The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England1888 |
Obsah
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Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
the journal of the royal agricultural society of england john murray, albemarle stre Úplné zobrazení - 1868 |
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acre ammonia animals average bales barley bred breed bushels butter cake calved cattle cent chaff chaffed Class clover cocksfoot corn cost cotton-cake cows crop cultivation Dairy district dung Earl England entries exhibited experiments export farm farmers farrowed feeding flesh-forming flour foaled grain grass grown Guernsey Highly Commended horses inches increase India Indian wheat January Jersey JOHN Judges land leguminous leguminous herbage Lincolnshire linseed linseed-cake Lolium perenne machine mangolds manure meal Messrs milk mill Mucilage nitrate of soda nitrogen Nottingham Number and Highly oats obtained Panjáb pasture plants plot plough potash potatoes produce Provinces quantity Reserve Number rollers Royal Agricultural Society Royal Veterinary College ryegrass sample season SECOND PRIZE seeds sheep smut soil sowing sown spores stallions straw superphosphate THIRD PRIZE tons trial Trifolium repens turf turnips VOELCKER weight wheat WILLIAM wool yield
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 174 - Brown had been wearing glasses handed on to him by his father, innocently believing that what was good enough for his father was good enough for him.
Strana 337 - timber' is meant properly such trees only as are fit to be used in building and repairing houses; thus oak, ash, and elm trees are considered 'timber' in all places, and under whatsoever circumstances they are grown (Co.
Strana 363 - They are also satisfied by the evidence that the establishment of forest schools, schools, or at any rate of a course of instruction and examination in Forestry, would be desirable, and they think that the consideration of the best mode of carrying this into effect might be one of the functions entrusted to such a Forest Board.
Strana 701 - SOILS. — Have a wooden box made 6 inches long and wide, and from 9 to 12 inches deep, according to the depth of soil and subsoil of the field. Mark out in the field a space of about...
Strana 416 - During the years of scarcity at the end of the last and beginning of the present century...
Strana 675 - One cubic centimeter of this solution will be equal to approximately 0.01 g. of zinc. The standardization should be carried out as nearly as possible in the same manner as in the estimation of zinc and approximately the same amount of zinc should be present. Keep the solution in a dark bottle. Shake thoroughly before each using and standardize each time it is used.
Strana 363 - HENDERSON. The Young Estate Manager's Guide. By RICHARD HENDERSON, Member (by Examination) of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, and the Surveyors Institution.
Strana 687 - Society has still further extended this scheme by offering a silver cup, value £100, for the best combination of machinery for the cultivation of the soil by steam-power, the cost of which shall not exceed £700 — the engine to be locomotive, and adapted for thrashing and other farm purposes.
Strana cxii - Have a wooden box made 6 inches long and wide, and from 9 to 12 inches deep, according to the depth of soil and subsoil of the field. Mark out in the field a space of about 12 inches square ; dig round in a slanting direction a trench, so as to leave undisturbed a block of soil...
Strana 41 - ... if buried deeply. But the two commonest methods of sowing are (i), by simply following the plough and dropping the seed into the furrow made by it, the seed being covered by the earth thrown up by the next furrow, and (2), by dropping the seed down a bamboo fastened to the plough stilt. It is said that the advantage of each practice varies with the condition of the soil, the former being best when the soil is very moist, and the latter when the soil has somewhat dried. But as a matter of fact...