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Beet-top Silage and Other By-products of the Sugar Beet
Charles E. Chambliss
Austin Foster Hawes
Cornelius Lott Shear
Edward H. Thomson
Everett Franklin Phillips
Floyd Dillon Young
Fred Corry Bishopp
Furman Lloyd Mulford
Harry Eugene Burke
Jesse Lee Webb
Le Roy August Reynoldson
Marion Imes
Warren Clemmer Funk
William Randolph Walton
Elmer Johnson
Lydia Ray Balderston
George A. Lawyer
Ned Dearborn
James Wiley Jones
John T. Bowen
Laura Irene Baldt
V. L. Wildermuth
Frank Barnes Herbert
出版
U.S. Department of Agriculture
, 1921
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=3NTwgYppBesC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
FULL_PUBLIC_DOMAIN
註釋
"A home and its surroundings must be attractive in order to be most uplifting to the family, visitors and passers-by. Farmsteads especially need attention in order to secure satisfactory conditions. The farm home and the farm business are so closely related that the success of the latter is reflected in the appearance of the former. All the buildings with their immediate surroundings must be considered. The roads and walls; the home vegetable, fruit and flower gardeners; the lawns; and the ornamental plantings are also important factors in determining the plan. Each building needs sufficient land about it to give it a proper appearance and provide the necessary yards or work room, and each should be so located with respect to other buildings as to facilitate the work of the farm. Roads and walks should be limited to the number necessary to facilitate daily traffic. Vegetable, fruit, and flower gardens must provide liberally for the family needs. The lawns should be so located and of such size as to give a pleasing setting for the home, but not large enough to make their care burdensome. Suitable plantings are necessary to unite the parts of a farmstead into a pleasing, homelike whole. Trees are used for windbreaks, as frames for the buildings or a background for them, and to give shade. Shrubs are needed in abundance to hide partially the foundation lines of buildings, support their corners, give reasons for turns in drives or walks, and to screen unsightly objects. Native trees and shrubs and those known by trial to thrive in the locality are the best to use." -- p. 65.