Report, Volume 13New Hampshire Department of Agriculture, 1884 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 58
Page 15
... tion of summer visitors in Jefferson , the Waumbek being the largest . The Brown Lumber Company have made great im- provements near the depot in the last five years . During Thurs- day night a fine rain fell , but all was over before we ...
... tion of summer visitors in Jefferson , the Waumbek being the largest . The Brown Lumber Company have made great im- provements near the depot in the last five years . During Thurs- day night a fine rain fell , but all was over before we ...
Page 24
... tion , or agriculture . The meeting manifested a good degree of interest . One of the prettiest incidents occurred here . Mr. Brown , the hotel keeper , had a pair of oxen , most perfectly trained , which he had just sold for $ 315 . In ...
... tion , or agriculture . The meeting manifested a good degree of interest . One of the prettiest incidents occurred here . Mr. Brown , the hotel keeper , had a pair of oxen , most perfectly trained , which he had just sold for $ 315 . In ...
Page 39
... tion with the main range , and rest upon about two thousand feet thickness of limestones , almost horizontal except at their base . The same schists reappear in what is called the Taconic range of mountains , a few miles west of Mt ...
... tion with the main range , and rest upon about two thousand feet thickness of limestones , almost horizontal except at their base . The same schists reappear in what is called the Taconic range of mountains , a few miles west of Mt ...
Page 45
... tion in the state south of the White Mountains , and the group passes beneath the mountains north of the Merrimack basin . This rock is a gneiss , containing distinct crystals of orthoclase , from one half to three inches in length ...
... tion in the state south of the White Mountains , and the group passes beneath the mountains north of the Merrimack basin . This rock is a gneiss , containing distinct crystals of orthoclase , from one half to three inches in length ...
Page 57
... tion similar to that of the gneissic anticlinals in Guilford , I , and Brattleboro ' , II , or Black Mountain in Dummerston . There is no evidence of elevation of the schists , in consequence of a disturbance , when the igneous mass ...
... tion similar to that of the gneissic anticlinals in Guilford , I , and Brattleboro ' , II , or Black Mountain in Dummerston . There is no evidence of elevation of the schists , in consequence of a disturbance , when the igneous mass ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
66 66 Foreign-born 66 females 66 Foreign-born males 80 years old acre agricultural Albuminoids ammonia animals Antonovka apple attractive average of whole beautiful beetle bone butter butterflies called carbonic carbonic acid cattle cells cent chemical chloritic climate clover Colored males corn crops cultivation disease earth ensilage experiment fact farm farmers feeding feet fermentation fertilizers field flowers fruit fungus give gneiss granite grass green grow growth grub Hampshire hornblende Huronian insects Kasan labor land larvæ leaf lime manure mass mica mica schist milk mineral mountain muriate of potash mycelium Native white males nearly nitrogen organs persons 80 phosphate phosphoric acid plant potato pounds present produced quantity rocks roots schists seed sheep silo soil species spores substance sugar superphosphate surface sweet temperature tion trees vegetable Volsk Voronesh wheat whole population winter zoospores
Popular passages
Page 277 - TYNDALL remarks, *I have seen the wild stone avalanches of the Alps, which smoke and thunder down the declivities with a vehemence almost sufficient to stun the observer. I have also seen snowflakes descending so softly as not to hurt the fragile spangles of which they were composed ; yet to produce from aqueous vapor a quantity of that tender material which a child could carry, demands an exertion of energy competent to gather up the shattered blocks of the largest stone avalanche I have ever seen,...
Page 373 - Forty-eight noble states, in an indissoluble union, are the ample justification of this policy. Their schoolhouses and churches, their shops and factories, their roads and bridges, their railways and warehouses, are the fruits of the characteristic American agriculture of the past.
Page 427 - ... Cuthbert and Turner, should not be over-fertilized. Some kinds demand good clean culture rather than a rich soil that would cause too great a growth of cane and foliage. But with most varieties, I consider from my own experience, there is but little danger of over enriching the ground. By planting in rows six feet apart, and three feet apart in the row, give them a thorough system of cultivation, and a vigorous application of the pruning knife. When the plant has attained the height of about...
Page 356 - Potomac and the Ohio, we say that, unlike the cultivators in any country of Europe except Switzerland and perhaps Scotland, they have at no stage of our history constituted a peasantry in any proper sense of the term. The actual cultivators of the soil here have been the same kind of men precisely as those who filled the professions or were engaged in commercial and mechanical pursuits. Of two sons of the same mother one became a lawyer, perhaps a judge, or went down to the city and became a merchant,...
Page 162 - The land was then plowed for wheat, and I had the pleasure of noticing these three acres to be quite free from the worm, and much superior in other respects to the other part of the field, which suffered greatly. Thus encouraged by these results, I sowed the next year a whole field of forty-two acres, which had never repaid me for nineteen years, in consequence of nearly every crop being destroyed by the wire-worm ; and I am warranted in stating that not a single wire-worm could be found the following...
Page 353 - Ever since the revolt of the British colonies nullified the royal prohibition of the settlement of the Ohio valley, the frontier line of our population has been moving steadily westward, passing over one, two, and even three degrees of longitude in a decade, until now it rests at the base of the Rocky Mountains. The report of the Public Land Commission to Congress, just issued from the press, states that the amount of arable lands still remaining subject to occupation under the Homestead and Preemption...
Page 363 - ... have, in pursuance of this theory of the case, systematically cropped their fields, on the principle of obtaining the largest crops with the least expenditure of labor, limiting their improvements to what was required for the immediate purpose specified, and caring little about returning to the soil any equivalent for the properties taken from it by the crops of each successive year.
Page 70 - That as the representatives of the industrial classes, including all cultivators of the soil, artisans, mechanics, and merchants, we desire the same privileges and advantages for ourselves, our fellows, and our posterity, in each of our several pursuits and callings, as our professional brethren enjoy in theirs; and we admit that it is our own fault that we do not also enjoy them.
Page 364 - When Professor Johnston wrote, the granary of the continent had already moved from the flats of the Upper St. Lawrence to the Mississippi Valley, the north-and-south line which divided the wheat product of the United States into two equal parts being approximately the line of the eighty-second meridian. In 1860 it was the eightyfifth; in 1870, the eighty-eighth; in 1880, the eighty-ninth. Meanwhile, what becomes of the regions over which this shadow of partial exhaustion passes like an eclipse in...
Page 151 - These last are at first white, and all the parts soft as the pupa, and they frequently remain in the earth for weeks at a time, until thoroughly hardened, and then, on some favorable night in May, they rise in swarms and fill the air.