1924-11: Alabama Farmer Newsletter, Auburn, Alabama, Volume 05, Issue 02

This is the volume V, issue 2, November 1924 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...

Full description

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,854
Description
Summary:This is the volume V, issue 2, November 1924 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. This issue also includes the volume 1, issue 2, November 1924 issue of The Campus Farmer newsletter. 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: Will wood give way to stone?; Tractor reduces mule power; Blueberry in Alabama and the nation; News of the Alumni; Successful sons; [editorials]; Efficiency and the farm plant (editorial); Stop that leak (editorial); Hiram Smith's farm philosophy (editorial); The county agents (editorial); Foot and mouth disease; Home economics--Fashion hints; Mattress frauds and laws; Auburn home economics club; Experiments with melilotus; Choctaw County wins; The Campus Farmer (Pasman apple shows promise for Alabama; Auburn represented at fat stock show; Is Auburn growing?--Survey of college and town answers; Pep, fun and enthusiasm feature ag. club meetings; Millinery school for agents held in Auburn); Sports (Pitts' Warriors of plains calm mighty Carolina tribe; Hutsell calls for freshmen trackmen; Auburn downs Howard in village of plains; Basketball practice); A word to the rats (editorial); Auburn's Progressiveness (editorial); Unmarked and unscratched (editorial); Heard on the campus (editorial); Professor J. F. Duggar works on winter legumes; Practice House opens; Vet. college obtains dogs; Harmless snakes in zoology department; Dr. Covington lectures;