed . In plat No. 2 the growth of foliage was slightly checked , but the blight did not strike it quite as soon as that in plat No. 1. In ...
Page 26
... sulphate of potash singly and the last three in combination , have been compared with farm ma- nure and no manure as fertilizers for potatoes . In both years the injury to the crop caused by blight was so great that the results were ...
... sulphate of potash singly and the last three in combination , have been compared with farm ma- nure and no manure as fertilizers for potatoes . In both years the injury to the crop caused by blight was so great that the results were ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. J. Cook AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION albuminoids ammonia amount analyses animals Annual Report apple scab April average barley beets breeds Bulletin butter butter fat cane cattle cent chemical clover College commercial fertilizers containing corn fodder corn meal cost cotton seed cotton-seed meal cows cream crop cultivation digestibility disease dry matter early Experiment Station Record farm farmers favor feeding stuffs Field experiments forage fruit gain given grain grapes grass grown growth inches increase injury insects kainit land live weight manure method milk muriate of potash nitrate of soda nitrogen notes oats Paris green percentage phosphate phosphoric acid pigs plants plats potash potatoes pounds produced protein quantity ration roots rows samples season silage skim-milk smut soil sorghum stalks station See Experiment sugar sugar-beet sulphate superphosphate tabulated temperature test of varieties tion trial tubers vegetable wheat yield
Popular passages
Page 107 - ... that on the contrary, the bacilli of tuberculosis are present and active in a very large proportion of cases in the milk of cows affected with tuberculosis, but with no discoverable lesion of the the udder.
Page 107 - That there is no ground for the assertion that there must be a lesion of the udder before the milk can contain the infection of tuberculosis.
Page 640 - The first is for the purpose of warming the seed preparatory to dipping it into the second. Unless this precaution is taken it will be difficult to keep the water in the second vessel at a proper temperature.
Page 309 - The stations employ 710 persons in the work of administration and inquiry. The number of officers engaged in the different lines of work is as follows: Directors...
Page 180 - The point of greatest significance, so far as the practical agriculturist is concerned, is that what is true of animals and plants in a state of nature is true also of animals and plants as modified by the voluntary acts of man ; for every race or breed of sheep, cattle, or swine, and every variety of grain or vegetable thrives best under particular conditions of temperature, moisture, exposure, and so on. It follows that a map of the natural life areas of a country will tell the farmer what he can...
Page 106 - ... the examination was completed. These samples were obtained from thirty-six different cows, all of them presenting more or less distinct signs of tuberculosis of the lungs or elsewhere, but none of them having marked signs of disease of the udder of any kind.
Page 255 - Set one-year-old plants in rows 4 feet apart and 2 feet apart in the row, and put the crown just at the top of the ground.
Page 230 - Commonwealth, the retail price of which is ten dollars or more per ton, shall be accompanied by a plainly printed statement, clearly and truly certifying the number of net pounds of fertilizer in the package, the name, brand or trade mark under which the fertilizer is sold, the name and address of the manufacturer or importer, the place of manufacture, and a chemical analysis stating...
Page 180 - The consequent abandonment of the three life areas commonly accepted by naturalists, namely: -The Eastern, Central, and Western Provinces. (3) The recognition of seven minor life zones in the San Francisco Mountain region, four of boreal origin, and three of subtropical or mixed origin. (4) The correlation of the four boreal zones with corresponding zones in the north and east.
Page 443 - ... of gravitation, largely unimpeded by capillary action, while at the same time the ability of the soil to return the water to the surface will be reduced to the minimum, and if a good mulch is now added the water will be under the best conditions for being used by the tree. So too, if the soil, about the roots of transplanted trees, is well firmed to insure the rapid transit of water to them, while the surface is left loose and well mulched at the time of setting to prevent capillary action upward...