International Review of the Science and Practice of Agriculture, Issues 1-6Printing Office of the International Institute of agriculture., 1913 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 8
... live stock at least a partial compensation for the loss of their prospective profits on grain - growing . Of course the single branches of live stock keeping were each of them differently affected by the altered economic conditions ...
... live stock at least a partial compensation for the loss of their prospective profits on grain - growing . Of course the single branches of live stock keeping were each of them differently affected by the altered economic conditions ...
Page 9
... live and dead weight , in milk yield and consequently also in value . In regard to live weight and value , DEVELOPMENT OF CATTLE BREEDING IN GERMANY 9.
... live and dead weight , in milk yield and consequently also in value . In regard to live weight and value , DEVELOPMENT OF CATTLE BREEDING IN GERMANY 9.
Page 10
value . In regard to live weight and value , valuations were made in connec- tion with the returns for 1883 , 1892 and 1900 , according to which the live weight increased between 1883 and 1900 from 100 to 132 and the value from 100 to ...
value . In regard to live weight and value , valuations were made in connec- tion with the returns for 1883 , 1892 and 1900 , according to which the live weight increased between 1883 and 1900 from 100 to 132 and the value from 100 to ...
Page 81
... Texas fever . Cattle ticks live only a part of their lives on their hosts , the rest being pent on the pastures . HYGIENE The tick larvae attach themselves firmly to the skin of 6 HYGIENE OF LIVE - STOCK 81 LIVE STOCK AND BREEDING a) ...
... Texas fever . Cattle ticks live only a part of their lives on their hosts , the rest being pent on the pastures . HYGIENE The tick larvae attach themselves firmly to the skin of 6 HYGIENE OF LIVE - STOCK 81 LIVE STOCK AND BREEDING a) ...
Page 82
... live without food nearly eight months during the colder part of the year . The United States Congress in 1906 empowered the United States Se- cretary of Agriculture to inaugurate a plan of cooperation with the autho- rities of Southern ...
... live without food nearly eight months during the colder part of the year . The United States Congress in 1906 empowered the United States Se- cretary of Agriculture to inaugurate a plan of cooperation with the autho- rities of Southern ...
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Common terms and phrases
according acre Agricultural amount animals average bacteria barley beets book-keeping branches breeding Bulletin cacao calves Cambodia cane cattle cent cheese cost cotton cows crop cultivation culture dairy disease districts eggs especially export farm farmers favourable feeding fertilizers forest fruit fungus give grain grapes growing grown guano Horticultural Hungary hydrocyanic acid important inches increase industry insects irrigation Java land large number larvĉ latter lime live stock lucerne Madagascar maize manure meat Merino method milk nitrate nitrate of soda nitrogen oats obtained parasite Paris pasture pests phosphoric acid plantations plants plots plough pomace potash production provinces quantity rice rubber season seed sheep soil stomata sugar sugar beets superphosphate ticks tion tobacco tons tor-grass trees varieties vegetation vines warble wheat wines winter writer yeast yield ΙΟ
Popular passages
Page 311 - Sec. 8. That the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized and directed to quarantine any State, Territory, or District of the United States, or any portion thereof, when he shall determine that such quarantine is necessary to prevent the spread of a dangerous plant disease or insect infestation, new to or not theretofore widely prevalent or distributed within and throughout the United States...
Page 311 - Applications for permits should be made in advance of the proposed shipments; but if, through no fault of the importer, a shipment should arrive before a permit is received, the importation will be held in customs custody at the risk and expense of the importer for a period not exceeding 20 days pending the receipt of the permit.
Page 310 - nursery stock" shall include all field-grown florist stock, trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, grafts, scions, buds, fruit pits and other seeds of fruit, and ornamental trees and shrubs, and other plants and plant products for propagation, except field, vegetable and flower seeds, bedding plants and other herbaceous plants, bulbs and roots.
Page iii - Institute, confining its operations within an international sphere, shall : a) Collect, study, and publish as promptly as possible statistical, technical, or economic information concerning farming, both vegetable and animal products, the commerce in agricultural products, and the prices prevailing in the various markets...
Page iii - Submit to the approval of the governments, if there is occasion for it, measures for the protection of the common interests of farmers and for the improvement of their condition, after having utilized all the necessary sources of information, such as the wishes expressed by international or other agricultural congresses or congresses of sciences applied to agriculture, agricultural societies, academies, learned bodies, etc.
Page iii - Communicate to parties interested, also as promptly as possible, the above information; c) Indicate the wages paid for farm work ; d) Make known the new diseases of vegetables which may appear in any part of the world, showing the territories infected, the progress of the...
Page 310 - ... nursery stock" as defined in section six of this Act may result in the entry into the United States or any of its Territories or Districts of injurious plant diseases or insect pests, he shall promulgate his determination, specifying the class of plants and plant products the importation of which shall be restricted and the country and locality where they are grown, and thereafter, and until such promulgation is withdrawn, such plants and plant products imported or offered for import into the...
Page 309 - That it shall be unlawful for any person to import or offer for entry into the United States any nursery stock unless and until a permit shall have been issued therefor by the Secretary of Agriculture, under such conditions and regulations as the said Secretary of Agriculture may prescribe...
Page 244 - States have caused an average annual loss of about 70 human lives,1 the destruction of trees worth at the very least $25,000,000, and the loss of stock, crops, buildings, and other improvements to the amount of many millions more.
Page iii - Study questions concerning agricultural cooperation, insurance, and credit in all their aspects; collect and publish information which might be useful in the various countries...