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$10 for each Hemp US Flag sold goes to Red Cross

In response to the recent and ongoing tragedy in America, begining midnight 9/18 and until further notice, $10 will be sent to the Red Cross relief effort for each flag ordered at regular retail from Hemp US Flag. Orders are being taken now for delivery in early October. Reserve your flag now at www.hempusflag.com.
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15,000 wild pot plants burned

A vestige of Minnesotas farm history went up in smoke in northern Washington County on Thursday, under the watchful eyes of Minnesota National Guard members and county narcotics officers. They mowed, piled and burned about 15,000 naturally occurring marijuana plants. The effort was part of a National Guard program to eradicate marijuana, conducted in cooperation with the county sheriffs office.
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1901 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture

The hemp plant (Cannabis sativa) is an annual, belonging to the nettle family. It grows to a height of from 5 to 15 feet, and when cultivated for fiber (Pl. LXXIX, fig. 1) produces only a few small branches near the top of the slender stalk. Its leaves, of a rich dark-green color, are composed of 5 to 9 lanceolate, serrate, pointed leaflets, 2 to 5 inches in length and about one-sixth as wide.
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1909 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture

Fiber Investigations - Hemp & Flax. Many plant fibers and many questions pertaining to fiber production have been investigated during the past year, but attention has been directed especially to hemp and flax, which, aside from cotton, are regarded as the most promising fiber-producing plants for this country.
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1913 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture

The two fiber-producing plants most promising for cultivation in the central United States and most certain to yield satisfactory profits are hemp and flax. The oldest cultivated fiber plant, one for which the conditions in the United States are as favorable as anywhere in the world, one which properly handled improves the land, and which yields one of the strongest and most durable fibers of commerce, is hemp.
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1917 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture

The seed supply of the nation - hemp. Although we have still only a small acreage devoted to hemp in the United States, the acreage has doubled each year for the last three years. The area planted in 1917 was estimated at 42,000 acres.
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1931 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture

Hemp fiber losing ground, despite its valuable qualities. Hemp is one of the oldest of known textile fibers. There is a definite record that the hemp plant (Cannabis Sativa) was cultivated in China for fiber production 27 centuries before the Christian Era. For nearly 5,000 years it has been important and has won an honorable position because of its strength and durability and the well-established fact that it is dependable.
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1938 Marihuana Conference, II

1938 Marihuana Conference, Part II
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1938 Marihuana Conference, Part I

1938 Marihuana Conference, Part I
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1938 Marihuana Conference, Part III

1938 Marihuana Conference, Part III
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