Queensland agricultural journal Volume 5, Volume 5Government Printer, South Africa, 1899 - 608 pages |
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Page v
... Trees as ... 504 Manurial Experiments 529 History of the Angora Goat 526 Manuring Fruit Trees 375 , 565 Honey and Beeswax in Victoria 577 Manuring , Green 117 Honey from Cane - juice 92 Manuring of Tropical Plants , Cotton 295 Honey ...
... Trees as ... 504 Manurial Experiments 529 History of the Angora Goat 526 Manuring Fruit Trees 375 , 565 Honey and Beeswax in Victoria 577 Manuring , Green 117 Honey from Cane - juice 92 Manuring of Tropical Plants , Cotton 295 Honey ...
Page vi
... Trees of Queensland 417 , 499 , 591 South African Fruit 33 Proposed Dairy Legislation 188 South Australia , Wheat - growing in 452 Protection of Rubber Trees in Africa 98 Sowing Seeds , Depth for 92 Pumpkins , the Value of 355 Spayed ...
... Trees of Queensland 417 , 499 , 591 South African Fruit 33 Proposed Dairy Legislation 188 South Australia , Wheat - growing in 452 Protection of Rubber Trees in Africa 98 Sowing Seeds , Depth for 92 Pumpkins , the Value of 355 Spayed ...
Page vii
... Trees as Historians Transplanting Mint . Trap , a Wallaby Tree Guards Tree Planting by Farmers ... Trip to Mirani Tropical Plants , Manuring of Tuberculosis in Cattle 324 421 95 Wheat - growing in Argentina and in Queensland ...
... Trees as Historians Transplanting Mint . Trap , a Wallaby Tree Guards Tree Planting by Farmers ... Trip to Mirani Tropical Plants , Manuring of Tuberculosis in Cattle 324 421 95 Wheat - growing in Argentina and in Queensland ...
Page 34
... trees of the " Old Colony . " February at the Cape produces the finest kinds of English peaches and nectarines , mainly of the late - ripening varieties , which are , as a rule , the very best in flavour , even of those choice fruits ...
... trees of the " Old Colony . " February at the Cape produces the finest kinds of English peaches and nectarines , mainly of the late - ripening varieties , which are , as a rule , the very best in flavour , even of those choice fruits ...
Page 95
... trees growing in the streets of this town ( Toowoomba ) had grown strong enough , so that the old unsightly triangle guards could be taken away . This gave free access for horses , when fastened to the trees , to girdle them ; also for ...
... trees growing in the streets of this town ( Toowoomba ) had grown strong enough , so that the old unsightly triangle guards could be taken away . This gave free access for horses , when fastened to the trees , to girdle them ; also for ...
Common terms and phrases
acre Agricultural Angora goat animals apothecia Australia bark better boric acid breed Brisbane Bundaberg bushels cane cattle cent charlock coffee colony colour condition corn cow pea crop cultivation dairy disease district drains eggs especially experience farm farmers favour feed feet fertilisers fibre flowers forests fruit garden give green manuring ground growers growing grown growth grubs hair harvesting Herberton herd horses Hymenium important inches industry inoculation kainit labour land leaves lime maize manure matter milk months nitrogen nut-grass obtained panicles paraphyses peaberry phosphoric acid pigs plant food plough potash potatoes present produce pruning quantity Queensland Rockhampton roots rust season seed sheep skin soil South South Wales sowing sugar sulphate superphosphate supply telegony Thallus ticks timber tobacco tons trees tuberculosis varieties wheat wood wool yield
Popular passages
Page 26 - Yet nature is made better by no mean But nature makes that mean: so, over that art, Which you say adds to nature, is an art That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry A gentler scion to the wildest stock, And make conceive a bark of baser kind By bud of nobler race: this is an art Which does mend nature, change it rather, but The art itself is nature.
Page 363 - The milk-bottle is set on this false bottom, and sufficient water is put into the pail to reach the level of the surface of the milk in the bottle. A hole may be punched in the cover of the pail, a cork inserted, and a chemical thermom.
Page 25 - I find in the domestic duck that the bones of the wing weigh less and the bones of the leg more, in proportion to the whole skeleton, than do the same bones in the wild duck; and this change may be safely attributed to the domestic duck flying much less, and walking more, than its wild parents.
Page 321 - ASCERTAIN THE WEIGHT OF CATTLE. Measure the girt close behind the shoulder, and the length from the fore part of the shoulderblade along the back to the bone at the tail which is in a vertical line with the buttock, both in feet. Multiply the square of the girt, expressed in feet, by five times the length, and divide the product by 21 ; the quotient is the weight, nearly, of the four quarters, in imperial stones of 14 Ib.
Page 359 - ... corresponding with the serrations that we had observed in the other fibre that had been viewed as a transparent object. It was not at once that the eye could adapt itself to the brilliancy of the object; but by degrees these divisions developed themselves, and could be accurately traced.
Page 18 - To give one instance out of several which I have observed : — I crossed some white fantails, which breed very true, with some black barbs — and it so happens that blue varieties of barbs are so rare that I never heard of an instance in England ; and the mongrels were black, brown, and mottled.
Page 25 - The address of these dogs consists in restraining their ardour, and attaching themselves to no animal in particular, but keeping the whole herd in check. Now, among these dogs some are found, which, the very first time they are taken to the woods, are acquainted with this mode of attack ; whereas, a dog of another breed starts forward at once, is surrounded by the pecari, and, whatever may be his strength, is destroyed in a moment.
Page 145 - The seal of the company shall not be affixed to any instrument except by the authority of a resolution of the board of directors, and in the presence of at least two...
Page 17 - Agassiz believed in telegony. He was strongly of opinion • that the act of fecundation is not an act which is limited in its effect, but that it is an act which affects the whole system, the sexual system especially; and in the sexual system the ovary to be impregnated hereafter is so modified by the first act that later impregnations do not efface that first impression.
Page 124 - The people of any race, other than the aboriginal race in any State, for whom it is deemed necessary to make special laws.