British Farmer's Magazine, Թողարկում 12James Ridgway, 1848 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 100–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
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... farmers by granting leases of twenty - one years , building for them good houses , out - houses , and other ... farmers of the district are doing precisely as that gentleman recommends in his publications . The two farms at Castle Acre ...
... farmers by granting leases of twenty - one years , building for them good houses , out - houses , and other ... farmers of the district are doing precisely as that gentleman recommends in his publications . The two farms at Castle Acre ...
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... farmers of the thin soil chalk districts drill their turnips on level at about 18 or 20 inches apart , exactly in the same manner as those of the Wolds of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire . Mr. Overman , of Burnham , is an instance of this ...
... farmers of the thin soil chalk districts drill their turnips on level at about 18 or 20 inches apart , exactly in the same manner as those of the Wolds of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire . Mr. Overman , of Burnham , is an instance of this ...
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... Farmers ' Club - an institution , the value of which to the British farmer is becoming daily more manifest . He was also unanimously elected a director of the Royal Farmers ' Fire and Life Insurance Company , the establishment of which ...
... Farmers ' Club - an institution , the value of which to the British farmer is becoming daily more manifest . He was also unanimously elected a director of the Royal Farmers ' Fire and Life Insurance Company , the establishment of which ...
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... farmers , generally speaking , are much better informed as to the true economy of manures than those of most other portions of the island . I have recently had occasion , in another place , to remark upon this when speaking of the ...
... farmers , generally speaking , are much better informed as to the true economy of manures than those of most other portions of the island . I have recently had occasion , in another place , to remark upon this when speaking of the ...
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... farmers of the thin soil chalk districts drill their turnips on level at about 18 or 20 inches apart , exactly in the same manner as those of the Wolds of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire . Mr. Overman , of Burnham , is an instance of this ...
... farmers of the thin soil chalk districts drill their turnips on level at about 18 or 20 inches apart , exactly in the same manner as those of the Wolds of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire . Mr. Overman , of Burnham , is an instance of this ...
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acid acre Agricultural Society ammonia animals average barley beans bones breed breeders bull bushels calved cattle chaff CHAIRMAN cheers clover corn crop cultivation dibbled disease districts ditto draining drill dry food dung Earl ewes exhibiter experiments farm farmers favour feeding flax grain grass guano guineas-Mr harrows heifer horse implement improved and manufactured inches invented and manufactured John labour lambs land landlord lime Lincolnshire linseed Lord machine manure matter ment months Northampton oats observed patent peas plants plough potatoes practice present prize produce quantity result roan roots Royal Agricultural Royal Agricultural Society salt season seed shearling sheep Sir Harry Smith soil sovs sowing sown straw sulphuric acid supply swedes tenant tion toast turnips vegetable weather week weight wheat winter wool yard
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Էջ 349 - ... made of flour or meal of wheat, barley, rye, oats, buckwheat, Indian corn, peas, beans, rice, or potatoes, or any of them, and with any common salt, pure water, eggs, milk, barm, leaven. potato or other yeast, and mixed in such proportions as they shall think fit, and with no other ingredient or matter whatsoever, subject to the regulations hereinafter contained.
Էջ 223 - Secretary to the Royal Society for the Promotion and Improvement of the Growth of Flax in Ireland, as that of the author of the winning essay in question.
Էջ 145 - The most trustworthy observations prove that in all climates, in the temperate zones, as well as at the equator or the poles, the temperature of the body in man, and in what are commonly called warm-blooded animals, is invariably the same...
Էջ 389 - I could with great effect precipitate myself upon his left and centre. I therefore quickly brought up Brigadier Godby's brigade, and with it and the 1st brigade under Brigadier Hicks, made a rapid and noble charge, carried the village, and two guns of large calibre. The line I ordered to advance, — her Majesty's 31st Foot and the Native regiments contending for the front, and the battle became general.
Էջ 101 - Vegetable fibrine and animal fibrine, vegetable albumen and animal albumen, hardly differ, even in form ; if these principles be wanting in the food, the nutrition of the animal is arrested; and when they are present, the graminivorous animal obtains in its food the very same principles on the presence of which the nutrition of the carnivora entirely depends.
Էջ 388 - At daylight on the 28th, my order of advance was — the cavalry in front, in contiguous columns of squadrons of regiments, two troops of horse artillery in the interval of brigades ; the infantry in contiguous columns of brigades at intervals of deploying distance ; artillery in the intervals, followed by two...
Էջ 390 - Infantry, by the right of the village. The battle was won ; our troops advancing with the most perfect order to the common focus— the passage of the river. The enemy, completely hemmed in, were flying from our fire, and precipitating themselves in disordered masses into the ford and boats, in the utmost confusion and consternation ; our 8-inch howitzers soon began to play upon their boats, when the
Էջ 87 - 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
Էջ 388 - The body of troops under my command having been increased, it became necessary so to organize and brigade them as to render them manageable in action. The cavalry under the command of Brigadier Cureton, and horse artillery under Major Lawrenson, were put into two brigades ; the one under Brigadier MacDowell, CB, and the other under Brigadier Stedman.