Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board of Agriculture, Volume 58, Part 1910W. White, 1911 |
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acre alfalfa Amherst amount analyses animals annual apple asparagus average bean beekeepers bees birds Board of Agriculture Boston Bulletin Calcium Oxide Cattle Bureau celery cent CHARACTER OF RATION chemical chief fire department clover color composition corn cost cottonseed cottonseed meal cows crop dairy disease excess Experiment Station farm farmer feed fertilizer fodder Forest warden fruit gluten grass green growers growing grown growth Herd High protein increase insoluble inspection leaf lime Low protein manure Massachusetts Agricultural meal method Middlesex North milk millet moth muriate of potash nitrate of soda nitrogen North oats Oleomargarine orchard Oxide pasture peas percentage period phoric Acid phosphate phosphoric acid plant plots pounds produced protein quince Rowen samples season seed silage soil South Soy bean starling sugar sulfate of potash temperature tion tobacco trees variety West Winesap winter Worcester yield
Popular passages
Page 176 - Executive order, administered by the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture...
Page 215 - LO Howard, chief of the Bureau of Entomology of the United States Department of Agriculture, and...
Page 47 - There will be, I fear, spoliation. The spoliation will increase the distress. The distress will produce fresh spoliation. There is nothing to stop you. Your Constitution is all sail and no anchor.
Page 225 - Whoever, by himself or by his servant or agent, or as the servant or agent of any other person, sells, exchanges, or delivers...
Page 47 - The day will come when in the state of New York a multitude of people, none of whom has had more than half a breakfast, or expects to have more than half a dinner, will choose a legislature.
Page 257 - SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon its passage. [Approved April 13, 1910.
Page 95 - Yet it is a fact well known to every naturalist, and the geographical distribution of species forms at once one of the most interesting and one of the most important studies in natural history. Some species have a very limited, others a very wide, range; and while in the course of time — in the lapse of centuries or ages — the limits have altered in the past and will alter in the future, they are, for all practical purposes, permanent in present time.
Page 26 - To Receipts from the Treasurer of the United States as per appropriations for fiscal year...
Page 69 - Tis the fool who wins half the battle, Then throws all his chances away. There is little in life but labor, . And tomorrow may find that a dream ; Success is the bride of Endeavor, And luck — but a meteor's gleam.
Page 258 - ... by section one of chapter five hundred and twenty-one of the acts of the year nineteen hundred and seven, is hereby further amended by striking out...