Cotton Hand-book, for Bengal: Being a Digest of All Information Available from Offcial Records and Other Sources on the Subject of the Production of Cotton in the Bengal Provinces, Volume 105J. G. Medlicott |
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Page 5
... equal to this : besides the Bhyratta , a Broach Cotton , and one from Tenasserim , are instanced . 66 If we pass over these anomalies , ( which might be multiplied to a vast extent , ) as , however interesting in themselves , rather ...
... equal to this : besides the Bhyratta , a Broach Cotton , and one from Tenasserim , are instanced . 66 If we pass over these anomalies , ( which might be multiplied to a vast extent , ) as , however interesting in themselves , rather ...
Page 20
... equal in quality to the best American , and at a price which would drive the latter from the market . Mr. Freeman § believes that wherever any Cotton is now grown in small quantities throughout India , the crop might be indefinitely ...
... equal in quality to the best American , and at a price which would drive the latter from the market . Mr. Freeman § believes that wherever any Cotton is now grown in small quantities throughout India , the crop might be indefinitely ...
Page 29
... equal inattention to , if not ignorance of , the princi- ples . The majority also appear wise only after personal experience , and paying little attention to that of their predecessors . For " we find that the same course is followed ...
... equal inattention to , if not ignorance of , the princi- ples . The majority also appear wise only after personal experience , and paying little attention to that of their predecessors . For " we find that the same course is followed ...
Page 46
... equal value of the crop , when produced , considered à priori , would lead to the conclusion that the Lower Provinces ought to have been at least self - supporting in regard to Cotton , and certainly ought not to have imported it from ...
... equal value of the crop , when produced , considered à priori , would lead to the conclusion that the Lower Provinces ought to have been at least self - supporting in regard to Cotton , and certainly ought not to have imported it from ...
Page 59
... equal to 160 lbs . of clean Cotton per acre : the gross out - turn was decidedly higher than that of the native kinds , besides which the proportion of clean to seed Cotton was materially greater . At the time when he sowed his own crop ...
... equal to 160 lbs . of clean Cotton per acre : the gross out - turn was decidedly higher than that of the native kinds , besides which the proportion of clean to seed Cotton was materially greater . At the time when he sowed his own crop ...
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Common terms and phrases
1848 the Collector acre Agra Agricultural Journal Agricultural Society Allahabad alluvial alluvium American Cotton annual Assam average price Balasore bales bazar believes Benares Bengal Berar bigas Bombay Bourbon Bundelkhund Calcutta cent Chanderi churka clean Cotton climate Coimbatore Commissioner considered cost Cotton Committee Cotton crop Cotton cultivation Cotton grown Cotton plant Cotton seed Cotton soil cultivation of Cotton Cuttack Dacca district lies division Doab English market exotic Cotton experiment exported extent farm fibre Finnie Ganges germinated gins ground grow growth hills India Indian Cotton indigenous irrigation Jumna jungul khund kind of Cotton labor land lime manure matter Mexican seed Mirzapore Mymensing Nagpore obtained Orleans Patna Pernambuco picked plough pods portion produce profit Provinces quantity of Cotton rain reported Royle Rupees samples sandy Sea Island Cotton season seed seed Cotton sent Shahabad Soonderbunds sowing sown staple suited supply Terai Upland Georgia villagers weeded yield
Popular passages
Page 420 - ... again I am informed that in some parts of the country, for example, in the Vizagapatam district, the finest cotton crops, both as to quantity and quality, are raised on red soils, and the redder the better for the purpose.
Page 461 - ... shoot," and subsequently to one plant, care being taken to keep the ground clear and free from weeds, at least until the plants are six months old. At Bourbon, about the month of April, the cotton-tree begins to shed its leaves. This fall precedes the blossoming, fifty days after which the gathering begins. The blossoming varies from a month to a month and a half; but in general the earlier it takes place, the more abundant is the crop. If the...
Page 421 - The mechanical state of a soil, its greater or less degree of porosity or of tenacity enabling the roots to spread with more or less facility, so as to fix the plant steadily in the earth, at the same time that they supply it with a large portion of its nutriment, is necessarily of great importance, but as a considerable portion of the food of plants is supplied by the air, its different states and due supply require also to be attended to in addition to climate. No chemical composition or mechanical...
Page 460 - To pick 501b. of Cotton in a day is considered as a fair task for one person. The plants should be cut down every year within three or four inches of the ground. The time for doing 'this, which must be in the rainy season, ought to be regulated by the same...
Page 337 - It is easy, of course, to be wise after the event, but it is not then that knowledge is needed.
Page 419 - ... to infer, that the compost or manure best fitted for cotton plantations should contain neutro-saline matter, with alkaline, calcareous, and magnesian bases, and that the presence of magnesia deserves notice, as it indicates marine food. But with respect to the absence of soda salts from the ashes of cotton, he observes, " Here, as in many other examples, the vegetative powers of the roots seem to eliminate potash from the stone detritus of the soil, which replaces the soda in the sea salts. For...
Page 11 - Mr. Vibart, the Revenue-Commissioner of Bombay, (Return, p. 66,) writes, that " the cultivators find that as ready a sale is obtained for cotton in a dirty and adulterated state as when brought to the market in a clean and first-rate condition, while the difference of price between the two articles does not repay them for the additional time and labour.
Page 279 - ... transmission to the Manchester Cotton Supply Association, on which the following opinion was given by them:— "' The sample arrived this morning, and has been examined by two other parties of experience in the cotton trade, as well as by ourselves, and the conclusion come to is, that this sample is all that could be desired by those interested in promoting the cultivation of GOOD cotton in this country, and it is believed that any quantity of this quality would find a ready sale in Liverpool...
Page 422 - ... by drainage. Again, if in another situation the air is more dry, and evaporation necessarily greater, both from the surface of the earth and from that of the leaves, a soil more retentive of moisture will be more suitable than one which is more open, and which thus allows moisture to escape, not only by evaporation but by drainage. These varieties may be observed not only in the soil and climate of different localities, but even in the same locality at different seasons of the year, especially...
Page 280 - ... GOOD cotton in this country, and it is believed that any quantity of this quality would find a ready sale in Liverpool at the full rates for fair Orleans, at present 7%d. to 8d. per Ib. We have never had an opportunity of comparing this sample with cotton grown in black soil, but we are inclined to believe that the mode of culture adopted by you is peculiarly suited to this description of seed, no sample of New Orleans growth in this country having been seen here to equal yours. We may add, that...