| OCR Text |
Show 50 ideal dry fam is location 0= the clr 108]:1 soil, of f arrn 211d raalce ce r t of depth wi tn an that w plenty be wou l.d he drought was the of appraisal ' it but s, ar-e a and four horses and and farm them acres even \'12.8 still a IT 2_JI'2.cticed. we r-e com i nr., denied that it n his d i.c'tum was was a "precarious" of E. C. dry farming, He , form of highly speci2.lized sdil, of the U.S. as and Department 19Ibid., pp. 412, 416. 20T ; d .::.!2..=_., pp 373-74 413. • 2.8 as i= 2. ye2)_'" enphasized that agriculture, intelligence. business.19 charging p. • long But He was Chilctt's "conservative" 18Ibid., .. as Ahr;'"s farn that this had hindered dry farm advancement and had shackled resources not was highly optimistic. in dr ough t years that r-equ i.r-cd much wor-k, i, ttl. de toward dry farming considerable vicor his belief that dry perceptibly critical at t an a than 160 to 200 more "Farm fewer succeed \'!ere dry farming one "One nan vii th C2l1l1ot handle Campbe Ll 2.S 2Jroper ::_Jl"'ocec1ures of uniformly d!"Y £2-11:1e:.", structured to rainfall exceeding ten inches, cautioned. defended '.'ri th f2ITning vrou Ld-sbe a ,,18 angu.i.ne }-:e Select urged location in further avoided. machinery Uidtsoe 's s :-:e average 8Xe2.S acres," he better. feet. annu a.L of adv i s e d the a.i.n that the soil is eight i.ndy he inport2:.:n.t. of the research Agriculture.20 |