Transactions of the New-York State Agricultural Society for the Year ..., Volume 9The Society, 1850 - Agriculture |
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Page 27
... are no hands to till . The value of an estate is measured not by the number of acres it contains , but by the number of souls which live upon , cultivate , and are sold along with it . As in the first clearings of a North No. 175. ] 27.
... are no hands to till . The value of an estate is measured not by the number of acres it contains , but by the number of souls which live upon , cultivate , and are sold along with it . As in the first clearings of a North No. 175. ] 27.
Page 41
... contain , usually , or in most of their parts , the greater number of the same mineral substances . c . That the animal , as a whole , also contains them , but distributed throughout its several parts in a manner different from that in ...
... contain , usually , or in most of their parts , the greater number of the same mineral substances . c . That the animal , as a whole , also contains them , but distributed throughout its several parts in a manner different from that in ...
Page 48
... contains matter highly creditable to the Society , and useful to the advancement of scientific agriculture . Farther the interest which , as individuals , you take in the promo- tion of Agriculture , by the acquisition and application ...
... contains matter highly creditable to the Society , and useful to the advancement of scientific agriculture . Farther the interest which , as individuals , you take in the promo- tion of Agriculture , by the acquisition and application ...
Page 64
... contains elements calculated to fatten the animal , but not those that strengthen the muscles so much as those found in our oats . The one , therefore , should be fed for one pur- pose and the other for another . This principle has been ...
... contains elements calculated to fatten the animal , but not those that strengthen the muscles so much as those found in our oats . The one , therefore , should be fed for one pur- pose and the other for another . This principle has been ...
Page 72
... point let us look how this charcoal gets there . We know that the atmosphere contains oxygen gas , and we know that if we burn charcoal with that , the coal dissolves and forms a color- less gas . If we take this new gas or 72 [ ASSEMBLY.
... point let us look how this charcoal gets there . We know that the atmosphere contains oxygen gas , and we know that if we burn charcoal with that , the coal dissolves and forms a color- less gas . If we take this new gas or 72 [ ASSEMBLY.
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Common terms and phrases
agricultural Agricultural Society Albany ammonia animal Annual Fair apples applied attention average awarded barley breed buck bushels bushels per acre butter carbonic acid cattle cent cheese clay contains cows crops cultivation culture dairy draining Executive Committee exhibited farm farmers feeding fertile fleece flock fruit gluten grain grapes heifer horse important improvement inches Indian corn interest J. J. Thomas John kind labor land lime magnesia maize manufacture manure matter Merino milk New-York nitrogen oats Oneida Oneida county Onondaga oxygen phosphate phosphoric acid plants plowing portion potash potatoes pounds practical premium present President produce profit quantity raised rich Rochester rocks roots salt Saxony season Secretary seed sheep soil sowing specimens starch straw substances sugar sulphuric acid surface Syracuse tion Transactions trees valuable varieties vegetable wheat winter wool yield
Popular passages
Page 153 - It will not be doubted, that with reference either to individual or national welfare, agriculture is of primary importance. In proportion as nations advance in population, and other circumstances of maturity, this truth becomes more apparent ; and renders the cultivation of the soil more and more an object of public patronage. Institutions for promoting it, grow up supported by the public purse : And to what object can it be dedicated with greater propriety...
Page 153 - ... charged with collecting and diffusing information, and enabled by premiums, and small pecuniary aids, to encourage and assist a spirit of discovery and improvement. This species of establishment contributes doubly to the increase of improvement, by stimulating to enterprise and experiment, and by drawing to a common centre the results everywhere of individual skill and observation, and spreading them thence over the whole nation. Experience accordingly has shown, that they are very cheap instruments...
Page 304 - Firmness and docility of temper greatly enhance the value of a milch cow : one that is quiet and contented feeds at her ease, does not break over fences, or injure other cattle, so much as those that are of a turbulent cast. To render them docile, they ought to be gently treated, frequently handled when young, and never hunted with dogs, beat, or frightened. A moderate degree of hardiness, life, and spirits, with a sound constitution, are desirable qualities in a dairy stock, and all these are 'found...
Page xviii - Its object shall be to improve the condition of agriculture, the rural household and mechanic arts. Section 1. The society shall consist of such citizens of the state as shall signify in writing their wish to become members and shall pay, on subscribing, not less than one dollar and annually thereafter one dollar; and also of honorary and corresponding members. The presidents of...
Page 308 - England, which has been a dairy region from the earliest period of English history, and bones and bone-dust have been long used there as indispensably necessary to restore the waste made by the animals fed upon the pastures. The following extract from an article in the Edinburgh Review, in relation to Cheshire, shows more particularly the result : " Dairy husbandry has long prevailed in Cheshire. Now it has been ascertained that every milch cow robs the land annually of as much phosphate of lime...
Page 290 - No other grain, in fact, except rice, is so extensively cultivated. Its flexibility of organization makes it very easy of adaptation to climate and soil. Though it prefers moist and rich soils with strong heats, there are varieties of it which can be raised in tropical climates at a height of more than nine thousand feet above the level of the sea.
Page 286 - It is no longer doubted among botanists, that maize, or Turkey corn, is a true American grain, and that the old continent received ic from the new.
Page 303 - Holland, and others have ascribed to them an English origin. I have no doubt but a tinge of foreign blood may have come into their veins ; but I am confident that the breed is chiefly indigenous, and that the principal improvement upon that breed has been by better feeding and treatment. The Earl of Marchmont, about the year 1750, purchased from the Bishop of Durham several cows and a bull of the Teeswater, or some other English breed of the same brown color, into which the dairy stock of Ayrshire...
Page 304 - ... deep, and pelvis capacious, and wide over the hips, with round fleshy buttocks.* Tail long and small ; legs small and short, with firm joints; udder capacious, broad and square, stretching forward, and neither fleshy, low hung nor loose ; the...
Page 388 - This rude implement is held in the left hand, its edge which is dull, is raised a line above the index finger. Strips of hemp are...