Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, 60. köideRoyal Agricultural Society of England, 1899 Vols. for 1933- include the societys Farmers' guide to agricultural research. |
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Results 1-5 of 48
Page 42
... tomatoes in the open , which produced an abundant crop of well - ripened fruit , worth 3d . to 4d . per pound wholesale . Some Chemin Rouge tomatoes were grown in pots under glass till the fruit was set , and then put out of doors ; but ...
... tomatoes in the open , which produced an abundant crop of well - ripened fruit , worth 3d . to 4d . per pound wholesale . Some Chemin Rouge tomatoes were grown in pots under glass till the fruit was set , and then put out of doors ; but ...
Page 47
... tomatoes , peaches , nectarines , melons , and cucumbers . The College , which gets no subsidy from any public authority , because it is a proprietary institution , affords excellent opportunities of theoretical and practical training ...
... tomatoes , peaches , nectarines , melons , and cucumbers . The College , which gets no subsidy from any public authority , because it is a proprietary institution , affords excellent opportunities of theoretical and practical training ...
Page 60
... tomatoes , outdoors , and in one year he produced 50 tons . His top fruit consists chiefly of plums , though he also grows a few apples and more pears ; and gooseberries and raspberries are the principal bottom fruits . Very few apples ...
... tomatoes , outdoors , and in one year he produced 50 tons . His top fruit consists chiefly of plums , though he also grows a few apples and more pears ; and gooseberries and raspberries are the principal bottom fruits . Very few apples ...
Page 65
... Tomatoes , too , are grown by the acre outdoors - probably much more extensively than anywhere else in England . Rhubarb , also , is very extensively cultivated . The land is almost ceaselessly cropped , and thus large returns are ...
... Tomatoes , too , are grown by the acre outdoors - probably much more extensively than anywhere else in England . Rhubarb , also , is very extensively cultivated . The land is almost ceaselessly cropped , and thus large returns are ...
Page 67
... tomatoes of the Early Evesham variety , a slightly wrinkled kind , not so large as the Old Red , but much earlier . The plants were raised in a hot- house , and set out in rows 3 ft . 6 in . apart , the plants being about 1 ft . 9 in ...
... tomatoes of the Early Evesham variety , a slightly wrinkled kind , not so large as the Old Red , but much earlier . The plants were raised in a hot- house , and set out in rows 3 ft . 6 in . apart , the plants being about 1 ft . 9 in ...
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Common terms and phrases
absent acid acres Agricultural Society ammonia amount apples April average barley Barmpton born Feb born Jan bred breed bull calved cattle cent Charles Colling charlock cheese Class Committee corn cotton cake Council cows crop cultivated currants Dairy district Earl England entries ewes exhibitor farm farmers feeding flocks foaled fruit gallons geese goose gooseberries grapes grass growers grown Hall hedge heifers hops Horses hot-house House in-milk inches injury June Kent lambs land larvæ Live Stock London Lord machine Maidstone Maidstone Meeting maize manure Members milk nitrate of soda nitrogen nursery orchards Pigs plants plot plums Poultry produce quantity Red Polled reported Romney Marsh Royal Agricultural Society season seeds Shearling sheep Shorthorn Showyard Sir JOHN THOROLD Society's soil Stilton cheese strawberries Sussex temperature ticks tion tomatoes tons trees Veterinary Wales Walter Gilbey wheat
Popular passages
Page 174 - Where any matter or ingredient not injurious to health has been added to the food or drug because the same is required for the production or preparation thereof as an article of commerce, in a state fit for carriage or consumption and not fraudulently to increase the bulk, weight, or measure of the food or drug, or conceal the inferior quality thereof...
Page 169 - No person shall sell to the prejudice of the purchaser any article of fuod or any drug which is not of the nature, substance, and quality of the article demanded by such purchaser...
Page 169 - No person shall, except for the purpose of compounding as hereinafter described, mix, colour, stain, or powder, or order or permit any other person to mix, colour, stain, or powder, any drug...
Page 386 - ... goods or things to which any forged trade-mark or false trade description is applied, or to which any trade-mark or mark so nearly resembling a trade-mark as to be calculated to deceive is falsely applied, as the case may be, shall, unless he proves...
Page 388 - Stores," carries on an extensive business as grocer and provision dealer, having, it appears, six shops or branch establishments, and having also a wholesale warehouse. It is obvious that, if sales with false trade descriptions could be carried out in these establishments with impunity so far as the principal is concerned, the Act would, to a large extent, be nugatory.
Page 383 - Act with respect to restrictions on expenditure, undertake the repair and maintenance of all or any of the public footpaths within their parish, not being footpaths at the side of a public road, but...
Page 420 - A Knight of Cales, A Gentleman of Wales, And a Laird of the North Countree ; A Yeoman of Kent, With his yearly rent. Will buy them out all three...
Page xliv - If at any time the Privy Council are satisfied on inquiry, with respect to any Regulation, that the same is of too restrictive a character, or otherwise objectionable, and direct the revocation thereof, the same shall not come into operation, or shall thereupon cease to operate, as the case may be.
Page 424 - Rumney marsh to London, and not from the several parts of it as they may be pickt out here and there. Mr Camden, col. 215, expounds differently from all. ' The inhabitants, according to its scituation, from the Thames southeward, distinguish it [Kent] into three plots or portions (they call them degrees ') ; the upper, lying upon the Thames, they look upon to be healthy, but not altogether so rich ; the middle part to be both healthy and rich ; the lower, to be rich, but withal unhealthy? because...
Page 749 - ... it was dealing. The very enacting part of it gives the antithesis between land and buildings, since the relief the occupier is to get is that he is to be liable in the case of every rate to which the Act applies, '' to pay one half only of the rate in the pound payable in respect of buildings and other hereditaments.