1923-04: Alabama Farmer Newsletter, Auburn, Alabama, Volume 03, Issue 07

This is the volume III, issue 7, April 1923 issue of Alabama Farmer, a newsletter published monthly during the school year by students in the Agricultural Club of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University). The newsletter includes articles of interest related to agriculture and agricu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Agricultural Club
Format: Electronic
Published: Auburn University Libraries
Subjects:
Online Access:http://content.lib.auburn.edu/u?/stdtpubs,326
Description
Summary:This is the volume III, issue 7, April 1923 issue of Alabama Farmer, a newsletter published monthly during the school year by students in the Agricultural Club of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University). The newsletter includes articles of interest related to agriculture and agriculture education. Pages 114 and 115 are missing (or mis-labeled) from this issue. This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.Articles: War department to hold military examination; Dr. Ogden holds great revival; Porter loving cup to be awarded to the best all-round athlete; Students given meat-cutting demonstration; Barbour County farmers visit Auburn; Milk standards question coming up; Cook book published by Auburn ladies; Leon Bradley leaves; Alabama Conference of Social Workers; Aphids; Three acres that pay a handsome profit; [editorials]; Prospects of boll weevil eradication (editorial); Rural credits bill becomes law (editorial); Why are Alabama farmers so indifferent (editorial); The world is looking for men (editorial); Auburn graduate becomes head of history at Alabama; Auburn man is head of history department at Vanderbilt; What are you going to do?--Shall it be bird-shoot or bird-band?; Ag. engineering notes; Home economics notes; Epitaphs from tombs of poor home managers; What organized agriculture is doing; Ag. club notes; Diseases, bacteriology and other things; Manure disposal--A factor in the control of parasitic diseases of livestock; Baseball; The district agents (W. O. Winston, E. E. Binford; W. D. Barton); Peanut meal vs. tankage as a feed for hogs; Dairy sanitation; New method for determining the power of draft horses; Agricultural banquet a great success; Progress in dairying; Did you know?; L. T. Wells recently appointed county agent for Lee County; The horse and mule: Their indispensibility to mankind; Kitchen plans; A discussion of cooperative marketing;