Transactions of the State Agricultural Society of Michigan: With Reports of County Agricultural Societies, for the Year ...Michigan state agricultural society, 1854 - Agriculture |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 90
Page 20
... result of his experiments during the last five years , by which he claims to have discovered a radical cure for the blight in that vegetable . He asserts that the potato has become diseased from a neglect of its natural laws in saving ...
... result of his experiments during the last five years , by which he claims to have discovered a radical cure for the blight in that vegetable . He asserts that the potato has become diseased from a neglect of its natural laws in saving ...
Page 27
... result with their reports . GENERAL RULES . A premium will not be awarded when the animal or article is not worthy , though there be no competition . No viewing committee , with the exception of the committee on mis- cellaneous articles ...
... result with their reports . GENERAL RULES . A premium will not be awarded when the animal or article is not worthy , though there be no competition . No viewing committee , with the exception of the committee on mis- cellaneous articles ...
Page 31
... results ? TILLAGE CROPS . 11. How many acres of land do you till ? and with what crops are they occupied , and how much of each crop ? 12. What is the amount of seed planted or sown for each crop ? the time of sowing - the mode of ...
... results ? TILLAGE CROPS . 11. How many acres of land do you till ? and with what crops are they occupied , and how much of each crop ? 12. What is the amount of seed planted or sown for each crop ? the time of sowing - the mode of ...
Page 32
... results ? 22. What do you consider the best and cheapest manner of wintering your cattle , as to feed , watering and shelter ? 23. How much butter and cheese do you make annually , from what number of cows , and what is your mode of ...
... results ? 22. What do you consider the best and cheapest manner of wintering your cattle , as to feed , watering and shelter ? 23. How much butter and cheese do you make annually , from what number of cows , and what is your mode of ...
Page 130
... results have in all cases been highly beneficial , making the soil of the high land more open , and easier tilled , and consequently producing better crops , and that of the low land which had before been unproductive , the most produc ...
... results have in all cases been highly beneficial , making the soil of the high land more open , and easier tilled , and consequently producing better crops , and that of the low land which had before been unproductive , the most produc ...
Common terms and phrases
1st prem 1st premium 2d best 2d prem 2d premium 66 Best acre Adrian Ann Arbor apples awarded best and greatest best lot best pair blood bull bushels calf cattle cheese CLASS clay coal Cochin China coke colt corn County Agricultural Society crop cultivation Detroit diluviums Diploma discretionary premium earth Eaton county ewes Executive Committee exhibited farm farmers Farmington feet flowers fowls French Merino grain greatest variety gypsum heifer Henry Waldron Hillsdale county horse improvement inches Ingham county iron Isabella grapes J. C. HOLMES Jackson Kalamazoo labor Lake land lime manufacture manure marl Merino Merino buck mium Monroe Oakland Oakland County pair woolen peaches peck Peninsula plants plow Pontiac portion potatoes present quilt River rocks Romeo sandstones seed sheep Shiawassee Shiawassee county Silver Medal Smith soil specimens stallion thickness tion Transactions tubers Utica vegetable wheat winter Ypsilanti
Popular passages
Page 346 - The honeybee that wanders all day long The field, the woodland, and the garden o'er, To gather in his fragrant winter store, Humming in calm content his quiet song, Seeks not alone the rose's glowing breast, The lily's dainty cup, the violet's lips, But from all rank and noxious weeds he sips The single drop of sweetness closely pressed Within the poison chalice.
Page 368 - Before these fields were shorn and tilled, Full to the brim our rivers flowed ; The melody of waters filled The fresh and boundless wood ; And torrents dashed and rivulets played, And fountains spouted in the shade.
Page 451 - Of all inventions, the alphabet and the printing press alone excepted, those inventions which abridge distance have done most for the civilization of our species.
Page 349 - To that cathedral, boundless as our wonder, Whose quenchless lamps the sun and moon supply ; Its choir the winds and waves — its organ thunder — Its dome the sky.
Page 601 - America is a land of wonders, in which everything is in constant motion, and every movement seems an improvement. The idea of novelty is there indissolubly connected with the idea of amelioration. No natural boundary seems to be set to the efforts of man ; and what is not yet done is only what he has not yet attempted to do.
Page 308 - uplifts" at Little Falls, which rise 147 feet higher than lake Erie, and the "highlands" of the Hudson might also have interposed barriers to an outlet across the state of New York. A single communication only would then exist •with the ocean, viz: through the valley of the Mississippi. That the lakes once discharged their waters in this direction, such additional evidence is furnished by the appearance of the country, that in this our argument, but serves to add confirmation to the general opinion.
Page 348 - Yet here at least an earnest sense Of human right and weal is shown; A hate of tyranny intense, And hearty in its vehemence, As if my brother's pain and sorrow were my own.
Page 332 - ... collected. If I am correct in the above conclusion, the coal bearing sandstones, or strictly speaking, the coal basin, occupy an extent of surface, nearly oval in form, whose centre very nearly corresponds with the true centre of the peninsula. The tract thus embraced is 150 miles in length, north and south, and upwards of 100 in extreme breadth; covering an area of about 11,000 square miles, or one-fourth the entire area of the lower peninsula.
Page 299 - Thus, according to circumstances, we find a variety of forms assumed by these deposites, from a "tufaceous marl," in which the particles have but partially cohered, to a hard "tufa," or travertin rock, appearing as ledges in exposed hill sides. All these recent fresh water limes exist in great abundance in most of the counties enumerated, as well as throughout the interior of the state. In the northern part of Hillsdale, and the counties of Washtenaw and Oakland, in particular, so extensive and universally...
Page 299 - ... the interior of the state. In the northern part of Hillsdale, and the counties of Washtenaw and Oakland, in particular, so extensive and universally distributed are the beds of this useful mineral, that an attempt to ascertain and enumerate all the places in which it exists, is unnecessary, if not impossible. But notwithstanding its wide distribution, the uses, and even the existence of this mineral are so little known or heeded, even by those who have most reason to appreciate its value, that...