Land Policy Review, Volúmenes6-7Bureau of Agricultural Economics, 1943 |
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... future . CONTRIBUTORS : PAUL S. TAYLOR is Professor of Agricultural Economics in the University of California and a member of the California State Board of Agriculture . ARTHUR P. CHEW is a special writer of long standing in the United ...
... future . CONTRIBUTORS : PAUL S. TAYLOR is Professor of Agricultural Economics in the University of California and a member of the California State Board of Agriculture . ARTHUR P. CHEW is a special writer of long standing in the United ...
Página 22
... future building . amenable to , help from the public educational institutions . HUGE war industries have been erected in the South . Great camps and training centers have there concentrated tens of thousands of men from all over the ...
... future building . amenable to , help from the public educational institutions . HUGE war industries have been erected in the South . Great camps and training centers have there concentrated tens of thousands of men from all over the ...
Página 23
... future . The vast capital and property losses of 75 years ago were tragic , but only a few of the younger spirits are today willing to leave this out of the reckoning on the immediate next steps . But Den- mark has had to shift its ...
... future . The vast capital and property losses of 75 years ago were tragic , but only a few of the younger spirits are today willing to leave this out of the reckoning on the immediate next steps . But Den- mark has had to shift its ...
Página 11
... future of the human race than the thunder of guns and the swoop of dive bombers on the battlefronts . Through such cooper- ation , the Americas learn to build a civilization in which human values find expression above the life ...
... future of the human race than the thunder of guns and the swoop of dive bombers on the battlefronts . Through such cooper- ation , the Americas learn to build a civilization in which human values find expression above the life ...
Página 15
... future , the Government seems to have a choice of two methods of agricultural progress . One is to make individual owner- ship and the intensive cultivation of a permanent piece of farmland a cor- nerstone principle of the new agri ...
... future , the Government seems to have a choice of two methods of agricultural progress . One is to make individual owner- ship and the intensive cultivation of a permanent piece of farmland a cor- nerstone principle of the new agri ...
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Land Policy Review, Volúmenes1-2 United States. Bureau of Agricultural Economics Vista completa - 1938 |
Términos y frases comunes
acres adequate agencies agri agricul agricultural production American Republics areas Argentina basic Book Review Chile cial Conference conservation cooperation coun creased crops culture Department of Agriculture diet distribution duction economic employment erosion export farm families farm products fertility field food and agriculture forest Government groups H. H. BENNETT Hazel K important improve income increase industry Inter-American interest justments LAND POLICY REVIEW land values lend-lease level of living Liberty Hyde Bailey livestock materials means measures ment million Negro nomic nutrition operation opportunity organization owners Panama parity peace percent period planning plants population possible post-war practices prob problems prod region rural settlement social soil South Southern Appalachians Spring sumers tenant farms Tennessee Valley Authority ternational timber tion tional tive tural ture ucts United Nations velopment wartime workers
Pasajes populares
Página 3 - Cultivators of the earth are the most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country, and wedded to its liberty and interests, by the most lasting bonds.
Página 25 - If we really believe that we are fighting for a people's peace, all the rest becomes easy. Production, yes — it will be easy to get production without either strikes or sabotage; production with the whole-hearted cooperation between willing arms and keen brains; enthusiasm, zip, energy geared to the tempo of keeping at it everlastingly day after day.
Página 28 - The essential qualities of a true Pan Americanism must be the same as those which constitute a good neighbor, namely, mutual understanding and, through such understanding, a sympathetic appreciation of the other's point of view.
Página 17 - That the inherent natural and economic advantages of any area should determine the farming systems adopted and the commodities . produced in that area...
Página 23 - No sentiment is more acknowledged in the family of Agriculturists than that the few who can afford it should incur the risk and expense of all new improvements, and give the benefit freely to the many of more restricted circumstances.
Página 26 - ... political and in matters economic, is likely to give them a new significance as factors in international affairs and in the political history of the world. It presents them as in a very deep and true sense a unit in world affairs, spiritual partners, standing together because thinking together, quick with common sympathies and common ideals. Separated they are subject to all the cross-currents of the confused politics of a world of hostile rivalries; united in spirit and purpose they cannot be...
Página 8 - By encouraging the production in single-crop areas of a greater diversity of foods for home use, since these areas are, in general, distant from...
Página 41 - It is time that every citizen in every one of the American Republics recognizes that the Good Neighbor policy means that harm to one republic means harm to every republic. We have all of us recognized the principle of independence. It is time that we recognize also the privilege of interdependence — one upon another.
Página 6 - I could mention numerous instances of Englishmen, coming to this country with hardly a dollar in their pocket, and arriving at a state of ease and plenty and even riches in a few years ; and I explicitly declare, that I have never known or heard of, an instance of one common labourer who, with common industry and economy, did not greatly better his lot. Indeed, how can it otherwise be, when the average wages of agricultural labour is double what it is in England, and when the average price of food...