House Documents, Otherwise Publ. as Executive Documents: 13th Congress, 2d Session-49th Congress, 1st Session, Volume 11 |
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Page 39
... average , from May 26 to June 6. Indian corn is planted from May 25 to June 1 , and is ripe for harvesting about the first week in September ; and the work of securing the crop of hay begins about the first of July and continues through ...
... average , from May 26 to June 6. Indian corn is planted from May 25 to June 1 , and is ripe for harvesting about the first week in September ; and the work of securing the crop of hay begins about the first of July and continues through ...
Page 47
... average weight our flocks consume , as most farmers regard two and a half pounds per day a sufficient amount . The season of feeding sheep during the winter is about one hundred and fifty days . Experienced flock - masters prefer to ...
... average weight our flocks consume , as most farmers regard two and a half pounds per day a sufficient amount . The season of feeding sheep during the winter is about one hundred and fifty days . Experienced flock - masters prefer to ...
Page 50
... average about one ton per acre . During the past ten years the total amount of the hay crop has largely increased , although it is doubted if the average amount per acre has advanced . The increase is due to the use of improved machines ...
... average about one ton per acre . During the past ten years the total amount of the hay crop has largely increased , although it is doubted if the average amount per acre has advanced . The increase is due to the use of improved machines ...
Page 51
... average . The stalks of Indian corn , especially the top part of the stalk , leaves , and husks , are highly prized as food for neat stock , and are carefully housed . They also make a good fodder for sheep , and , as a change from ...
... average . The stalks of Indian corn , especially the top part of the stalk , leaves , and husks , are highly prized as food for neat stock , and are carefully housed . They also make a good fodder for sheep , and , as a change from ...
Page 52
... average yield of premium crops as thirty - four bushels per acre , the smallest yield in a county being nine- teen , and the largest fifty - one bushels per acre . OATS are grown by nearly every farmer , but are considered an exhausting ...
... average yield of premium crops as thirty - four bushels per acre , the smallest yield in a county being nine- teen , and the largest fifty - one bushels per acre . OATS are grown by nearly every farmer , but are considered an exhausting ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid acre agricultural amount animal average barrels boiling breed Broom corn bushels calyx cane sugar cattle census cent Chasselas climate coal oil color corn cotton crop cultivation culture dollars early eggs ending June 30 England estimate ewes experiments exports farm farmers favorable feeding feet fibre flax fleece flock flour flowers fowls fruit gallons grain grape grass grown growth hardy horses hundred Illinois imphee important improvement inches increase Indian insects juice June 30 labor lambs land less manufacture manure Massachusetts Merino molasses Morocco mutton native Ohio plants plough portion pounds prairie profit quantity ripening roots salt season seed sheep sheep husbandry sirup soil sorghum species Specific gravity specimens straw tion trees turnips United varieties vegetable vine wheat winter wood wool woollen yield
Popular passages
Page liii - Agriculture, the general designs and duties of which shall be to acquire and diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and to procure, propagate, and distribute among the people new and valuable seeds and plants.
Page 71 - I smote you with blasting and with mildew and with hail in all the labours of your hands ; yet ye turned not to me, saith the LORD.
Page liv - Nevertheless, he left not himself without witness, in that he did good, and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness.
Page liii - Commissioner and the chief clerk shall also, before entering upon their duties, severally give bonds with sureties to the Treasurer of the United States, the former in the sum of ten thousand dollars, and the latter in the sum of five thousand dollars...
Page liii - Agriculture to acquire and preserve in his Department all information concerning agriculture which he can obtain by means of books and correspondence and by practical and scientific experiments, (accurate records of which experiments shall be kept in his office) by the collection of statistics, and by any other appropriate means within his power...
Page liii - Congress, in which he may recommend the publication of papers forming parts of or accompanying his report, which report shall also contain an account of all moneys received and expended by him. He shall also make special reports on particular subjects whenever required to do so by the President or either house of Congress, or when he shall think the subject in his charge requires it.
Page 547 - Have we not at the South, as well as the North, grown great, prosperous and happy under its operation? Has any part of the world ever shown such rapid progress in the development of wealth, and all the material resources of national power and greatness, as the Southern States have under the General Government, notwithstanding all its defects?
Page 275 - Manufacture, and I myself have seen Serge made upon Long Island that any man may wear. Now, if they begin to make Serge, they will, in time, make coarse Cloth, and then fine ; we have as good fullers...
Page 225 - Instances are sufficiently common among the lower animals where the offspring exhibit more or less distinctly, over and beyond the characters of the male by which they were begotten, the peculiarities also of a male by which their mother at some former period had been impregnated. * * * Great difficulty has been felt by physiological writers in regard to the proper explanation of this kind of phenomena. They have been ascribed by...
Page 432 - a special mineralization producing a bituminous matter instead of coal or lignite. This operation is not attributable to heat, nor of the nature of a distillation, but is due to chemical reactions at the ordinary temperature, and under the normal conditions of climate.