The New England Farmer, Volumul 6J. Nourse, 1854 |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 81
Pagina iv
... Pear , 17 ; the Dix , 64 ; vegetable , 114 ; tree , culti- vation of , 283 ; the Beurre Bosc , 337 ; fine Pea , and turnips , 137 ; pods , alcohol from , 383 ; early 531 509 • 511 560 Picture , a beautiful 413 504 • . 560 Pine , sugar ...
... Pear , 17 ; the Dix , 64 ; vegetable , 114 ; tree , culti- vation of , 283 ; the Beurre Bosc , 337 ; fine Pea , and turnips , 137 ; pods , alcohol from , 383 ; early 531 509 • 511 560 Picture , a beautiful 413 504 • . 560 Pine , sugar ...
Pagina vi
... Pear . Short Horn , or Durham Heifers Pruning Grape Vines • Danvers Winter Sweet Apple A Modern Suffolk Stallion Pruning a Peach - tree A Model Poultry House Baccillaria Navicula ( Infusoriæ ) Garden Work • Batchelder's Corn Planter ...
... Pear . Short Horn , or Durham Heifers Pruning Grape Vines • Danvers Winter Sweet Apple A Modern Suffolk Stallion Pruning a Peach - tree A Model Poultry House Baccillaria Navicula ( Infusoriæ ) Garden Work • Batchelder's Corn Planter ...
Pagina 16
... trodden : mind be $ 39,626,362 - being $ 5,242,443 more than the upon mind ' is our point at present , and perhaps value of the freights last year . THE WINTER NELIS PEAR . MR . RUSSELL'S ADDRESS . 16 JAN . NEW ENGLAND FARMER .
... trodden : mind be $ 39,626,362 - being $ 5,242,443 more than the upon mind ' is our point at present , and perhaps value of the freights last year . THE WINTER NELIS PEAR . MR . RUSSELL'S ADDRESS . 16 JAN . NEW ENGLAND FARMER .
Pagina 17
THE WINTER NELIS PEAR . MR . RUSSELL'S ADDRESS . The above fine portrait of the Winter Nelis , We give below several paragaphs from the late was taken from a pear grown in the garden of Mr. Address of GEORGE R. RUSSELL , Esq . , before ...
THE WINTER NELIS PEAR . MR . RUSSELL'S ADDRESS . The above fine portrait of the Winter Nelis , We give below several paragaphs from the late was taken from a pear grown in the garden of Mr. Address of GEORGE R. RUSSELL , Esq . , before ...
Pagina 20
... PEAR . in coming into bearing . " The obvious remedy Without waiting to see whether Mr. Silas would be to graft it on the quince , or upon old Brown and his friends - arrayed in their inviola- pear stocks . But a nursery - man says it ...
... PEAR . in coming into bearing . " The obvious remedy Without waiting to see whether Mr. Silas would be to graft it on the quince , or upon old Brown and his friends - arrayed in their inviola- pear stocks . But a nursery - man says it ...
Cuprins
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Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Termeni și expresii frecvente
acid acre Agricultural Society ammonia amount animal apple applied ashes barn beautiful better birds bones Boston breed bushels butter carbon carbonic acid carrots cattle cents compost Concord Grape corn covered cows crop cultivation culture dollars early eggs England Farmer experience farm feed feet fertilizing field flowers FREDERICK HOLBROOK fruit garden give grain grass green ground grow guano hill hoeing horse hundred important improved inches keep kind labor land less lime loam manure matter ment milk mode muck oats pasture pear pigs plant plow potatoes pounds produce profit quantity Quincy Hall raised rods roots salt season seed sheep SIMON BROWN soil spring sugar superphosphate supply swine things tion tivation trees tural turnips valuable variety vegetable wheat winter wood yield young
Pasaje populare
Pagina 424 - re flowing from our native hills As our free rivers flow ; The blessing of our Mother-land Is on us as we go. We go to plant her common schools On distant prairie swells, And give the Sabbaths of the wild The music of her bells. Upbearing, like the Ark of old, The Bible in our van, We go to test the truth of God Against the fraud of man.
Pagina 424 - We cross the prairie as of old The Pilgrims crossed the sea, To make the West, as they the East, The homestead of the free!
Pagina 10 - Now, shepherds, to your helpless charge be kind, Baffle the raging year, and fill their pens With food at will; lodge them below the storm, And watch them strict : for from the bellowing east, In this dire season, oft the whirlwind's wing Sweeps up the...
Pagina 142 - O then to your gardens ye housewives repair, Your walks border up, sow and plant at your leisure ; The bluebird will chant from his box such an air, That all your hard toils will seem truly a pleasure ! He flits through the orchard, he visits each tree, The red flowering peach, and the apple's sweet...
Pagina 323 - Nor hear my low sweet humming; For in the starry night, And the glad morning light, I come quietly creeping everywhere. Here I come creeping, creeping everywhere; More welcome than the flowers In summer's pleasant hours; The gentle cow is glad, And the merry bird not sad, To see me creeping, creeping everywhere.
Pagina 439 - ... of the day is done. A gentle failure of the perceptions comes creeping over one : — the spirit of consciousness disengages itself more and more, with slow and hushing degrees, like a mother detaching her hand from that of her sleeping child ; — the mind seems to have a balmy lid closing over it, like the eye : — 'tis closing ; — 'tis more closing ; — 'tis closed.
Pagina 439 - A gentle failure of the perceptions comes creeping over one: the spirit of consciousness disengages itself more and more, with slow and hushing degrees, like a mother detaching her hand from that of her sleeping child; the mind seems to have a balmy lid closing over it, like the eye. 'Tis closing — 'tis more closing — 'tis closed. The mysterious spirit has gone to take its airy rounds.
Pagina 235 - Work, work, work! From weary chime to chime ; Work, work, work, As prisoners work for crime : Band and gusset and seam, Seam and gusset and band, Till the heart is sick, and the brain benumbed, As well as the weary hand.
Pagina 323 - Here I come creeping, smiling everywhere; All round the open door, Where sit the aged poor; Here where the children play, In the bright and merry May, I come creeping, creeping everywhere.
Pagina 413 - The man who stands upon his own soil ; who feels, that by the laws of the land in which he lives, — by the law of civilized nations, — he is the rightful and exclusive owner of the land which he tills, is, by the constitution of our nature, under a wholesome influence, not easily imbibed from any other source. He feels, — other things being equal, — more strongly than another, the character of man as the lord of the inanimate world.