The Cultivator1851 |
From inside the book
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Page 14
... farmer can easily estimate after he has tried it . ENRICHING FARMING . - Some of the best farmers have learned that the most profitable farming is that which increases the fertility of their land . Instead of raising chiefly grain to ...
... farmer can easily estimate after he has tried it . ENRICHING FARMING . - Some of the best farmers have learned that the most profitable farming is that which increases the fertility of their land . Instead of raising chiefly grain to ...
Page 15
... farming , by reading - by ascertain- ing wherein consisted the success of the best farmers of the country , to enable him to do which , he should not only subscribe for " THE CULTIVATOR . " but study each number , as it comes to hand ...
... farming , by reading - by ascertain- ing wherein consisted the success of the best farmers of the country , to enable him to do which , he should not only subscribe for " THE CULTIVATOR . " but study each number , as it comes to hand ...
Page 20
... farmers are deterred from raising ruta bagas , carrots , field beets , & c . , by the labor and expense of hoeing and destroying weeds , al- though these crops often yield from 500 to 800 bushels to the acre . To avoid all this trouble ...
... farmers are deterred from raising ruta bagas , carrots , field beets , & c . , by the labor and expense of hoeing and destroying weeds , al- though these crops often yield from 500 to 800 bushels to the acre . To avoid all this trouble ...
Page 28
... farmers with a few acres , actually make more than others on large farms . Let each farmer , then , begin the year by looking closely to the causes of waste . For in- stance - how many tons of hay are trodden under foot and wasted in ...
... farmers with a few acres , actually make more than others on large farms . Let each farmer , then , begin the year by looking closely to the causes of waste . For in- stance - how many tons of hay are trodden under foot and wasted in ...
Page 30
... farmers . It is not the province of these papers to assume the cha- racter of arbitrary teachers . They should rather be regarded as furnishing to farmers a medium for the mu- tual interchange of ideas on the various subjects of ...
... farmers . It is not the province of these papers to assume the cha- racter of arbitrary teachers . They should rather be regarded as furnishing to farmers a medium for the mu- tual interchange of ideas on the various subjects of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid acre Addison county Agricultural Agricultural Society Agricultural Warehouse Albany American ammonia animals apple ashes beautiful better bones breed bull bushels cattle cents clover corn cows crop cultivation dairy Devon drain early exhibited experience fair farm farmers feet fence field fowls fruit furnished Garden grain grass ground growth guano gypsum heifers Horse Powers Horticultural Implements important improvement inches insects J. J. THOMAS kinds labor land late lime LUTHER TUCKER Macedon machine manufacture manure Merino miles milk mode months Morgan Horse morn New-York offered Ohio Ornamental Trees Otsego county peach Pear plants plow portion potatoes pounds practical premium produced Prof purchased quantity Reaper roots season seed sheep Short-horns soil sold sowing spring straw subscriber superior Thresher tion valuable varieties vegetable wheat winter wool YALE COLLEGE
Popular passages
Page 51 - ... 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 100 - By shutting up the port of Boston, some imagine that the course of trade might be turned hither and to our benefit; but...
Page 101 - The legislature shall, as soon as conveniently may be, provide, by law, for the establishment of schools throughout the State, in such manner that the poor may be taught gratis.
Page 168 - ... and the rural cottage. It is the solitude and freedom of the family home in the country which constantly preserves the purity of the nation, and invigorates its intellectual powers. The battle of life, carried on in cities, gives a sharper edge to the weapon of character, but its temper is, for the most part, fixed amid those communings with nature and the family, where individuality takes its most natural and strongest development.
Page 199 - That the preparation of long fibre for scutching is effected in less than one day, and is always uniform in strength, and entirely free from colour, much facilitating the after-process of bleaching, either in yarns or in cloth.
Page 52 - Mount Vernon, whose soil was once tilled by the hands and is now consecrated by the dust of the Father of his country, should properly belong to the nation, and might with great propriety become, under its auspices, a model farm to illustrate the progress of that pursuit to which he was so much devoted. CENSUS. Shortly after the passage of the act of 23d...
Page 199 - That the fibre, to be mixed with cotton, or spun alone on cotton machinery, is so completely assimilated in its character to that of cotton, that it is capable of receiving the same rich opaque color that...
Page 226 - Professor Low, writing in 1840 in relation to the Short-horn breed, says that at a period "near our own times, it appears that cattle were frequently brought from the opposite continent and mingled with the native Varieties. They were chiefly imported from Holland, the cows of which country were the...
Page 168 - That family, whose religion lies away from its threshold, will show but slender results from the best teachings, compared with another where the family hearth is made a central point of the Beautiful and the Good. And much of that feverish unrest and want of balance between the desire and the...
Page 48 - ... group within ; nothing is to be seen but the conflict of the elements, nor heard but the raving of the storm ; then they all kneel around him, while he recommends them to the protection of Heaven ; and though their little hymn of praise can scarcely be heard even by themselves, as it mixes with the roar of the tempest, they never fail to rise from their devotions with their spirits cheered and their confidence renewed, and go to sleep with an exaltation of mind of which kings and conquerors have...