Hearings Before the Committee on Agriculture During the Second Session of the Sixty-first Congress, Volumen3U.S. Government Printing Office, 1910 |
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Página 8
... entirely willing that enormous tracts of land that would otherwise be sold , and the proceeds of which would go into the Treasury of the United States for the benefit of all the people , shall be taken for the benefit of the West . They ...
... entirely willing that enormous tracts of land that would otherwise be sold , and the proceeds of which would go into the Treasury of the United States for the benefit of all the people , shall be taken for the benefit of the West . They ...
Página 12
... entirely in accord with the result of the studies which the Central Hydrographic Office , which is under the author's direction , obtained by examining the question of the influence of the forest on the formation and regimen of high ...
... entirely in accord with the result of the studies which the Central Hydrographic Office , which is under the author's direction , obtained by examining the question of the influence of the forest on the formation and regimen of high ...
Página 18
... entirely inconclusive . You can not draw any conclusion whatever from it . Mr. LAMB . I want to ask one question : Have you ever had occasion to study the effects of the erosion along the banks of the James River , from its source down ...
... entirely inconclusive . You can not draw any conclusion whatever from it . Mr. LAMB . I want to ask one question : Have you ever had occasion to study the effects of the erosion along the banks of the James River , from its source down ...
Página 19
... entirely from the banks of the river in its lower reaches ? Mr. SWAIN . Not entirely ; no , sir . It is a complicated question ; but I think the greatest erosion from the surface of the ground is on the steep slopes , where the water ...
... entirely from the banks of the river in its lower reaches ? Mr. SWAIN . Not entirely ; no , sir . It is a complicated question ; but I think the greatest erosion from the surface of the ground is on the steep slopes , where the water ...
Página 23
... entirely different . The erosion there takes place very largely on the upper slopes and is carried down into the streams , and does not come from caving banks as it does in the Mississippi . Mr. Cocks . Do you not think a great deal of ...
... entirely different . The erosion there takes place very largely on the upper slopes and is carried down into the streams , and does not come from caving banks as it does in the Mississippi . Mr. Cocks . Do you not think a great deal of ...
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Agricultural College amount animals apples appropriation BAHRENBURG barrel BEALL believe brown-tail moth bushel cent CHAIRMAN Colonel BIXBY committee Congress cubic inches deforestation disease District of Columbia Doctor THOMPSON engineers entomologist erosion fact Federal floods flow forests fruit fund gentlemen George Washington University GIBSON give Government grade growers gypsy moth HAWLEY Hood River HOWARD imported inspection institution jobber land legislation LEVER LUPTON Major CAVANAUGH MARLATT matter MCLAUGHLIN mechanic arts ment Morrill acts mountains navigable Northwest nursery stock nurserymen Ohio Ohio River orchard Oregon pack package pests PITKIN plant PLUMLEY POINDEXTER present President Professor MOORE Professor SWAYNE quarantine question rainfall river ROTHWELL RUCKER Secretary of Agriculture seedlings shipment shipped slopes standard STANLEY statement streams SYMONS Tennessee River thing tion to-day trees trustees United WAGNER West Virginia WHISTLER Winesap York