PRIZE ESSAYS AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE HIGHLAND SOCIETY OF SCOTLAND1816 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 73
Página viii
... sums in premiums to the best ploughmen within the limits to which their encouragement is directed . Competitions of this sort are now almost universal , 7 So so that there are comparatively but few places to which vi INTRODUCTION .
... sums in premiums to the best ploughmen within the limits to which their encouragement is directed . Competitions of this sort are now almost universal , 7 So so that there are comparatively but few places to which vi INTRODUCTION .
Página 4
... sorts and sells ; and sometimes we find him also á manufacturer . Most of the staplers of Great Britain reside in England . This is natural ; for most of the ma- nufacturers also reside there . The stapler pur- chases wool in the fleece ...
... sorts and sells ; and sometimes we find him also á manufacturer . Most of the staplers of Great Britain reside in England . This is natural ; for most of the ma- nufacturers also reside there . The stapler pur- chases wool in the fleece ...
Página 10
... sort- ⚫ed and combed ; part is returned into Scotland . • to be spun into yarn ; the yarn returns to Eng- land to be weaved , dyed and dressed ; a great , • deal of the cloth returns back , to be worn by our own people ; who do not ...
... sort- ⚫ed and combed ; part is returned into Scotland . • to be spun into yarn ; the yarn returns to Eng- land to be weaved , dyed and dressed ; a great , • deal of the cloth returns back , to be worn by our own people ; who do not ...
Página 16
... sorts that are made , the more perfect is the work . It is a great object with the stapler , to make out as much as possible of the varieties which are fine . The coarser varieties , when stapled , are expected to bring as much per ...
... sorts that are made , the more perfect is the work . It is a great object with the stapler , to make out as much as possible of the varieties which are fine . The coarser varieties , when stapled , are expected to bring as much per ...
Página 17
... sorts vary , in different lines of busi- ness and places . They also discover a gradual progress in the distinctions made of the finer sorts . Mr Luccock , woolstapler in Leeds , in his work on wool , 1805 , has given these terms , and ...
... sorts vary , in different lines of busi- ness and places . They also discover a gradual progress in the distinctions made of the finer sorts . Mr Luccock , woolstapler in Leeds , in his work on wool , 1805 , has given these terms , and ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Prize Essays and Transactions of the Highland Society of Scotland Henry MacKenzie,James Vaughan Pré-visualização indisponível - 2015 |
Prize Essays and Transactions of the Highland Society of Scotland Pré-visualização indisponível - 2020 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
acre advantage appear assorted bank barberry barley Bart beans Berwickshire betwixt bushel Campbell esq cattle clean climate coarse common salt considerable corn croft lands cultivated culture degree distemper district drain early Edinburgh effect employed England Essay experience extent farm farmers fence field fiorin fleece frost fungi fungus grain grass green crops ground grow grubber hedges Highland Society husbandry improvement injury James John kind labour land late lime magnesia manufacture manure means ment mildew mode muriatic nature neral oats object observed parish particular pasture peas places plants plough Portpatrick potatoes present produce proper purpose quantity respect rich ripening road rust Scot Scotland season seed sheep situations smut soil sorts sowing sown species stalks stapled wool staplers stones Stranraer straw ther tion ture turnips varieties vegetable wheat wheat mildew whin whole Wigton woollen
Passagens conhecidas
Página 625 - To the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of his Majesty's Treasury: The Memorial and Petition of Gustavus Vassa a black Man, late Commissary to the black Poor going to Africa. humbly sheweth, That your Lordships...
Página 284 - ... in proportion ; and make a hedge thicker, without running to naked wood, than by any method yet practised.
Página 337 - A very simple process for charring peat is given in the Farmer's Mag., vol. xvii. " Take a dozen or fifteen peats, and put them upon the top of the kitchen fire, upon edge : they will soon draw up the coal fire, and become red hot in a short time : after being turned about once or twice. and done with smoking, they are charred, and may be removed to the stores : if more is wanted, put on another supply of peat, and manage it as above.
Página xxvi - Commons, which was appointed in the year 1758, to inquire into the original standards of weights and measures in this kingdom, and to consider the laws relating thereto...
Página 296 - ... as that every two plants may be brought to intersect each other in the form of a St Andrew's cross. In that part where the two plants cross each other, he gently scrapes off the bark, and binds them with straw thwart-wise. Here the two plants consolidate in a sort of indissoluble knot, and push from thence horizontal slanting...
Página 591 - ... that it should sometimes be ill employed, and last but a short time. It would probably be essential to the success of any plan of this kind that the labourer should be able to draw out his money whenever he wanted it, and have the most perfect liberty of disposing of it in every respect as...
Página 580 - Potatoesfrosted,when three times distilled, produce a spirit from hydrometer proof to 10 per cent. over proof; therefore a principal purpose and use to which they may be turned, is the making of alcohol ; more particularly as that article is useful for many purposes where strength is its principal recommendation.
Página 248 - IT is well known to every practical farmer, that land, when properly ploughed, must be removed from a horizontal position, and twisted over to a certain angle, so that it may be left in that inclining position, one furrow leaning upon another, till the whole field be ploughed. The form of the furrow which is most approved of by farmers, and commonly to be met with in the best ploughed fields, is in proportion as 2 is to 3 ; or, if the furrow be 2 deep, it must be, 3 wide, and left in an inclining...
Página 587 - WHAT IS THE BEST MODE OF FORMING INSTITUTIONS OF THE NATURE OF SAVINGS BANKS, FOR RECEIVING THE DEPOSITS OF LABOURERS AND OTHERS.
Página 577 - ... handful of salt in the water ; and, when put on to be boiled, put as much salt into the water as possible, not to make them too salt when boiled. This is a powerful way of making the potatoe throw off the bad taste and spoiled quality lodged in its substance^ When prepared for horses; black cattle, or swine, salt or saltpetre put among the potatoes, and boiled together, will destroy any injurious quality which frost has lodged or brought on. Chaff or oats, bruised in the mill, boiled together...