Farmers' BulletinU.S. Government Printing Office, 1921 - Agriculture |
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Aberdeen substation acre alfalfa Argentine ant average barley beetles birds black locust black walnut board feet breeding brood coops Bulletin bushels cents Chief clean coal tar corn cover creosote crop crow's Department of Agriculture diameter disease dockage early especially farm income farm woodland Farmers FEATHER LICE feathers feet feet feet fence posts fertile eggs fire foreign material forest forestry grade grown growth hatching head lice Idaho inches infested injury insects irrigated land Kherson killed lice longleaf pine mash mature fowls method mildew mites nest nurse crop oats planting plow poison Poultry Clubs poultry house pounds profitable protection quantity roosts season seed sieve sirup slash pine soil South southern Idaho spray spring sprouting stand Standardbred timber treated trees UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT usually Varieties of Chickens Washington West North Central wheat white pine winter wood yield young
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Page 11 - Army; the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, United States Department of Agriculture...
Page 23 - Director of Information MS EISENHOWER. Director of Extension Work ML WILSON. Director of Finance WA JUMP. Director of Personnel ROY F. HENDRICKSON. Director of Research JAMES T. JARDINE. Director of Marketing MILO R.
Page 23 - Forest Service, EARLE H. CLAPP, Acting Chief. Bureau of Home Economics, LOUISE STANLEY, Chief. Library, CLARIBEL R. BARNETT, Librarian. Bureau of Plant Industry, EC AUCHTER, Chief. Rural Electrification Administration. HARRY SLATTERY, Administrator. Soil Conservation Service, HH BENNETT, Chief.
Page 18 - BEDS. season. Some, including the seedlings of black cherry, cucumber tree, yellow poplar, basswood, sugar maple, red gum, black gum, red mulberry, birch, and beech, may have to remain in the seed beds two years or more. In digging them from a farm nursery the spade is the most effective tool. Care should be taken to injure the roots as little as possible, and to secure practically all of them. Injured portions of the roots should be cut off. with a sharp knife. The seedlings should not be dug until...
Page 23 - Solicitor MASTIN G. WHITE. Land Use Coordinator MS EISENHOWER. Office of Plant and Operations ARTHUR B. THATCHER, Chief. Office of CCC Activities FRED W. MORRELL, Chief. Office of Experiment Stations JAMES T. JARDINE, Chief. Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations LESLIE A. WHEELER, Director. Agricultural Adjustment Administration RM EVANS, Administrator. Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering - HENRY G.
Page 11 - Chief. Bureau of Plant Industry WILLIAM A. TAYLOR, Chief. Forest Service RY STUART, Chief. Bureau of Chemistry and Soils HG KNIGHT, Chief. Bureau of Entomology CL MARLATT, Chief. Bureau of Biological Survey PAUL G. REDINGTON, Chief. Bureau of Public Roads THOMAS H. MACDONALD, Chief. Bureau of Agricultural Economics NILS A. OLSEN, Chief. Bureau of Home Economics LOUISE STANLEY, Chief. Plant Quarantine and Control Administration. LEE A.