404 STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. 



the laud was to be sown to corn, beets, beans, etc. Coe (2) 

 states that the results -obtained annually by hundreds of farm- 

 ers are sufficient proof that there is no foundation for such 

 fear. "When the first year's growth of sweet clover is to be turned 

 under for green manure it is recommended that the field be plowed after 

 the plants have made some growth the following spring rather than in 

 the fall of the year of seeding. When the first year's growth is plowed 

 under the same fall many of the plants will not be entirely covered, and 

 these will make a vigorous growth the following spring. When the 

 plowing is elelayed until the plants have made some growth the following 

 spring, no trouble will be experienced in eradicating them." 



PUBLICATIONS OF THE MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION 

 RELATING TO THE CULTURE OP LEGUMES. 



Alfalfa— Bulletin No. 97. 



Soybeans — Special Bulletin No. 100. 



Short Season Hay Crops — Circ. No. 42. 



Lime, Its Uses and Functions — Special Bulletin No. 91. 



The Use of Phosphorus — Kegular Bulletin No. 284. 



Soil Fertility— Kegular Bulletin No. 290. 



THE FOLLOWING I'URLICATIONS HAVE EEEN REFERRED TO IN THIS BTJLLETIN : 



(1) Coe, H. S. Sweet Clover: Utilization. 



1917— Farmers Bulletin 820, 1-32. 



(2) Sweet Clover: Growing The Crop. 



1917— Farmers Bulletin 797, 1-34. 



(3) Sweet Clover: Harvesting and Threshing The Seed. 



1917— Farmers Bulletin 83G, 1-23. 



(4) Drake, J. A., and Bundles, J. C. Sweet Clover On Corn Belt Farms. 



1919. Farmers Bulletin 1005, 1-28. 



(5) McCool, M. M., and Harmer, P. M. 



Some Kesults From Fertilizers On Muck Soils. 



1921 Quarterly Bulletin. 



Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station 4-2: 45-51. 



