Englands happiness increased, or A sure and easie remedy against all succeeding dear years : by a plantation of the roots called potatoes, whereof (with the addition of wheat flower) excellent, good, and wholesome bread may be made, every year, eight or nine months together, for half the charge as formerly : also by the planting of these roots, ten thousand men in England and Wales, who know not how to live or what to do to get maintenance for their families, may of one acre of ground, make thirty pounds per annum / invented and published for the good of the poorer sort by John Forster.

Author/creator Forster, John
Format Electronic
Publication InfoLondon : Printed for A. Seile ..., 1664.
Description7 unnumbered pages, 24 pages
Supplemental ContentAvailable to subscribing institutions
Subjects

Variant title England's happiness increased
Variant title Sure and easie remedy against all succeeding dear years
General noteReproduction of original from Goldsmiths' Library, University of London.
General noteGoldsmiths'-Kress no. 01724.
Reproduction noteElectronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2005. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited to licensing agreements.