It is extremely common in all industry that is designed to supply merchantable goods for the market.
The first merchantable products of printing on paper were not books, but playing cards and images.
Every method for making merchantable types, save that of casting, is a failure.
The hypothesis, for it is nothing more, that all the early prints were produced by the frotton does not satisfactorily explain the large production of merchantable printed matter during the first half of the fifteenth century.
If not, he may leave a few merchantableseed bearing trees provided the soil is such as to make them deep-rooted and wind-firm.
This annual gain is taking place even if the timber has not reached merchantable size, being like coin deposited in a toy bank which does not open until full.
Occasional vigorous young trees just under present merchantable size are of doubtful value because they are likely to blow down.
But before tieing up any considerable sum in merchantable trees he should consider the cost and safety of supplementing any shortage of natural supply by artificial seeding.
On the other hand, natural reproduction does not always require the leaving of merchantable timber on the cutting area.
The few merchantable trees he spares, together with those now unmerchantable, will, in perhaps twenty years, make another excellent crop.
The condition of every sugar and yellow pine on the sale area should be studied closely to determine whether that tree will be merchantable thirty years hence, by which time a second cut is probable.
On the other hand, a large proportion of what we now consider typically fir forest has a vigorous ground cover of hemlock and cedar which may become merchantable many years before an entirely new fir crop can be grown.
It is probably safe to say of mature Pacific coast fir that leaving enough merchantable timber on a cutting area for adequate seeding costs more than to use it and restock.
All merchantablesugar pine may therefore be removed.
If the present stand is nearly pure fir, or if other species are represented almost wholly by merchantable trees, there will be no young growth worth saving.
Especially in younger growths, the quantity of merchantable material tied up in this way is not so great as is sometimes necessary in the case of red fir, where single seed trees may contain several thousand board feet.
There is a considerable quantity of accessible spruce and red cedar of merchantable size growing near the shores of the inlet, and much larger bodies on the banks of the streams, and in the valleys a few miles back.
The forest embraces no Douglass fir, but little available yellow cedar or cypress, and only comparatively small bodies of merchantable spruce, which are accessible without the construction of expensive roads.
While in the aggregate, it embraces large quantities of merchantable timber, a comparatively small portion is available for lumbering operations.
There is no merchantable timber, on the west coast of Graham Island, excepting spruce, which is found in moderate quantities at the head of Rennell and Cartwright Sounds, and the inlets to the southward.
These are common difficulties, but can be avoided by a careful miller who wants to make a fine article of merchantable flour, and good yield.
Business being of a productive character--that is, converting raw material into merchantable goods--is upon a safe and substantial basis.
Work has been done on more than a dozen openings in the county, and a merchantable product obtained from most of them.
Several mines have been opened, and some good merchantable mica taken out.
That which appears merchantable is piled on the table before the workmen.
A promising mine was opened on Lickstone mountain, from which a large quantity of merchantable mica of fine quality has been taken.
Mr. Crean reports that a considerable quantity of merchantable spruce timber is to be found in Methye lake section.
As to whether you can get petroleum in merchantable quantities, that is a matter about which I would not care to speak.
It proved impossible to carry out this boring to the very base of the Cretaceous and into the underlying formation, in which the existence of a more fluid and merchantable oil was still to be hoped for.
There are no hard woods, the only deciduous trees that attain merchantable measurements being the canoe birch, the aspen and balsam poplars and the tamarack.
This would be all of merchantable size, not extraordinarily large, but plenty of it.
Every effort is being made to advise timber landowners as to proper cutting practices and disposal of merchantable timber.
Thousands of dollars worth of damage is done annually to our existing woodlands by fires which not only destroy our merchantable timber but also cause severe mortality to young forest seedlings.
The 16-foot butt log will be taken from each tree selected and the entire merchantable hole of one average tree for each species.
From each locality, three to five dominant trees of merchantable size and approximately average age will be so chosen as to be representative of the dominant trees of the species.
Our friend here is a pretty good judge of verse, and knows a merchantable article about as quick as any man in his line of business.
