Report, Volume 23New Hampshire Department of Agriculture, 1895 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 54
Page 5
... soil , I need not mention the Amer- ican's appreciation , only to say that of the two billion bush- els annually produced , ninety - six per cent . is required for home consumption . What will be the demand when European nations have ...
... soil , I need not mention the Amer- ican's appreciation , only to say that of the two billion bush- els annually produced , ninety - six per cent . is required for home consumption . What will be the demand when European nations have ...
Page 6
... soil , not from lack of suitable climate , not from lack of surety of a harvest , but because we have imbibed from mouth to mouth the sentiment that we can buy cheaper than we can raise it . The price of our commodities is not within ...
... soil , not from lack of suitable climate , not from lack of surety of a harvest , but because we have imbibed from mouth to mouth the sentiment that we can buy cheaper than we can raise it . The price of our commodities is not within ...
Page 11
... in every direction , in the method of tilling the soil , destroying and wasting its fertil- izing material , equally wasteful and more foolish in the reck- less manner in which the timber of the country is WINTER MEETING OF THE BOARD . II.
... in every direction , in the method of tilling the soil , destroying and wasting its fertil- izing material , equally wasteful and more foolish in the reck- less manner in which the timber of the country is WINTER MEETING OF THE BOARD . II.
Page 14
... soil billions of cubic feet of water which are received from the clouds and melting snows , in spring , winter , and summer , and holding it like a sponge , and dealing it out as it is wanted and demanded to keep our rivers in their ...
... soil billions of cubic feet of water which are received from the clouds and melting snows , in spring , winter , and summer , and holding it like a sponge , and dealing it out as it is wanted and demanded to keep our rivers in their ...
Page 17
... soil , but the soil growing richer year after year and century after century . This policy has become so fixed there , that a man would be looked upon as insane who would , in any part of Europe , go and cut down a forest and sweep it ...
... soil , but the soil growing richer year after year and century after century . This policy has become so fixed there , that a man would be looked upon as insane who would , in any part of Europe , go and cut down a forest and sweep it ...
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Common terms and phrases
acre animal annual Applause apples average Babcock test bacillus bacteria Barnstead believe Belknap County Board of Agriculture boys breeding cattle cent Class Concord condition consumption coöperation corn Cornish Creamery crop culture dairy dairymen Dairymen's Association disease dollars England exhibit fact farm farmers feeding feet forestry forests fruit give Goffstown Grange grow Hamp Hampshire Haverhill herd Hopkinton hundred inches industry infected interest land large number Lecturer living Manchester Master meeting Melted snow ment Merrimack river milk minister Mont Vernon never oleomargarine organization Pennycook pine plants poultry pounds of butter practical PRESIDENT produce profitable question result Sanbornton score Secretary soil T. H. White thing thousand timber tion to-day town trees tuberculosis tuberculous turer turkeys Utah Vermont W. D. Baker West West Lebanon wood
Popular passages
Page 338 - These by-laws may be amended by a two-thirds vote of the members present at any meeting of the Association provided that the amendment be proposed by ten members and that notice of the proposed amendment be given in the call of the meeting not less than ten days before the day thereof.
Page 33 - Gardiner's rivers; thence east to the place of beginning is hereby reserved and withdrawn from settlement, occupancy, or sale under the laws of the United States and dedicated and set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people...
Page 336 - The officers of this Society shall consist of a President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Delegates, and Board of (three) Censors.
Page 270 - Provided. That nothing in this act shall be construed to prohibit the manufacture or sale of oleomargarine in a separate and distinct form, and in such manner as will advise the consumer of its real character, free from coloration or ingredient that causes it to look like butter.
Page 28 - Democrats, who shall be appointed by the governor, with the advice of the council, for their special fitness for service on this commission, and be classified in such manner that the office of one shall become vacant each year. One of said commissioners shall be elected by his associates secretary of the commission, and receive a salary of one thousand dollars per annum. The other members shall receive no compensation for their services, but shall be paid their necessary expenses incurred in the...
Page 270 - Act shall be construed to prohibit the manufacture or sale of oleomargarine, butterine, or imitation butter, in a separate and distinct form, and in such manner as will advise the consumer of its real character, free from coloration or ingredient that causes it to look like hutter.
Page 201 - ... she is left little less responsible for the destructive progress and fatal result. The germ which might have remained comparatively dormant and harmless in the absence of the poisoned meat and milk, is by these stimulated to a more deadly energy. "This hitherto unchallenged factor in the progress of tuberculosis opens up new and uncultivated fields for sanitary work.
Page 29 - They shall also hold meetings from time to time in different parts of the state for the discussion of forestry subjects, and make an annual report to the governor and council, embracing such suggestions as to the commission seem important, fifteen hundred copies of which shall be printed by the state.
Page 182 - Drying of the tuberculous matter in doors or in the shade, and apart from the above temperature, and its inhalation as fine dust is one of the most common causes of tuberculosis. In one store with a tuberculous clerk the dust raised in sweeping out the store infected clerk after clerk, and a similar rising of the virus in dust is a cause of infection in dwelling houses, stores, barns, barnyards, stockyards, and railroad cars.
Page 222 - There are a number of us creep Into this world, to eat and sleep; And know no reason why they 're born, But merely to consume the corn, Devour the cattle, fowl, and fish, And leave behind an empty dish.