When Professor Johnston wrote, the granary of the continent had already moved from the flats of the Upper St. Lawrence to the Mississippi Valley, the north-and-south line which divided the wheat product of the United States into two equal parts being... Report - Page 364by New Hampshire. Department of Agriculture - 1884Full view - About this book
| Francis Amasa Walker - 1883 - 256 pages
...when the decadence of agriculture begins, flourish the more on this account, inasmuch as a second pact of the agricultural population, not choosing to follow the westward movement of the grain culture, are ready with their rising sons and daughters to enter the mill and factory. Still another part of... | |
| Charles Jesse Bullock - 1907 - 732 pages
...flourishing days of agriculture, which have grown with the age of the communities in which they are planted, and which, having been well founded when...follow the westward movement of the grain culture, are ready with their rising sons and daughters to enter the mill and factory. Still another part of... | |
| Edwin Griswold Nourse - 1916 - 936 pages
...already moved from the flats of the Upper St. Lawrence to the Mississippi Valley, the north-and-south line which divided the wheat product of the United...occupied in the higher and more careful culture of the cereal crops on the better portion of the former breadth of arable land, the less eligible fields being... | |
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