Browsing by Author "Pond, George A."
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Item Agricultural Production and Types of Farming in Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1940-05) Engene, S. A.; Pond, George A.Item The Changing Picture of Farming in Southeastern Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1958) Pond, George A.; Nodland, Truman R.CHANGES IN FARM ORGANIZATION and farm earnings have been more numerous and more striking during the past 25 or 30 years than at any other time in the long history of agriculture. Some of these changes and the resulting effect on earnings are brought out in the financial and production records kept by a group of farmers in southeastern Minnesota. These farmers were members of the Southeastern Minnesota Farm Management Service. During the first three years, 1928 through !930. only farms in Dodge, Freeborn, Goodhue, Rice, Steele, and Waseca Counties were included. Later it was expanded to include farms in Dakota. LeSueur, Mower, Nicollet, Olmsted, Scott, Wabasha, and Winona Counties, as well as a few in adjoining counties.Item The Combine Harvester in Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1929-07) Schwantes, A. J.; Pond, George A.; Arny, A. C.; Bailey, C. H.; Black, R. H.; Reynoldson, L. A.; Humphries, W. R.Item Cost of Combine Harvesting in Minnesota(University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1930-05) Pond, George A.; Bassett, Louis B.Item The cost of producing apples in Minnesota, 1916-1920(University of Minnesota. Agricultural Experiment Station, 1924-04) Brierley, WG; Koppen, Walter J.; Pond, George A.Item The Cost of Producing Apples in Minnesota, 1916-1920(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1924) Brierley, WG; Pond, George A.; Koppen, Walter J.Item An Economic Study of Crop Production in the Red River Valley of Minnesota(University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1931-09) Pond, George A.; Sallee, George A.; Crickman, C.W.Item An Economic Study of Livestock Possibilities in the Red River Valley of Minnesota(University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1931-09) Sallee, George A.; Pond, George A.; Crickman, C.W.Item Factors affecting the Physical and Economic Cost of Butterfat Production in Pine County, Minnesota(University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1930-12) Pond, George A.; Ezekiel, MordecaiItem Farm Accounts as a Source of Data for Farm Management Research(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1956-02) Pond, George A.Item Farm organization for beef cattle production in southwestern Minnesota(University of Minnesota. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1939-08) Sallee, George A.; Pond, George A.; Crickman, C. W.Item Farm Tenancy in Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1941-06) Pond, George A.Item Pasture Production and Use: A Study in Houston County Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1943-05) Anderson, Hjalmer O.; Welch, C. Herman; Pond, George A.Item Planning Farm Organizations for the Northeast Cut-Over Section of Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1933-02) Pond, George A.; Crickman, C.W.Item Planning Farms for Increased Profits(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1957) Hasbargen, Paul R.; Pond, George A.Item Planning Systems of Farming for the Red River Valley of Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1931-09) Pond, George A.; Sallee, George A.; Crickman, C.W.Item Relation of Variations in the Human Factor to Financial Returns in Farming(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1932-06) Wilcox, Walter W.; Boss, Andrew; Pond, George A.Item Starting Farming in Southeastern Minnesota(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1951-05) Beneke, Raymond, R.; Pond, George A.Item Starting Farming Today(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1955-04) Pond, George A.; Swanson, Henning W.; Cavert, W.L.Item Starting Farming Today: Can It Be Done, What Does It Take(Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, 1955-04) Pond, George A.; Swanson, H.W.; Cavert, W. L.STARTING FARMING was never easy. It is not easy today. Obtaining the capital to start farming and especially acquir ing ownership of a farm may seem to many a young couple today an almost unattainable goal. Perhaps such young people would do well to question their fathers or grandfathers or some elderly farmer in their neighborhood as to just how they got their start.