 | Pennsylvania. Department of Agriculture - Agriculture - 1914 - 696 pages
...the greatest economic question of better marketing. We have learned and are continuing to learn how to make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before, but we have yet to learn how to make the two blades yield double the return in worldly goods or comforts... | |
 | Illinois Farmers' Institute - Agriculture - 1900 - 564 pages
...construction of the truss or a new method of tempering steel; in a triumph of agricultural genius or how to make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before; whether it be a symphony, or a new bacteriun to ripen cheese; a new method of telegraphy, or a method... | |
 | Historical Society of Southern California - California, Southern - 1901 - 684 pages
...city's exchequer, which was chronically in a state of collapse, would expand and become plethoric. To make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before is the secret of agricultural wealth. The city fathers well knew that neither the one blade nor the... | |
 | Wisconsin - Wisconsin - 1903 - 1276 pages
...college of Agriculture to teach the farmer to use less acreage, — to farm deeper rather than broader, "to make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before." The poetical ring of the woodman's axe, and laws that encourage it, mark the decadence of agriculture —... | |
 | California, Southern - 1904 - 224 pages
...city's exchequer, which was chronically in a state of collapse, would expand and become plethoric. To make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before is the secret of agricultural wealth. The city fathers well knew that neither the one blade nor the... | |
 | 1904 - 320 pages
...city's exchequer, which was chronically in a state of collapse, would expand and become plethoric. To make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before is the secret of agricultural wealth. The city fathers well knew that neither the one blade nor the... | |
 | 1904 - 292 pages
...city's exchequer, which was chronically in a state of collapse, would expand and become plethoric. To make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before is the secret of agricultural wealth. The city fathers well knew that neither the one blade nor the... | |
 | Jonathan Ogden Armour - 1906 - 412 pages
...that of all around them — opportunities to create new enterprises — opportunities, if you please, to make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before. Made as they were, they could no more smother their energies than the born artist can keep his fingers... | |
 | Jeremiah Whipple Jenks - Business ethics - 1906 - 104 pages
...production of wealth. These are in good part the men who, whatever else they may do, know best how to " make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before." A prominent cause, then, that has brought power and wealth into the hands of the few, let us not forget,... | |
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