AGRICULTURAL INDEX 



27 



Agricultural war book for 1916 



Descriptive note. Ag Gaz ol" Canada 3:397-9 

 My '16 



Production and thrift, 1916. 250p '16 Canada 

 Ag 

 Agriculture 



Adjustment of production to demand. C. K. 

 Knight. Penn State F 9:341+ Mr '16 



Alter the war. G: D. Black. Ohio P 141:374 Mr 

 9 'IS 



Agricultural problems, American and Euro- 

 pean. J. G. Schurman. N Y Ag Dept B 92: 

 89-97 F '17 



Agriculture for beginners. W. I. Chamber- 

 lain. Nat Stock & F 40:4, 38, 70, 100, 132, 

 180, 205, 228, 252 Ap 1-29, My 13-Je 3 '16 



American larmer's opportunity. A. W. Blair, 

 il Hoard's D 53:785+ Je 1 '17 



Botany and better agriculture. E. J. Petry. 

 Purdue Ag 11:21-2 Je '17 



Can the boy without much capital buy a farm 

 of high priced land? A. J. Bill. Banker-F 

 3:14 N '16 



Coimtry versus city. W. H. Wilson. {In Am. 

 sociological soc, Pub. v. 11, p. 12-20) 



Don t sell your breeding stock. F. R. Mar- 

 shall, il Am Sheep B & W 37:329-30 Je '17 



Effect of climate and soil upon agriculture. 

 R. R. Spafford. maps University Studies 

 (Nebraska Univ., Lincoln) v 16,nos 1, 2:91- 

 113 Ja-Ap '16 



Efiect of wars on trade and national indus- 

 try. J: B. C. Kershaw. Industrial Manage- 

 ment (6 E. 39th st, N.Y. 25c; 54:94-9 O '17 



Eugenics and agriculture. O. F. Cook. J He- 

 redity 7:249-54 Je '16 



Failures at farming. B. Howard, il Country 

 Gent 83:14 F 16 '18 



Farmer and the new conditions. G: D. Black. 

 Ohio F 142:579 D 14 '18 



Farming — a science, a business and a life. 

 H: Wallace. Wallaces' F 41:1656 D 22 '16 



Farming: industry, business, profession. C. 

 Poe. Prog F 31:407 Mr 18 '16 



Farms that came back. H. W. Collingwood. il 

 Country Life 29:36-7 Ja; 40-1 F; 50-1 Mr; 

 40-1 Ap; 30:44-5 My; 50-1 Je; 40-1 Jl; 40-1 

 Ag; 38-9 S; 40-1 O '16 



Geography of the world's agricultvire. V. C. 

 Finch and O. E. Baker. 14dp bibliog maps 

 '17 U S Ag 



Graphic summary of world agriculture; maps. 

 V. C. Finch and others. U S Ag Yearbooli 

 1916:531-53; Same. Separate 713 



Greater acreage or more per acre? F. M. 

 Lutts. Ohio F 139:672 My 12 '17 



Greater agriculture; a sequel. W. J. Maiden. 

 19th Century (249 W. 13th St., N.Y. 50c) 81: 

 171-92 Ja '17 



Home of their own. E. Davenport. Country 

 Gent 83:7+ Ag 10 '18 



How John and Mary may start farming. C. E. 

 Ladd. Country Gent 83:12 Je 29 '18 



Importance of continued cultivation. Coop 

 Manager & F 6:83 Jl "17 



Labor hears farmers' side. A. C. Townley. 

 Non-Partisan Leader (Box 575, St Paul, 

 Minn. $2.50 per yr.) 5:6-7+ D 10 '17 



Laying the foundation. A. H. Shaver. Wallaces' 

 F 4:2:500 Mr 16 '17 



Letters to a young farmer. W: H. Dean, 

 il Country Gent 81:1929, 1998, 2071; 82:11, 

 97 N 4, 18. D 2 '16, Ja 6, 20 '17 



Man and his relation to the soil. G. F. Jor- 

 dan. Coop Manager & F 6:77 Ja '17 



More per acre vs. inore acres. F. M. Lutts. 

 Ohio F 141:614 My 4' '18 



More soup stones. B. Howard. Country Gent 

 81:1969 N 11 '16 



New business of farming. F. D. Coburn. See 

 monthly numbers of Country Life in Amer- 

 ica from April to October 1916 



Organization of agriculture. {In Nat. conf. on 

 marketing and farm credits, 1916, p. 435- 

 504) $2 '17 C. W. Holman, sec, Madison, 

 WMs. 



Includes: Cost of living and the remedy, by 

 C: McCarthy; Basis of National agricul- 

 tural organization, by K. L. Butterfield; Or- 

 ganization and price making, by J. N. Mc- 

 Bride; Unification of American agriculture, 

 by C. S. Vrooman; National service institu- 

 tion for farmers, by C: A. Lyman; First aid 

 to farming business, by C: W. Holman; An- 



nouncement of National agricultural organi- 

 zation society 



Outstanding achievements in agriculture. 

