|  | books.google.com C. Robertson - 1998 - 669 pages POCOCK R. 8802 The land too poor for any other crop, is best for raising men. POE Edgar Allan 1809-1849 8803 'Annabel Lee' This maiden she lived with no other thought Than to love and be loved by me. 8804 'Annabel Lee' I was a child ... |
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 | books.google.com Margaret Mead Newfoundland is a great English ship, moored near the Banks during the fishing season for the convenience of the English fishermen. A. H. McIntosh The land too poor for any other crop, is best for raising men. R. Pocock I want ... |
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 | books.google.com 1868 The expense of raising and harvesting a crop of wheat' rob the soil of more plantfood than the poor, strawis not far ... $"PPlYStates, is how can exhausted lands too poor to grow clover, ... No one can regret more than I do that, owing to other engagements, this gentleman is not here to open the discussion ... He must first get his land in high condition, and he should then select the best variety he can find. |
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 | books.google.com 1910 Is it advisable' in any case to continue raising hay for several years instead of trying to raise the small grains ? ... Year after year, some men raise corn on land so poor that with the best cultivation only a very small crop can be raised, and this always without profit. ... Some farmers do' not know how to increase the productiveness of their land ; and some, it seems, know how, but are too poor themselves to ... |
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 | books.google.com No man was ever made rich by the cultivation of poor, impoverished land; poor lands make a poor State, but a rich, ... but time showed the folly of this, and the raising of wheat was soon abandoned, the crops being too poor to pay cost. ... There are no richer lands in the West than those in the Kaw valley and other bottom lands, but their continuous cropping without ... The best crops of wheat, corn, and grass I have ever seen raised on our high prairie lands have been where barnyard ... |
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 | books.google.com 1838 Let us Suppose a farm hi consist of one thousitnj acres of arable land ; that the, greatest produce of bread grain, not In fvia ... men, women,' orVdindren, are -a tolerable resource, pro- dpcing ; also, th«. good-effect of habituating the last in early life to ... This" temporary resource.isj however, greatly. inferior to* encloqiiroe, particulbiily Iq too poor to nourish them, and ... tueet temporary pressures,arid at other seasons for want of beneficial -employment; The crop computed' by thfe acre, ... |
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 | books.google.com In other forest cities like Drummond which has been established on the cut-over lands in northwestern Wisconsin, a new ... These 200 people have come from places where the land is too poor to raise good crops, so that they have not been ... |
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 | books.google.com 1838 Let us suppose a farm to consist of one thousand acres of arable land ; that the greatest produce of bread grain, not in one year only, ... because the land is too poor to nourish them, and their destruction by the plough returns too rapidly. ... losses accrue from its insufficiency to meet temporary pressures, and at other seasons for want of beneficial employment. ... potatoes, peas, cotton, turnips, or any cleaning crop, to be followed by wheat and grass seed, if ihese crops are gotten off in ... |
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 | books.google.com Edmund Ruffin - 1838 Vol. VI. No. 6. ON THE FREQUENT FAILURES OF THE WHEAT CROPS. To the Editor of the Farmers' Resistor. ... sufficient bread-stuff for its inhabitants since its first settlement, and latterly exporting more of that article than any other, should, ... our example, they soon found that their barns were loaded with grain, laid up for many years; and, like the man in the parable, said " soul take thy rest. ... Select some field, or portion of one, of good land ; not some worn-out gall, too poor for corn. |
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 | books.google.com P. D. Groenewegen - 1998 - 224 pages It rates a part of the man's being as "goods of the second order", the scientific name for working instruments; and it assigns to ... He has recognized as rent- yielding agents not only land, but a number of other things that give to some producers ... the price of each one of them must be such as to reward the men who are making it on land that is too poor to be paid for. ... all that his good land saves to him, and still make his customers pay no more than they would have to do in any case, ... |
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