Agriculture of Maine: Annual Report of the Secretary of the Maine Board of Agriculture |
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Page xiii
... bushels of shelled corn on one acre , and H. Doughty of Alton , 125 bushels of shelled corn from two acres . Barley , buckwheat and rye are not much sown ; oats were an average crop . Potatoes were less planted than usual ; the beetle ...
... bushels of shelled corn on one acre , and H. Doughty of Alton , 125 bushels of shelled corn from two acres . Barley , buckwheat and rye are not much sown ; oats were an average crop . Potatoes were less planted than usual ; the beetle ...
Page xiv
... bushels of ears to the acre . Potatoes were injured , both by the potato bug and dry weather , yet I think we have har- vested enough for our own consumption . Apples in abun- dance and of the best quality . Pears and grapes were a ...
... bushels of ears to the acre . Potatoes were injured , both by the potato bug and dry weather , yet I think we have har- vested enough for our own consumption . Apples in abun- dance and of the best quality . Pears and grapes were a ...
Page xv
... bushels per acre . Oats and barley not as much grown as formerly . Corn fully an average ; potatoes a luxury , the crop being the lightest for years . Apples bounteous . Waldo . ( D. A. Wadlin . ) Hay was an average yield , but was cut ...
... bushels per acre . Oats and barley not as much grown as formerly . Corn fully an average ; potatoes a luxury , the crop being the lightest for years . Apples bounteous . Waldo . ( D. A. Wadlin . ) Hay was an average yield , but was cut ...
Page xvi
... bushels per acre , and for the first time in many years we have grown our own flour ; apples damaged by cod- dling moth ; cranberries a total failure ; sugar beets a fair yield , and we grow them to advantage on marine manure . Farmers ...
... bushels per acre , and for the first time in many years we have grown our own flour ; apples damaged by cod- dling moth ; cranberries a total failure ; sugar beets a fair yield , and we grow them to advantage on marine manure . Farmers ...
Page xxiv
... During these ten years the Board has discussed and dealt with a large number and variety of subjects pertaining to agricultural practice and XXV economy , and among the bushels of chaff gathered xxiv BOARD OF AGRICULTURE .
... During these ten years the Board has discussed and dealt with a large number and variety of subjects pertaining to agricultural practice and XXV economy , and among the bushels of chaff gathered xxiv BOARD OF AGRICULTURE .
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Common terms and phrases
acid acre aforesaid Alsike ammonia amount animals annually Aroostook county barn beast beef beef or pork better breed bushels cattle cent Chapter cheese clover corn cows crop cultivation dairy dollars exhausted experiment stations farm farmers feed fence viewers fertility field forfeit George Flint give grain grow growth herds-grass horses hundred improvement inches increase interest keep Kennebec County kinds labor land less Maine manure meadow meadow foxtail milk muck mutton nitrogen oats orchard grass Orono owner oxen pasture person phosphoric acid plant food plow potash potatoes pounds practice Presque Isle production profitable proprietors quantity raise red clover Revised Statutes roots seed sell sheep sheep husbandry society soil Statutes of 1871 straw sugar beets superphosphate thereof tion town trustees variety weeds weight wheat winter yield
Popular passages
Page 248 - ... provided, that no donation, grant or endowment shall at any time be made by the legislature to any literary institution now established, or which may hereafter be established, unless, at the time of making such endowment, the legislature of the state shall have the right to grant any further powers to, alter, limit or restrain any of the powers vested in, any such literary institution, as shall be judged necessary to promote the best interests thereof.
Page 247 - ... impress on the minds of the children and youth committed to their care and instruction the principles of morality, and justice and a sacred regard for truth; love of country; humanity and a universal benevolence; sobriety, industry and frugality; chastity, moderation and temperance; and all other virtues which ornament human society...
Page 241 - ... be punished by fine not exceeding three hundred dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding one year in the house of correction in said county of Middlesex.
Page 251 - ... successfully cultivates the same for three years, the trees being not less in numbers than two thousand on each acre and well distributed over the same, then, on application of the owner or occupant thereof to the assessors of the town in which such land is situated, the same shall be exempt from taxation for twenty years after...
Page 205 - Said selectmen and mayor and aldermen may make regulations in writing to regulate or prohibit the passage from, to, or through their respective cities or towns, or from place to place within the same, of any...
Page 239 - ... one dollar fine for riding or driving on this bridge faster than a walk.
Page 220 - ... shall record and preserve as evidence; and a certificate of such result, sworn to by the analyzer, shall be admissible in evidence in all prosecutions under this act.
Page 251 - Each fence viewer shall be paid by the person employing him at the rate of two dollars a day for the time he shall be so employed; and if such person shall neglect to pay the same within thirty days after the service shall have been performed, each fence viewer having performed any such service may recover in an action of assumpsit double the amount of such fees.
Page 243 - Virgin, are hereby constituted a body politic and corporate, by the name of the Trustees of the State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, having succession as hereinafter provided, with power to establish and maintain, subject to the provisions and limitations of this act, such a college as is authorized and provided for, by the act of...
Page 245 - ... that a sum not exceeding ten per centum upon the amount received by any State under the provisions of this act may be expended for the purchase of lands for sites or experimental farms, whenever authorized by the respective legislatures of said States.