Bulletin of the Department of Agriculture and Immigration of VirginiaVirginia Department of Agriculture and Immigration., 1928 |
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Seite 20
... number and a transcript giving the full data of the shipment goes with the sample to the Department for analysis where a complete , permanent record is made of it , and under number the sample goes to the chemical laboratory ...
... number and a transcript giving the full data of the shipment goes with the sample to the Department for analysis where a complete , permanent record is made of it , and under number the sample goes to the chemical laboratory ...
Seite 34
... number of years and growers are more optimistic than they have been since 1920. The number of cattle sold is not as large as usual owing to the heavy sales during the previous two years , when a shortage of feed forced growers to sell ...
... number of years and growers are more optimistic than they have been since 1920. The number of cattle sold is not as large as usual owing to the heavy sales during the previous two years , when a shortage of feed forced growers to sell ...
Seite 92
... number of daughters of a dairy bull when compared with the production records of their dams determine the breeding value of the bull as certainly as the records show the pro- ducing ability of the cows themselves . If a sire has a high ...
... number of daughters of a dairy bull when compared with the production records of their dams determine the breeding value of the bull as certainly as the records show the pro- ducing ability of the cows themselves . If a sire has a high ...
Seite 94
... number , for instance , as may happen to hatch from hidden nests . It is suggested that farmers who are unable to ... numbers more than enough for the home supply of eggs and meat , and is not as large as 200 , it is likely to demand ...
... number , for instance , as may happen to hatch from hidden nests . It is suggested that farmers who are unable to ... numbers more than enough for the home supply of eggs and meat , and is not as large as 200 , it is likely to demand ...
Seite 18
... number of samples were drawn , and only in one instance was arsenic residue present in harmful amount . Another interesting drive had for its object the use of sulphites in fresh sausage , and samples were drawn from the butcher's ...
... number of samples were drawn , and only in one instance was arsenic residue present in harmful amount . Another interesting drive had for its object the use of sulphites in fresh sausage , and samples were drawn from the butcher's ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
7-6-5 Truck Guano Acid Phosphate Agricultural Lime Agriculture Analysis Tag April hatched Armour Armour's Big Crop baby chicks bags Baltimore Barred Rock Baugh beans Bird Bros Bourbon Red Brands Guaranteed brooder Bros bull Bulletin cannas cent certified and blood Christiansburg chrysanthemums cock cockerels Company corn cows crates returned Culpeper dahlias Dealers Division of Markets exchange Farmers feed germination gladiolus Goldbank strain Grass Guano Guaranteed to Contain Harrisonburg hatched cockerels Hatchery hens hogs incubator Jumbo Potato Grower Leghorn lilies Lime Louisa Miss N-G N-G Named dahlias Nassawadox Norfolk OK F Onancock Parks strain Parksley Percentage Phosphate pigs plants Potash Potash Mixture Potato Guano Poultry Farm pounds prepaid produce pullets Purebred eggs Purebred S. C. Red Clover registered Rhode Island Red Richmond Roanoke Royster Royster's Arrow S. C. eggs samples Smith strain cockerels strain eggs Superphosphate sweet Swift Swift's Red Steer Tancred strain Tobacco Virgilina Virginia White Leghorn
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 52 - ... his teeming gardens, and orchards, and vineyards, and dairies, and barnyards, pitching his crops in his own wisdom, and growing them in independence, making cotton his clean surplus, and selling it in his own time, and in his chosen market, and not at a master's bidding — getting his pay in cash, and not in a receipted mortgage...
Seite 37 - Where grows ? — where grows it not? If vain our toil, We ought to blame the culture, not the soil...
Seite 25 - ... conducted by the Bureau of Home Economics of the US Department of Agriculture.
Seite 85 - ... ratio will be increased rather than diminished. In many cases the condition of the mucous membranes will not permit the presence of organic acid, and soured milk can not be retained. It is also possible that symptoms of autointoxication are due not to unusual bacterial activity in the intestine, but to functional failure of certain organs. This point could be determined only by a physician. It would be very unsafe to consume large quantities of milk, fermented or unfermented, under certain pathological...
Seite 99 - Feed a grain mixture in the proportion of 1 pound to each 3 to 4 pints or pounds of milk produced daily by the cow; or 1 pound of grain mixture for every pound of butter fat that the cow produces during the week.
Seite 122 - In Great Britain and northern Europe barley takes the place of corn for pig feeding, leading all grains in producing pork of fine quality, both as to hardness and flavor. In American trials somewhat more barley than corn has been required for 100 Ibs.
Seite 132 - American novel that best presents "the wholesome atmosphere of American life, and the highest standards of American manners and manhood.
Seite 85 - The fat is almost unchanged, and a part only of the sugar is converted into acid, alcohol, or gas. In certain gastric troubles in which it is difficult to find any food that can be retained by the patient, fermented milks are frequently used with good results. Kefir and kumiss especially are used under such circumstances, as the stimulating action of the carbon dioxid which they contain is believed to aid in their digestion.
Seite 108 - Year of snow Fruit will grow. Or. in still another form : A year of snow, a year of plenty. That these and similar statements commonly are true is evident from the fact that a more or less continuous covering of snow, incident to a cold winter, not only delays the blossoming of fruit trees till after the probable season of killing frosts but also prevents that alternate thawing and freezing so ruinous to wheat and other winter grains. In short, as another proverb puts it, A late spring never deceives.