A Handbook of Agriculture, Issue 16 |
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Results 1-5 of 35
Page 22
... meal to thicken . Dissolve salt with a mitre joint ; it is hinged to top ; and soda in the water , add the milk . top is held in place by screw eyes and Stir well and add meal and bake . hooks ; hood fastens down at night and This ...
... meal to thicken . Dissolve salt with a mitre joint ; it is hinged to top ; and soda in the water , add the milk . top is held in place by screw eyes and Stir well and add meal and bake . hooks ; hood fastens down at night and This ...
Page 23
... meal ? Mr. Smith - You had better make Johnny - cake . You can feed raw food , but be very careful . You should moisten it . If the chicks are fed out- doors , it will blow away . and will get wasted if not moistened . moisten it ...
... meal ? Mr. Smith - You had better make Johnny - cake . You can feed raw food , but be very careful . You should moisten it . If the chicks are fed out- doors , it will blow away . and will get wasted if not moistened . moisten it ...
Page 27
... meals added to a four quart pudding of mixed grain , furnishes chickens an excellent builder . Beans can be ground at any feed mill , or can be cooked and mashed . Ducks , however , must have an animal builder , like cheese or meat ...
... meals added to a four quart pudding of mixed grain , furnishes chickens an excellent builder . Beans can be ground at any feed mill , or can be cooked and mashed . Ducks , however , must have an animal builder , like cheese or meat ...
Page 40
... meal succotash ( wheat and oats ) scattered on a floor or the ground , so they can not get it too fast , but must eat slowly and work for their breakfast . At noon they get middlings and milk as a thin slop . At night I feed about four ...
... meal succotash ( wheat and oats ) scattered on a floor or the ground , so they can not get it too fast , but must eat slowly and work for their breakfast . At noon they get middlings and milk as a thin slop . At night I feed about four ...
Page 41
... meal , wheat corn meal with some middlings , whey , and all the ear corn they would eat . Outlook Good for Prosperous Season . Everything seems to point to a suc- cessful year for breeders of pure - bred animals . All kinds of business ...
... meal , wheat corn meal with some middlings , whey , and all the ear corn they would eat . Outlook Good for Prosperous Season . Everything seems to point to a suc- cessful year for breeders of pure - bred animals . All kinds of business ...
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acre Agriculture alfalfa amount baking powder beef beets better Bordeaux mixture bran bread breeding cent cheese Chester White Chicago clover coffee cooking corn cream creamery crop cultivation dairy digestible dish dough doughnuts early eggs ensilage experience farm feed fertility flavor flesh formers flour fuel value furnish give grain grass green grow hogs hundred inches Institute Bulletin keep lambs land live stock manure Marathon county meal meat ment Mention Farmers milk fever Milwaukee northern Wisconsin oats Oconomowoc Paris green peas pigs plant plow potash potatoes pounds Prof profitable protein Question-Do raise reason Rietbrock seed sheep silage skimmed milk soda soil sugar Supt telephone things tion trees weather West-I wheat wire Wiscon Wisconsin Central Railway writing to advertisers yeast
Popular passages
Page 79 - Among the means, which have been employed to this end, none have been attended with greater success than the establishment of boards, composed of proper characters, charged with collecting and diffusing information, and enabled by premiums, and small pecuniary aids, to encourage and assist a spirit of discovery and improvement.
Page 175 - ... important that we should maintain the high level of our present prosperity. We have now reached the point in the development of our interests where we are not only able to supply our own markets but to produce a constantly growing surplus for which we must find markets abroad. To secure these markets we can utilize existing duties in any case where they are no longer needed for the purpose of protection...
Page 63 - Water, ,r>0 gallons. The standard remedy for the destruction of insects which eat the foliage or fruit. The lime is added to prevent the Paris green from burning the foliage. Slack the lime in a little water, make into a thin paste. Mix the lime and Paris green and add the remainder of the water.
Page 79 - ... 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 center 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 61 - It sometimes happens, therefore, that farmers are led to believe that their potatoes are affected with early blight and other diseases when the trouble has been brought on by themselves through the improper use of Paris green. Injuries resulting from the use of this substance are very apt to occur where flea beetles have eaten the foliage. The arsenic attacks the tissues at such points, and as a result more or less circular brown spots are produced, having for their centers the holes eaten out by...
Page 58 - Another test is to place a little of the Paris green between two pieces of window glass and rub them together. If the Paris green is adulterated with lime, barium sulphate, or similar white materials, the Paris green will appear to turn white in places. Paris green of good quality is intensely bright green and uniform. When adulterated, the green loses something of its intensity and is grayish green and is not always uniform.
Page 60 - ... swept by fire. The rapid spread of the disease, which is caused by a parasitic fungus, is dependent in large measure upon certain conditions of moisture and heat. A daily mean or normal temperature of from 72° to 74° F. for any considerable time, accompanied by moist weather, furnishes the best conditions for the spread of the parasite. On the other hand, if the daily mean or normal temperature exceeds 77° for a few days, the development of the disease is checked.
Page 164 - The reason for this is simple ; one has to drink a large quantity to get the needed nourishment, and further it is so readily disposed of that it does not satisfy the sense of hunger. But when eaten with bread, or used in cooking, it is a food material the value of which is not at all appreciated by the farmer. A pound of lean beef contains about .180 pounds of flesh formers, and has a fuel value of 870 calories.
Page 63 - Arsenate 1 pound Water 50 gallons Arsenate of Lead acts slower as a poison than Paris green. It can be kept suspended in the water better than Paris green ; it does not burn foliage and sticks to the foliage better than Paris green.
Page 63 - Slake the lime by the addition of a small amount of water, and when slaked add 2 or 3 gallons of water and stir freely. Pour the milk of lime thus made into the sulphate solution, passing it through a brass wire strainer of about 30 meshes to the inch (No. 50), or through...