Annual Reports of the Department of Agriculture for the Fiscal Year Ended ...: Report of the Secretary of Agriculture, Miscellaneous ReportsU.S. Government Printing Office, 1919 |
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Results 1-5 of 94
Page 3
... loss from disease , flood , and drouth , to put his labor and capital into the production of food , feeds , and the raw material for clothing . The work of the agricultural agencies is not much in the public eye . There is little of the ...
... loss from disease , flood , and drouth , to put his labor and capital into the production of food , feeds , and the raw material for clothing . The work of the agricultural agencies is not much in the public eye . There is little of the ...
Page 13
... losses from the cattle tick , hog cholera , tuberculosis , predatory animals , and crop pests , and , in conjunction with the Department of Labor , rendered assistance to the farmers in securing labor . It safeguarded seed stocks and ...
... losses from the cattle tick , hog cholera , tuberculosis , predatory animals , and crop pests , and , in conjunction with the Department of Labor , rendered assistance to the farmers in securing labor . It safeguarded seed stocks and ...
Page 15
... loss from disease . The campaigns for increased production yielded especially fruit- ful results in respect to pigs and poultry . Indications are that the increase of 15 per cent in pork production this year over 1917 , asked for by the ...
... loss from disease . The campaigns for increased production yielded especially fruit- ful results in respect to pigs and poultry . Indications are that the increase of 15 per cent in pork production this year over 1917 , asked for by the ...
Page 16
... losses , but also permits the raising of high - class beef cattle and the development of dairying in sections where neither was before economically possible . Hog cholera . The ravages of hog cholera , the greatest obstacle to ...
... losses , but also permits the raising of high - class beef cattle and the development of dairying in sections where neither was before economically possible . Hog cholera . The ravages of hog cholera , the greatest obstacle to ...
Page 18
... losses from influenza or shipping fever of horses , which has been very prevalent among animals collected for Army purposes . Greater efforts were put forth also to control , reduce , and prevent blackleg , anthrax , hemorrhagic ...
... losses from influenza or shipping fever of horses , which has been very prevalent among animals collected for Army purposes . Greater efforts were put forth also to control , reduce , and prevent blackleg , anthrax , hemorrhagic ...
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Common terms and phrases
acreage acres addition amount animals assistance beans beekeeping birds Board breeding brown-tail Bulletins Bureau of Chemistry Bureau of Entomology Bureau of Markets campaign cattle cent cooperation corn cottage cheese cotton cottonseed meal county agents dairy demonstrations Department of Agriculture disease distribution district Division eggs emergency eradication especially extension farm farmers Federal Federal Horticultural Board feed field fiscal year 1917 Food Administration food production Forest Service funds Government grades grain growers hogs important improved increase infested insect insecticides inspection investigations issued June 30 labor land large number Library live stock manufacture material meat ment methods Mexico milk National Forests North Carolina North Dakota Office operation organization Plant Industry potatoes poultry pounds practically prepared projects quarantine reports road season secured seed sheep shipments silage soil supervision supply survey tests Texas tion United various velvet beans Washington wheat
Popular passages
Page ii - L.. 1895.) [AN ACT Providing for the public printing and binding and the distribution of public documents...
Page 71 - I have the honor to transmit herewith a report of the operations of the Bureau of Animal Industry for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1906, together with plans and recommendations for the future.
Page 448 - 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 108 - Carolina; with the Office of Indian Affairs of the Department of the Interior...
Page 449 - Nursery stock, including all field-grown florists' stock, trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, grafts, scions, buds, fruit pits and other seeds of fruit and ornamental trees or 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 43 - Union, included provisions especially designed to assist the farming population. It authorized national banks to lend money on farm mortgages and recognized the peculiar needs of the farmer by giving his paper a maturity period of six months. This was followed by the Federal farm loan act, which created a banking system reaching intimately into the rural districts and operating on terms suited to the farm owners
Page 448 - Prohibits the importation from southeastern Asia (including India, Siam, IndoChina, and China), Malayan Archipelago, Australia, New Zealand, Oceania, Philippine Islands, Formosa, Japan, and adjacent islands, in the raw or unmanufactured state, of seed and all other portions of Indian corn or maize (Zea.
Page 480 - ... for enabling the Secretary of Agriculture to investigate and certify to shippers the condition as to soundness...
Page 473 - Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington.
Page 111 - Best results may be expected only when every live-stock owner becomes familiar with the provisions of the accredited-herd plan, which are as follows: METHODS AND RULES FOR ACCREDITING HERDS OF CATTLE. The rules below were unanimously adopted by the United States Live Stock Sanitary Association and by representatives of pure-bred cattle-breeders' associations, and approved December 23, 1917, by the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture.