The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England |
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Page xxiii
... effect of cold . The weather of February , 1868 , was more like spring than winter , and at the end of the month trees and shrubs were budding . A difference of 3o in lowness of temperature for 90 days was the chief cause of a ...
... effect of cold . The weather of February , 1868 , was more like spring than winter , and at the end of the month trees and shrubs were budding . A difference of 3o in lowness of temperature for 90 days was the chief cause of a ...
Page xxxv
... effect of increasing supplies considerably , and receipts for past week show an excess of 1165 firkins over corresponding week last year . Demand , notwith- standing the large make , continues quite brisk , and prices have been well ...
... effect of increasing supplies considerably , and receipts for past week show an excess of 1165 firkins over corresponding week last year . Demand , notwith- standing the large make , continues quite brisk , and prices have been well ...
Page 7
... effect ; a fact which finds a ready explanation in the absence of any appreciable quantity of alumina , oxide of iron , and other soil - constituents possessing the power of absorbing and retaining the fertilising substances contained ...
... effect ; a fact which finds a ready explanation in the absence of any appreciable quantity of alumina , oxide of iron , and other soil - constituents possessing the power of absorbing and retaining the fertilising substances contained ...
Page 8
... effect a radical improvement in its agricultural capa- bilities . The propriety of freely applying lime to this kind of land receives an additional support in the fact that the interme- diate - soil layer is full of organic acids , or ...
... effect a radical improvement in its agricultural capa- bilities . The propriety of freely applying lime to this kind of land receives an additional support in the fact that the interme- diate - soil layer is full of organic acids , or ...
Page 11
... effect on the produce of the land is almost incredible . The alders are the property of the tenant , who cuts them once every seven or nine years ; the large trees are the property of the landlord . Very often each field has Report on ...
... effect on the produce of the land is almost incredible . The alders are the property of the tenant , who cuts them once every seven or nine years ; the large trees are the property of the landlord . Very often each field has Report on ...
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Common terms and phrases
acre agricultural ammonia amount annual applied average barley beans beet-root Belgium better boiler breed bushels cake Campine cattle cent cheese clay clover commended corn cost cows crop cultivation cwts dairy districts dung engine England ewes exhibitors experiments factory farm farmers favour feeding feet flax flesh-forming friendly societies gallons gear grain grass guano heifers hops horses improvement inches increase labour lambs land lime machine mangolds manufacturing manure means milk Mineral Superphosphate Monmouthshire months nitrate of soda oats obtained Oxfordshire pasture Peruvian guano plant plots ploughed Polders potash potash-salts potatoes prize produce pulp quantity rennet Report rollers roots rows Royal Agricultural Society salts season seeds sewage Shearling sheep soil sown spring steam straw sugar-beet sulphate supply swedes temperature tons turnips unmanured village week wheat whey winter
Popular passages
Page 106 - The days of our age are threescore years and ten ; and though men be so strong that they come to fourscore years, yet is their strength then but labour and sorrow ; so soon passeth it away, and we are gone.
Page 418 - Report of the Commissioners appointed in 1868 to inquire into the best means of preventing the pollution of Rivers (Mersey and Ribble basins).
Page 85 - Commission on the employment of children, young persons, and women in agriculture — "fearful to contemplate.
Page 567 - And We do hereby grant our especial licence and authority unto all and every person and persons, bodies politic and corporate, (otherwise competent,) to grant, sell, alien, and convey in mortmain, unto and to the use of the said Society, and their successors, any messuages, lands, tenements, or hereditaments, not exceeding such annual value as aforesaid.
Page 567 - VICTORIA, by the grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Queen, Defender of the Faith; to all to whom these presents shall come greeting...
Page 197 - That whoever shall knowingly sell to any person or persons, or sell, deliver, or bring to be manufactured to any cheese or butter manufactory in this State, any milk diluted with water, or in any way adulterated, or milk from which any cream has been taken, or milk commonly known as "skimmed milk," or shall keep back any part of the milk known as "strippings,.
Page lxviii - Kent, has been elected a Member of Council to fill the vacancy caused by the election of His Grace the Duke of Devonshire, KG, as a Vice-President.
Page 567 - ... to make it fit into the wooden box, invert the open box over it, press down firmly, then pass a spade under the box and lift it up, gently turn over the box, nail on the lid, and send by rail.
Page 567 - Society ;" and for the purposes aforesaid, and by the name aforesaid, shall have perpetual succession and a Common Seal, with full power and authority to alter, vary break, and renew the same at their discretion, and by the same name, to sue and be sued, implead and be impleaded, answer and be -answered unto...