400 STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE 



Dk. K. C. Kedzte, Professor of Chemistry, Agricultural College: 



1— Wheats for Michigan. 



2— Forecasts of frosts. 



8— The simpler chemistry of the soil. 



4— Soil exhaustion. 



5— Feeding the soil. 

 ruoF. F. S. Kedzie, Adjunct Professor of Chemistry, Agricultural Collegi': 



1— Keeping up soil fertiltity.—what it means and how it is done. 



2— Some interesting points about soils. 

 C E. ^Marshall. Bacteriologist. Experiment Station, Agricultural College: 



Bacteria and their importance in our everyday life. 

 Pkof. EiHTii McDerjiott, Professor of Domestic Economy, Agricultural College: 



Demonstration lectures in cooking. 

 Prof. H. W. Mumford, Assistant Professor of Agriculture, Agricultural College: 



1— Ten points in taking care of farm stock. 



2— Why and how should the farmer be educated? 

 Peof. C. D. Smith, Professor of Agriculture and Director of Experiment Station, 

 Agricultural College: 



1— The home dairy vs. the factory. 



2— Stall fixtures. 



3— Forage crops and how to raise them. 



4— The home dairy. 



5— The art of buttermaking. 



6— Principles of stock feeding. 

 Dr. J. L. Snyder, President Agricultural College: 



Practical education. 

 Prof. L. R. Taft, Professor of Horticulture, Agricultural College: 



1— Diseases of small fruits. 



2— Diseases of pome fruits. 



3 — Diseases of stone fruits. 



4 — Treatment of plant diseases. 

 G. H. True, Instructor in Dairying, Agricultural College: 



1 — Making butter in a dairy of less than five cows. 



2— Better butter cows and how to get them. 



3— Feeding the dairy herd in dry years. 

 Prof. H. K. Vedder, Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering, Agricultural 

 College: 



Bridges and culverts for country highways. 

 Prof. C. F. Wheeler, Assistant Professor of Botany. Agricultural College: 



1— Some bad weeds and how to eradicate them. 



2— Smuts and rusts of grains. 



3— Grasshoppers. 

 Prof. P. B. Woodworth, Assistant Professor of Physics, Agricultural College: 



1— Water in physics. 



2 — Water in the air. 



3— AVater in the soil. 



4— Water in plants. 



II. 



The following were employed especially for Institute work, and were 

 paid a per diem and expenses while on such work: 



Hex. Wm. Bael. Hamburg: 



1— Value of improved stock and how to improve it. 



2 — How I grow wheat. 



3— Maintaining soil fertility. 



4— Does improved stock pay the average farmer today? 



5 — Business sense in farming. 



C — How I grow corn. 



