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Anthrax
A. D. McNair
Carleton Roy Ball
Clyde William Warburton
Everett Franklin Phillips
F. H. Hillman
H. P. Gould
Harry Benjamin Derr
Henry James Washburn
Jacob Hiram Arnold
John Robbins Mohler
John William Froley
Joseph Allen Warren
Lee Cleveland Corbett
Leland Ossian Howard
Thomas Henry Kearney
William Moore Scott
William Renwick Beattie
Harvey Washington Wiley
Rob Roy Slocum
Altus Lacy Quaintance
Clarence Beaman Smith
William Benjamin Mercier
W. F. Fletcher
其他書名
With Special Reference to Its Suppression
出版
U.S. Department of Agriculture
, 1911
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=pkBQWrdXNXUC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
FULL_PUBLIC_DOMAIN
註釋
"It is apparent that the business of distilling alcohol is one which calls for a considerable investment and no small degree of technical skill.It can not be conducted advantageously, from a commercial point of view, in very small plants on account of the proportionately high cost of the plant and of the labor; and many of the so-called "wastes" which have been suggested as fermentable raw materials are so poor in fermentable substance or so expensive to handle that their availability is thereby impaired. It seem that the business, to be productive of satisfactory returns, must be conducted on a fairly large scale, and that the best success is likely to be attained with raw materials of the general types already in use, namely, maize, potatoes, and molasses. The industry is not suited to every locality, and it is most likely to be successful if carried on systematically on a very large farm, or if supported by the joint interests of a fairly large community. The alluring statements sometimes made regarding large financial returns to be obtained by making industrial alcohol with waste, raw material, unskilled labor, and a "cheap" distilling outfit are misleading and can only result in loss if followed." -- Conclusion (p.32)