1923-10: Alabama Farmer Newsletter, Auburn, Alabama, Volume 04, Issue 01

This is the volume IV, issue 1, October 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 agric...

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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,529
Description
Summary:This is the volume IV, issue 1, October 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 12 and 13 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: Opportunities for an agricultural graduate; Feeding for milk production; Winter cover crops; Miss Peyton goes to Europe--Alabama home demonstration agent highly honored;Smith-Hughes work paying financially; Influence of weight of feeder pigs on quality of carcass; The modern farm; The man's the farm; A World's Dairy Congress to be held; Additions to animal husbandry department; Something to think about (editorial); The new staff says: (editorial); Welcome, Ag. 'rats' (editorial); The farmer must know how to sell as well as grow (editorial); News of alumni (With last year's ag. grads); General news; Athletics (Auburn's football schedule for year); Yes, we should have no tractorless farms; Inoculating legumes; New dean of education; The campus echo (News in brief; Mr. Myers goes to Harvard; Mr. Ware comes to horticulture department; Animal husbandry news; No let-up in 'Y' work this year; Agricultural staff do post-graduate work; Home economic notes); Origin of imported forage plant seeds; How do you stand?; The increase in skim-milk powder; General Robert L. Bullard speaks; Boys' dormitory almost completed; The real Farmer staff; Jokes;