... lapse of a few hours, by precipitating to the bottom the impure particles, so purify it that it will be found to possess nearly all the freshness and clearness of the finest spring water. The American Agriculturist - Page 2221845Full view - About this book
 | 1857
...liberty, and hopeful if patient patriotism. 210 PISCICULTURE. 211 From Chsmbers's Journal. PISCICULTURE. IT is not so generally known as it ought to be, that efforts are being made upon a considerable scale to augment our supply of salmon by means of artificial... | |
 | John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1857
...admiration for tempered liberty, and hopeful if patient patriotism. From Chambera's Journal. PISCICULTURE. IT is not so generally known as it ought to be, that efforts are being made upon a considerable scale to augment our supply of salmon by means of artificial... | |
 | Richard Nettle - 1857 - 144 pages
...calculations are based on a good, true, and solid foundation. PISCICULTURE OR THE BREEDING OF FISHES. " It is not so generally known as it ought to be, that efforts are being made upon a considerable scale to augment our supply of salmon by means of artificial... | |
 | Chambers's journal - 1857
...call it forth to active operation. PISCICULTURE. A VISIT 1O THE STORMONTFIELD SALMON BREEDING-PONDS. IT is not so generally known as it ought to be, that efforts are being made upon a considerable scale to augment our supply of salmon by means of artificial... | |
 | Valentine Baker - 1858 - 104 pages
...of bran would be more than an ample allowance if extra hay were issued. The most common disease on * It is not so generally known, as it ought to be, that the return to a hot stable is quite as dangerous as the change from a heated atmosphere to a cold and... | |
 | Richard Garnett - 1859 - 342 pages
...by one of the very few editors competent to such a task, under the auspices of a Scottish Society. It is not so generally known as it ought to be that this work is of the first importance for the ethnological and civil history of our border counties,... | |
 | Mrs. Mary L. Edgeworth - 1860
...three days and nights, to make it more transparent and dry. SIMPLE MEANS OF PURIFYING WATER. It is not generally known, as it ought to be, that pounded alum possesses the property of purifying water. A large tablespoonful of pulverized alum, sprinkled into a hogshead of water (the water being fresh at... | |
 | 1860
...the first three years after the passing of the Act, nor for more than four days in any future year. It is not so generally known as it ought to be, that this Act did not impose the whole burden of maintaining the roads on the tenants and labourers. Although... | |
 | 1865
...equally abhorrent to the Stuart dynasty, the most blindly infatuated race of monarchs that ever reigned. It is not so generally known as it ought to be that in the times of Charles II., the law inflicted death upon those who published opinions opposed to the... | |
 | 1866
...succession, while the range of variation to which it may have been subject has been slight, but perceptible. It is not so generally known as it ought to be, that Professor Owen himself, in the year 1860, was the first to propound the theory that the concomitant... | |
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