Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents, 2. daļaU.S. Government Printing Office, 1853 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 100.
2. lappuse
... give back to cotton plantations a fair equivalent for the elements of crops , removed by the leaching and washing of many sudden showers and heavy rains falling upon light and thoroughly or poorly - tilled land , can it be easier to ...
... give back to cotton plantations a fair equivalent for the elements of crops , removed by the leaching and washing of many sudden showers and heavy rains falling upon light and thoroughly or poorly - tilled land , can it be easier to ...
3. lappuse
... give nothing back . This great error is by no means limited to the cotton and tobacco - growing States . It exists in New England , New York , Pennsylvania , Ohio , and all the other States , and will lead to precisely the same results ...
... give nothing back . This great error is by no means limited to the cotton and tobacco - growing States . It exists in New England , New York , Pennsylvania , Ohio , and all the other States , and will lead to precisely the same results ...
8. lappuse
... give to this ques- tion ? The soil loses thousands of tons of its most precious constituents of crops every year , and receives no equivalent in manure , potash , soda , and magnesia , or in ammonia and phosphoric acid . Without ...
... give to this ques- tion ? The soil loses thousands of tons of its most precious constituents of crops every year , and receives no equivalent in manure , potash , soda , and magnesia , or in ammonia and phosphoric acid . Without ...
14. lappuse
... give the number of acres devoted to the production of each of the great sta- ples , as a means of instructive comparison hereafter . If there were not room in the blank schedules without extending them too far , then the almost vacant ...
... give the number of acres devoted to the production of each of the great sta- ples , as a means of instructive comparison hereafter . If there were not room in the blank schedules without extending them too far , then the almost vacant ...
15. lappuse
... give a true statistical account every year of the number of acres under tillage , and in meadows and pasturage , and the products of each , additional evidence would be furnished corroborating every statement which we have made ...
... give a true statistical account every year of the number of acres under tillage , and in meadows and pasturage , and the products of each , additional evidence would be furnished corroborating every statement which we have made ...
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
40 bushels 50 cents acid agricultural ammonia apples average price average yield bales barley barrels Berkshire better breed bushels per acre cattle cents per bushel cents per pound Circular clover colt COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS corn cost cotton cows crop cultivated culture dairy disease dollars early experience fall farm farmers feed feet fertility fruit grain grass ground growing grown guano gypsum half harrow harvest Hessian fly hill hogs horses hundred improved increase injury kinds labor land less lime manure meadows Merino mules oats orchard pasture pear peas phosphate phosphate of lime phosphoric acid plant plaster plough pork potatoes present produce profitable quantity raised red clover respectfully roots rows rutabaga Rutland county season seed sheep soil sown spring stalks sulphuric acid tillage Timothy trees tubers turnips usually varieties weevil wheat winter wool worth yield per acre
Populāri fragmenti
418. lappuse - This is epecially true in the Atlantic States. The excessive drought inflicted then more damage than all the opposing causes of the present season. The receipts at Charleston and Savannah will therefore exceed those of last year. They will also be increased by the extension of the Georgia rail-road farther to the West.
359. lappuse - ... marl, and the recent shells and other marine remains, offer the best principal and indispensable means for fertilization, and which are available for half your territory. Another great resource, and almost as much neglected, is presented in your great inland swamps, now only wide-spread seed-beds of disease, pestilence, and death ; and which, by drainage, with certainty and great profit, might be converted to dry fields of exuberant fertility.
415. lappuse - July 5£d., and 6d. in September, 1852. The increased estimates of the crop depressed the price early in the season, but the immense consumption in every part of the world — in the United States, in England, and on the continent — encouraged the sellers to demand higher rates ; and these have been maintained, in spite of the promise of another large crop for the ensuing year. The rates now current are not high, but they are above the average. For the thirteen years from 1840 to 1852, the whole...
353. lappuse - ... living — population and the products of taxation — and, in time, would as much decline the measure of moral, intellectual, and social advantages, the political power and military strength of the commonwealth. The destructive operations of the exhausting cultivator have a most important influence far beyond his own lands and his own personal interests. He reduces the wealth and population of his country and the world, and obstructs the progress and benefits of education, the social virtues,...
64. lappuse - ... planter says, that cotton has destroyed more than earthquakes, or volcanic eruptions. Witness the red hills of Georgia and South Carolina, which have produced cotton till the last dying gasp of the soil forbade any further attempt at cultivation ; and the land, turned out to nature, reminds the traveller, as he views the dilapidated condition of the country, of the ruins of ancient Greece.
358. lappuse - If all the advantages ofiered by this crop were fully appreciated and availed of, the possession of this plant in your climate would be one of the greatest agricultural blessings of this and the more Southern States. For my individual share of this benefit, stinted as it is by our colder climate, I estimate it as adding, at least, one thousand bushels of wheat annually to my crop.
401. lappuse - A TABLE showing the receipts of the principal articles from the Interior, during the year ending 31st Jlugust, 1851, with their estimated average and total value.
354. lappuse - But if any, from prejudice, should deny or doubt its truth, they may see the practical proofs on all the most improved and profitable farms of Lower and Middle Virginia. On the lands of our best improvers and farmers, such as Richard Sampson, Hill Carter, John A. Selden, William B. Harrison, Willoughby Newton, and many others, slave-labor is used not only exclusively, and in larger than usual proportion, (because more required on very productive land.) but is deemed indispensable to the greatest...
360. lappuse - ... so greatly exaggerated as to be altogether incredible. But however much I would desire to avoid the position of a discredited witness, I will not be restrained by that fear from stating general results, which are notorious in Virginia, and to sustain the truth of which thousands of particular facts could be adduced. These results, susceptible of clear proof, or exhibited by official documents, are, that thousands of farms have been doubled or tripled, and some quadrupled in production, and the...
356. lappuse - Also, a cover of weeds left to rot on the surface, or any crop ploughed under, green or dry, as manure, is subject to more or less waste of its alimentary principles in the course of the ensuing decomposition. Therefore, it is nearer the facts that two years...