 L. H. Bailey. J Ag (Quebec) 19:205 Mr '16 



Palate of civilized man and its influence on 

 agriculture. D: Fairchild. il J Fr Inst 

 (Franklin Inst., Philadelphia 50c) 185:299- 

 316 Mr '18 



Picture of the world's basic resources of re- 

 habilitation, maps Americas (55 Wall st, 

 N.Y.) 4:24-8 Jl '18 



Plain tale of a back to the lander; he reviews 

 his first year. Rural N Y 77:693, 718 My 18- 

 25 '18 



Plant ecology and its relation to agriculture. 

 W. G. Waterman. Science (Science Press, 

 Garrison, N.Y. 15c) n s 46:223-8 S 7 '17 



Practical pointers for increasing production, 

 il Ohio F 139:633-4 My 5 '17 



Pi-eserve and produce. Purdue Ag 12:30-4 

 O '17 



Relationship between the use of fertilizer and 

 labor efficiency. Coop Manager & F 6:72-3 

 Je '17 



Rhythm of civilization and agriculture. Wal- 

 laces' F 41:1656-7 D 22 '16 



School and farm of the future. B. T. Gallo- 

 way. J Ag (Quebec) 19:250 My '16 

 * Seven barrels on democracy. W: Haller. Co- 

 lumbia Univ Quar (Columbia Univ. Press, 

 N.Y. 30c) 20:170-5 Ap '18 



Soil feeding or crop feeding. M. Ryder. Coop 

 Manager & F 7:78 N '17 



Some observations on agricviltural work in 

 Egypt, America, and Japan. W. Roberts. Ag 

 J of India 12:583-7; 13:272-80 O '17, Ap "18 

 (to be cont) 



Soup stones in agriculture. B. Howard. Coun- 

 try Gent 81:1871 O 21 '16 



Stoiy of John and Mary; they want to farm, 

 but how can they afford it? E. Davenport. 

 Country Gent 83:15 Ad 13 '18 



Those good old days. M. E. Townsend. Nat 

 Stock & F 41:138 Ap 28 '17 



Value of agriculture in time of war. E. M. K. 

 Gelling. Scientific Am (233 Broadway, N.Y. 

 10c) 116:391 Ap 21 '17 



Veteran's memories. H. W. Phelps. Nat Stock 

 & F 40:958 D 23 '16 



Visit to Optimistic farm, N.J., in the good 

 vear 1940. O. W. Mapes. Rural N Y 75:1229, 

 1254 S 23-30 '16 



War time profits. P. T. Maw. J Bd Ag 24: 

 63-6 Ap '17 



Waste and the high cost of living. H. C. 

 Campbell. Hoard's D 53:969 Jl 13 '17 



What is coming to farming? G: A. Cosgrove. 

 Rural N Y 77:743 Je 1 '18 



What poor seed, plant or stock diseases and 

 boarder cows cost farmers. H. L. Russell. 

 Banker-F 4:12-13 N '17 



What the railroads are doing in the develop- 

 ment of farm and rural communities. J: H. 

 Peyton. {In Agricultural extension, p 103-6) 

 '16 National implement & vehicle assn., 76 

 W. Monroe St., Chicago 



Will our farmers become tenant class? T. 

 Roosevelt. Ohio F 140:314 O 13 '17 



Window box farmers: a caustic commentary 

 on this class of farmer advisors. S. W. 

 Charles. Farm Eng 6:12 F '18 



.Sfc also Animals, Predatory; Bacteriology; 

 Banks and agricultural development; Bee 

 culture; Bees; Birds, Injurious and bene- 

 ficial; Clearing of land; Cover crops; Crops; 

 Dairying; Diversified farming; Drainage; 

 Drug farming; Dry farming; Electricity on 

 the farm; Farmers; Farmers' institutes; 

 Farms; Feeding and feeding stuffs; Fertili- 

 zers; Floriculture; Forage plants; Forests 

 and forestry; Frost protection; Fruit cul- 

 ture; Gardening; Greenhouses; Insects, In- 

 jurious and beneficial; Irrigation; Irrigation 

 farming; Land; Land tenure; Live stock; 

 Manures; Market gardening; Marketing; 

 Pastures and meadows; Peasantry; Plant 

 breeding; Plants; Poultry; Ranges; Recla- 

 mation of land; Rotation of crops; Seeds; 

 Silage; Silos: Standing crop competitions; 

 Threshing; Tillage; Trees; Truck farming; 

 Vegetable gardening; also headings begin- 

 ning Agricultural, Agriculture, Farm, Soil, 

 Soils, and names of special products 



