4 books found
by Altus Lacy Quaintance, Arthur Challen Baker
1917
by Altus Lacy Quaintance, Ara Marcus Daniels, Charles Ernest Ramser, Charles Franklin Kinman, Charles Orrin Townsend, Charles Vancouver Piper, Edward David Vosbury, G. A. Russell, George Milton Warren, Gerald Thorne, Harry Baker Humphrey, Ida M. Spasoff, Jenkin William Jones, Russell Arthur Oakley, Samuel Fortier, Theo. H. Scheffer, Timothy Paul White, William Renwick Beattie, James Herbert Beattie, H. S. Beardsley, United States. Department of Agriculture
1924
by Altus Lacy Quaintance, Byron Hunter, C. J. Zintheo, Carleton Roy Ball, Charles D. Woods, Charles Ford Langworthy, Charles Pinckney Hartley, Clarence Beaman Smith, Clyde William Warburton, D. Ward King, David Arthur Brodie, David Ernest Lantz, E. B. Boykin, F. H. Hillman, Fred Corry Bishopp, George Arthur Bell, George Frederick Mitchell, H. P. Gould, Harmon Benton, Harold T. Nielsen, Herbert John Webber, Joseph Allen Warren, Karl Frederic Kellerman, Lee Cleveland Corbett, Lyman Carrier, M. A. Crosby, Peter Johnson Wester, Robert Love Bennett, Samuel Mills Tracy, Seaman Ashahel Knapp, Warner Webster Stockberger, William Allen Orton, William Luther Spoon, William Moore Scott, William Renwick Beattie, Arthur Henry Leidigh, Chalmer Kirk McClelland, Charles Richardson Jones, Cornelius Lott Shear, William Jasper Spillman, John Frederick Duggar
1907
Brief summary of methods of getting rid of rats to prevent disease and damage.
by Altus Lacy Quaintance, Charles William Pugsley, Claude Clifford Hawbaker, Curtis Hernon Kyle, Edmund Cecil Shorey, Edward Lee Shaw, Ernest Adna Back, Frank Getz Ashbrook, Frank Hurlbut Chittenden, George McMillan Darrow, H. P. Gould, Harry Alanson Miller, Howard Ross Tolley, Jacob Hiram Arnold, James Herbert Beattie, Lee W. Fluharty, Leonard Lee Harter, Marion Imes, Russell Sage Woglum, Waldo Lee McAtee
1919
"The southern mountain farm often produces no more than a scant living for the family. Corn is the chief crop grown. Often part of the farm lies idle, being "rested," while corn is grown on another part year after year until the land is worn out. By growing three or more crops in rotation including clover, the farmer will be able to produce larger crops, make more money, and keep all crop land under cultivation all the time. Cattle, hogs, and sheep will not only add to the cash income, but will help to increase the fertility of the soil, a nd render larger crops possible. This bulletin describes crop rotations for small mountain farms in the southern Alleghenies, and gives complete directions for starting a crop rotation that will make poor mountain land more productive."--Page [2]