Agronomy. 47 



B. CO-OIERAIIVE EXIEXIMENTS : 



3. Renewal of pastures without plow in j 



4. Meadows, same as 3. 



5. Similar to 2. 



6. Trial of meadow fescue. 



7. Alfalfa, use soil and manure on all. 



(a) Lime and no lime. 



(b) Inoculation. 



(c) And clover mixed. 



id) Seed in grain and after grain and after tillage only. 



8. Vetch and rye. 



9. Vetch in com. 



10. Soy beans in corn. 



11. Soy beans alone. 



12. Peas and oats for hay and soiling. 



13. Oat variety test. 

 14 Wheat variety test. 



15. Field bean variety test. 



16. Potato variety test. 



17. Buckwheat variety test. 



18. Buckwheat mixed variety test. 



19. Buckwlicat cultural test. 



20. Potato cultural test. 



21. Value of sunflower in silage. 



22. Spraying for wild mustard. 



2T,. Test of soil with litmus and lime. 



24. Fertilizer trial any crop. 



25. Profit or loss in growing any crop. 

 ' 26. F"arm labor. 



27. Use of more horse power on farms and other labor saving 



devices. 



28. Corn breeding. 



29. Potato breeding. 



3c. Breeding any other farm crop. 



IV. PERSONNEL. 



On Afay i, i(;o6, Profes.sor Samuel Eraser, Assistant Agronc- 

 nii.st, resii;ne'l t') acce])t a position of oreater res])onsibility. Pro- 

 fessor Eraser is a man of wide kno\vledj;e. a earefnl observer, and a 

 tliorou^h in.vestigator. Mr. Charles V. Clark, a graduate of the 

 University of Vermont, and a post graduate student with his major 

 in agronomy at Cornell, has been elected to succeed him. 



Professor T. L. Lyon was elected Professor of Experimental Ag- 

 ronomy and entered upon his duties the first of September, 1906. 



Professor Elmer O. Pippin, who had heretofore been detailed by 

 the Rureaii of -Soil? to give inrtrnction at Cornell, was elected Assist- 