Miss Rose Bugbee, whose family opulence grew out of the only merchantable article a Hebrew is never known to seek profit from, thought she could be made presentable in the first circles if taken in hand in good season.
This is as cheap as merchantable English puddled iron can be imported, paying 25 per cent.
The consideration for the surrender, was, the payment of one hundred pounds of good merchantable tobacco, to each nation annually.
In our five States from Montana to California stands half the merchantable timber in the United States, the majority in private hands.
The remaining two-thirds of our forests are in private ownership, and this includes about four-fifths of the remaining standing merchantable timber.
Much of the land acquired during the past decade has been lumbered land, and has contained little merchantable timber.
Colorado is almost as badly off; and not more than 30 percent of its forest reserves is covered with merchantable timber, while about 40 percent has no timber at all.
The result of this judicious policy has been that there is now a fine growth of young trees on the property, which in a few years will come to merchantable size.
To offset this reduction of merchantable resources the annual production of timber by growth amounts to much less than one-third the average quantity used and destroyed.
By its very nature, therefore, the problem of forestry presents great difficulties to the average private owner of forest land who has bought the property to market the merchantable timber and not to grow trees.
The special bounty which had hitherto been paid on cocoons, over and above their merchantable value, was suspended, and by a statute of 9 Geo.
In the case of sales by description there is always an implied warranty that the buyer shall have not only goods which answer that description, but merchantable goods which answer that description.
The glue manufacturer sells the buyer glue which is merchantable glue, but it not good furniture glue, as furniture glue must be of unusual tenacity.
If the goods are not merchantable under circumstances where the buyer does rely, he can recover from the seller, even though the seller was not guilty of negligence.
Therefore, unless the buyer pretty clearly assumes the risk himself of picking out what is satisfactory to himself, a seller who is a manufacturer will be held to warrant the merchantable quality of the goods which he makes and sells.
It does not have to be the best, but it must be ordinarily salable as merchantable Manila sugar.
He had taken upon himself to specify the particular kind of boilers he wanted; he got them and they were merchantable boilers.
The law at present is that the seller must furnish to the buyer merchantable Manila sugar; that is, Manila sugar of average and salable quality.
Each merchantable log scaled is stamped on at least one end and unmerchantable or defective logs are stamped "US" in a circle.
The damages cover not only the merchantable timber and forage destroyed, but damages are also collected for young, immature growth, which at first thought might seem to have little or no value.
Merchantable timber which is not cut and removed and unmarked trees which are cut must be paid for at double the specified stumpage rates.
The greatest annual loss by insects is caused not so much by conspicuous local outbreaks as in the sustained annual loss of scatteredmerchantable trees.
Merchantable dead timber is appraised at the same rate as green timber of the same species unless it is clearly shown that the products manufactured from it command a lower market price or that logging costs are higher.
All live timber is marked or otherwise designated before cutting, and any merchantable timber used for logging improvements, such as houses, bridges, stables, etc.
Snags and diseased trees upon the sale area must usually be felled, whether merchantable or not, in order to remove fire menace and to check the spread of timber infestations and pests.
This measure not only eliminates undesirable trees from a hygienic standpoint, but it also makes it possible to utilize the merchantable timber left in undesirable trees, which would otherwise go to waste.
Nowhere else in the temperate zone is there such a variety of merchantable timber as in western Carolina and the Tennessee front of the Unaka system.
So long as that corporation continued to receive a vast quantity of merchantable goods without any disbursement for the purchase, so long it possessed wherewithal to continue a dividend to pay debts, and to contribute to the state.
The inland trade, from whence it derived a very great supply of silver and gold and many kinds of merchantable goods, was very considerable.
The price of a barrel of good merchantableherrings runs from seventeen and eighteen to four and five-and-twenty shillings; about a guinea at an average.
The area of forestry includes the larger remaining part of the great pine belt, together with a very heavy reserve of merchantable oak-timber.
The merchantable supply is not great, and the wood is therefore growing more valuable each year.
On the other hand, pine forests with the trees so thickly set as to make a clear, merchantable lumber require at least a century for maturity.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "merchantable" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.