INDEX. 



479 



Kansas experiments, 364. 



Kansas view, a, 431. 



Keep off the fields in winter, 



296. 



Keep hay from the air, 314. 

 Keep sheep from small pastures, 



333. 



Labor cost, the, 248. 



Lamb feeding- at Woodland, 397. 



Late cutting- damaging, 294. 



Late mowing- harmful, 91. 



Length of pasture season, 409. 



Less grain needed, 375. 



Life of Arg-entine alfalfa, 350. 



Life of a field, 94. 



Lifting to stack or mow, 304. 



Lime in England, 124. 



Lime in soils, 130. 



Lime the basis, 111. 



Limestone harmless, 127. 



Little grain needed, a, 387. 



Loading- on low wagons, 312. 



Location of fields, 452. 



Loss by weathering-, 369. 



Maintaining fertility, 401. 

 Maintains vigor, 388. 

 Maintenance of fertility, 110. 

 Making green or brown hay, 



300. 



Making horse hay, 377. 

 Management in the mow, 316. 

 Manure brings inoculation, 151. 

 Meal and cut hay, 416. 

 Meal and bran, 417. 

 Meeting competition, 384. 

 Melilotus or sweet clover, 166. 

 Melilotus in Kentucky, 170. 

 Methods of harvesting, 437. 

 Method of seeding in rows, 455. 

 Method of soiling, 333. 

 Methods of using manure, 157. 

 Method of using soil, 230. 

 Methods in use, 399. 

 Mineral phosphates, 181. 

 Mixing grasses with alfalfa, 343. 

 Moisture the limiting factor, 



249. 

 Money-making crop, a, 431. 



Natural phosphates, 181. 



Natural seeding of alfalfa, 105. 



Need of protein, 359. 



New work, 126. 



Next cutting, the, 90. 



Nodules on the roots, 165. 



No fear of pest, 169. 



No heaves nor colic, 374. 



No universal rule, 295. 



Not hard to cure. 309. 



Nurse crops in irrigated regions, 



06. 



Open center hay barn, the, 308. 

 Opening the cocks, 313. 

 Other factors, 432. 



Other forms of lime, 118. 

 Other functions of lime, 108. 

 Other nurse crops, 201. 

 Other sources of phosphorus. 



180. 

 Over-feeding with hay, 378. 



Pasture for horses, 345. 

 Pasturing and mowing, 337. 

 Penetration of roots in irri- 

 gated soils, 289. 

 Personal experience, 373. 

 Peruvian alfalfa, 83. 

 Phosphates on alfalfa, 185. 

 Phosphorus needed, 148. 

 Plowing for spring sowing, 195. 

 Pork industry prominent, the, 



413. 

 Possibilities of seed production 



in cultivated rows, 460. 

 Poverty of soil a factor, 253. 

 Preparation for crop, 210. 

 Preparation of the seedbed, 452. 

 Preparing the land for flooding. 



283. 

 Prevention of the drifting of 



soil, 454. 



Prevention of grass, best, 255. 

 Principles of seed production, 



447. 



Profit from the cows, 247. 

 Profits in actual practice, 246. 

 Protein the costly food element, 



358. 



Quantity of lime, 128. 



Rate of seed per acre, 216. 

 Rate of seeding and thickness 



of stand, 456. 

 Raw bone meal, 181. 

 Raw phosphatic rock for al- 

 falfa, 183. 



Raking the hay, 310. 

 Red clover and alfalfa, 268. 

 Red clover with alfalfa, 221. 

 Relative value of phosphate 



fertilizers, 182. 

 Repeating the mowing, 326. 

 Resisting temperature extremes, 



87. 



Results at Woodland, 384. 

 Right crop to leave for seed, 



the, 459. 



Right way, the, 419. 

 Roots, 85. 

 Rotation for a 300-acre farm 



240. 

 Rotation in the dairy region, 



246. 



Safety of alfalfa pasture, 379. 



Salting hay, 320. 



Sand lucerne, 79. 



Saving of labor cost in alfalfa 



growing, 243. 

 Searching for inoculation, 233. 



