CRIMSON CLOVER 373 



plant a crop of cotton or corn. It adds a large quantity of 

 vegetable matter to the soil and also materially increases 

 the supply of nitrogen. It is seldom used as a pasture crop, 

 but is occasionally cut for hay. The hairy stems and leaves 

 are somewhat objectionable, and when the hay forms a large 

 part or all of the ration of an animal, "hair balls" are some- 

 times formed in the stomach, giving considerable trouble. 



SUPPLEMENTARY READING 



Fanners' Bulletins: 



260. Seed of Red Clover and Its Impurities. 



306. Dodder in Relation to Farm Seeds. 



323. Clover Farming on the Jack Pine Lands of the North. 



353. Commercial Clover Seed, pp. 5-7. 



382. The Adulteration of Forage-Plant Seeds. 



451. Clover Growing, pp. 7-10. 



455. Red Clover. 



Cyclopedia of American Agriculture, Vol. II, pp. 232-239. 

 Burkett's Farm Crops, pp. 102-103; 120-121; 162-163; 197-202; 262-263. 

 Hunts' Forage and Fiber Crops in America, pp. 140-173. 

 Shaw's Clovers and How To Grow Them, pp. 1-113; 194-278. 

 Voorhees' Forage Crops, pp. 231-252. 



