Annual Report of the Ohio State Board of Agriculture, Volume 27, Part 1872Reports for 1862-66 include reports of the Ohio Pomological Society. |
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Page xxx
... yield of milk and the quantity of butter produced , at such time as may by him be deemed most proper , and be continued for ten successive days ; then after an interval of fifty days the account to be resumed and again continued ten ...
... yield of milk and the quantity of butter produced , at such time as may by him be deemed most proper , and be continued for ten successive days ; then after an interval of fifty days the account to be resumed and again continued ten ...
Page lii
... yield to anything but the most scientific and prolonged siege . There are others , which , in all probability , may be resolved in a short time . To the first class belong the higher problems of cattle feeding . The precise condition of ...
... yield to anything but the most scientific and prolonged siege . There are others , which , in all probability , may be resolved in a short time . To the first class belong the higher problems of cattle feeding . The precise condition of ...
Page 13
... yield implicit submission to the bebests of a combination which , for a season , will be the ruling power of the land . The wise determination of this question is of vastly more importance to producers and consumers than any other ...
... yield implicit submission to the bebests of a combination which , for a season , will be the ruling power of the land . The wise determination of this question is of vastly more importance to producers and consumers than any other ...
Page 42
... yield of those pine forests to be 300,000 ( three hundred thousand ) feet from 40 acres - some say more than that . Allowing 320,000 ( three hundred and twenty thousand ) feet , it will require more than 200,000 ( two hundred thousand ) ...
... yield of those pine forests to be 300,000 ( three hundred thousand ) feet from 40 acres - some say more than that . Allowing 320,000 ( three hundred and twenty thousand ) feet , it will require more than 200,000 ( two hundred thousand ) ...
Page 43
... yield immense quantities to the ever- increasing demand , until it is calculated , as already shown , that these regions cannot continue to supply our necessities much longer ; and we are threatened with a timber famine that must affect ...
... yield immense quantities to the ever- increasing demand , until it is calculated , as already shown , that these regions cannot continue to supply our necessities much longer ; and we are threatened with a timber famine that must affect ...
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Common terms and phrases
2d best 66 Best acres amount animals annual fair apples average AWARDS Bellville best 66 best cow best display best pair blood Board of Agriculture bred breed breeders Bucyrus bushels cattle cent Chillicothe Cleveland color committee condition convention corn County Agricultural Society crop crosses cultivation ditch early Elyria England exhibition fact farm farmers favor feeding fertilizers fish forest Frank Ford fruit grain grape grounds grow growth Hambletonian Herd Book hogs horses Horticultural important improvement interest John John Schenck land larvæ Mansfield manure mare meeting Nashport nitrogen number of entries oats Ohio Paris Green pedigrees Percheron plant plow potash potatoes pounds premiums present produced quantity race railway Reynoldsburg Sandusky season seed sheep Shorthorn soil Springfield stallion Stark county Strongsville swine thoroughbred tion tobacco trees Trumbull County varieties vegetables Warder wheat winter wood yield Zanesville
Popular passages
Page xl - State which may take and claim the benefit of this act, to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least one college where the leading object shall be, without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts...
Page xxxvii - War be, and he hereby is, authorized and required to provide for taking meteorological observations at the military stations in the interior of the continent and at other points in the States and Territories of the United States, and for giving notice on the northern lakes and on the seacoast, by magnetic telegraph and marine signals, of the approach and force of storms.
Page xxxvii - WAR," authorizing the Secretary of War to provide for taking meteorological observations at the military stations and other points of the interior of the continent, and for giving notice on the northern lakes and sea-board of the approach and force of storms...
Page xxxiii - War, with the special duties of the observation and giving notice, by telegraph and signal, of the approach and force of storms, under the provisions of this resolution.
Page 138 - Constitution, be referred to a committee of three, to be appointed by the chair...
Page 45 - That committees and commissions carefully chosen have for the last 30 years clung to one form of competition after another ; that it has nevertheless become more and more evident that competition must fail to do for railways what it does for ordinary trade, and that no means have yet been devised by which competition can be permanently maintained.
Page 171 - Resolved, That the thanks of this Convention are due and are...
Page 351 - December; and the president shall have power to call meetings of the Board whenever he may deem it expedient.
Page 46 - You shall not have a permanent monopoly against the public, but after a limited number of years, we give you notice we shall have the option of purchasing your property.
Page 363 - ... the sum of ten dollars, to be recovered before any justice of the peace of the...