Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents, 2. daļaU.S. Government Printing Office, 1852 |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 99.
4. lappuse
... hundred and fifty miles yearly ;, and a third had completed the drainage of four hundred and sixty - seven acres at an expense of more than 1,500 , and had increased the rental of his land by these operations to the amount of £ 435 2s ...
... hundred and fifty miles yearly ;, and a third had completed the drainage of four hundred and sixty - seven acres at an expense of more than 1,500 , and had increased the rental of his land by these operations to the amount of £ 435 2s ...
6. lappuse
... hundred and eighty feet in heigth , the first two hundred and fifty feet without a branch or limb , an extent of growth so far beyond the ordinary size as to seem almost incredible , but well known , and seen , and verified by the ...
... hundred and eighty feet in heigth , the first two hundred and fifty feet without a branch or limb , an extent of growth so far beyond the ordinary size as to seem almost incredible , but well known , and seen , and verified by the ...
7. lappuse
... hundred varieties of which are illustrated by truthful and beautiful draw- ings ; seeds of more than three hundred varieties of native flowers ; twenty varieties of lily and other bulbous roots , embracing the remarkable soap plant ...
... hundred varieties of which are illustrated by truthful and beautiful draw- ings ; seeds of more than three hundred varieties of native flowers ; twenty varieties of lily and other bulbous roots , embracing the remarkable soap plant ...
8. lappuse
... hundred to one hundred and forty pounds each ; cabbages two feet in diameter , and weigh- ing over fifty pounds ; onions , beets , and potatoes of enormous size , not iso- lated , but by hundreds of bushels ; the top onion produced the ...
... hundred to one hundred and forty pounds each ; cabbages two feet in diameter , and weigh- ing over fifty pounds ; onions , beets , and potatoes of enormous size , not iso- lated , but by hundreds of bushels ; the top onion produced the ...
11. lappuse
... hundred and twenty pounds of guano ( value seven dollars ) to the acre . The ground was moist , the snow having just ... hundred and eighty pounds per acre , are worth $ 1 50 . Thus we have- Value of sixteen bushels of rye four hundred ...
... hundred and twenty pounds of guano ( value seven dollars ) to the acre . The ground was moist , the snow having just ... hundred and eighty pounds per acre , are worth $ 1 50 . Thus we have- Value of sixteen bushels of rye four hundred ...
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
40 bushels 50 cents agricultural animal apples August average price average yield barley better breeds bushels per acre cattle cents per bushel cents per pound cheese Circular Clear Cloudy clover Commissioner of Patents compost corn cost cotton cows crop cultivated culture dairy early experience farm farmers fatten feeding feet fertilizer fleece flocks fruit grain grass ground growing grown guano harrow harvest Hessian fly hogs horses improvement inches increase kind labor land lime manure merino months Northwest oats pasture peas Pickaway county plant plaster plough pork portion potatoes produce profitable quantity Rain raised reindeer respectfully Ross county season seed September sheep sheep husbandry snow soil sold South Southwest sown species spring straw THOMAS EWBANK tillage timothy tobacco tons trees varieties vegetable weight West wheat winter wool worth yoke
Populāri fragmenti
92. lappuse - And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
70. lappuse - DARWIN'S (CHARLES) Journal of Researches into the Natural History of the Countries visited during a Voyage round the World. Post Svo.
78. lappuse - Unto Adam also and to his wife did the Lord God make coats of skins, and clothed them.
55. lappuse - The capsules are jgently pounded in a mortar to loosen the seeds from their shells, from which they are separated by sifting. To facilitate the separation of the white sebaceous matter enveloping the seeds, they are steamed in tubs, having convex open wicker bottoms, placed over caldrons of boiling water.
285. lappuse - It has been said that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one grew before is a benefactor to his species.
57. lappuse - With an unimportant exception, the candles are always made of what I beg to designate as vegetable stearine. When the candles, which are made by dipping, are of the required diameter, they receive a final dip into a mixture of the same material and insect-wax, by which their consistency is preserved in the hottest weither.
128. lappuse - The round or buttock of beef of the best quality, having been cut into thin steaks, from which the fat and membranous parts were pared away, was dried in a...
38. lappuse - To facilitate the increase and practical application and diffusion of knowledge, the professors should conduct, each in his own department, a continued series of annual experiments. For example, let twenty or more acres of each variety of grain (each acre accurately measured), be annually sown, with some practical variation on each acre as regards the quality and preparation of the soil, the kind and quantity of seed, the time and mode of sowing or planting, the time and modes...
38. lappuse - ... various diseases, both of those on the premises and of those brought in from abroad; and advice given, and annual reports made on those and all similar topics. Let the professors of physiology and entomology be ever abroad at the proper seasons, with the needful apparatus for seeing all things visible and invisible, and scrutinizing the latent causes of all those blights, blasts, rots, rusts, and mildews which so often destroy the choicest products of industry, and thereby impair the health,...
130. lappuse - ... vehicles on long journeys, they would, I think, be greatly preferable to the common ox. I have as yet had no opportunity of testing the longevity of the buffalo, as all mine that have died did so from accident, or were killed because they became aged. I have some cows that are nearly twenty years old, that are healthy and vigorous, and one of them has now a sucking calf. "The young buffalo calf is of a...