List
of Contents (1954-1959) |
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Spring
1959, Volume 6, No. 1 top>> |
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Pasture Plants Valuable in Cattle Nutrition (Anthony) |
| European Borer Will Not Put Alabama Out Of Corn-Growing Business (Eden) |
| When Should Corn Be Plant (Cope) |
| Backrubbers Cheap and Easy Method of Controlling Livestock Pests (Hays) |
Index to Articles Published in Highlights of Agricultural Research 1954-1958 |
| Too Many Deer in Alabama? (Adams) |
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Summer
1959, Volume 6, No. 2 top>> |
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Opportunities for Farm Profits (Lee, Jr., and Chastain)
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| Radioactive Insects? (Arthur) |
| Divided Applications of Fertilizer Increase Vegetable Yields (Ware and Johnson) |
| Time and Cost of Clearing Land (Stokes and Yeager) |
| Harvesting and Drying High-Moisture Corn (Rollo) |
| Dairying--A Way of Building Farm Business (Mayton and Blackstone) |
| Need for Water-Soluble Phosphorus in Fertilizer (Ensminger) |
| Fertilizer Use By Alabama Farmers (Belcher and Yeager) |
| Income Opportunities from Contract Egg Production (Miller and White) |
| White Clover Robbed by Soil Organism (Curl and Hansen) |
| New Vegetable Varieties (Isbell) |
| Blood Grouping Valuable in Animal Breeding (Johnson) |
| Resistant Crops, Ratations Economical Approach to Root-Knot Nematode Situation (Cairns and Minton) |
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Fall
1959, Volume 6, No. 3 top>> |
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Molds and Peanut Quality (Diener and Ward) |
| Warrior Vetch--Promising New Variety (Donnelly and Langford) |
| Tagged Phosphate--Useful Tool in Fertility Research (Ensminger) |
| Where Does Your Nitrogen Go? (Hiltbold) |
| Surplus Milk Can Be Profitable (Gissendanner and Blackstone) |
| The Sand Mountain Substation A Story of Research for Farms of the Area (McGraw and Gissendanner) |
| Poisonous Plants (Ward and Browne) |
| Pasture Know-How From Winter Grazing Trials (Patterson, Anthony, and Brown) |
| Fattening Cattle for Slaughter (Anthony, Starling, and Boseck) |
| Improving the Farm Woodlot (Whipple) |
| New Commercial Fruit Crops for Alabama (Harris and Barber) |
| How Samples Are Checked for Nematodes (Cairns and Minton) |
| The Honey Bee A Friend To Man (Blake, Jr., ) |
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Winter
1959, Volume 6, No. 4 top>> |
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Good Management Ensures Woodlot Harvest (Christen) |
| Fineness of Lime--A Key to Quality (Adams) |
| Rejuvenating Worn Out Soils (Cope, Jr.) |
| Insects--Factors in Pine Reforestation (Hyche) |
| Rural Housing Needs (Rose, Hurst, and Yeager) |
| The Tennessee Valley Substation An Account of the Valley's Farm Progress (Stevenson, Boseck, and Webster) |
| Pelleted Concentrates for Dairy Cows (Hawkins) |
| Restricted Feeding of Laying Hens (Cross, Ingram, and King) |
| Seedling Diseases Present Problems (Padgett and Lyle) |
| Zinc Deficiency A Common Disorder of Corn (Wear) |
| Plant Foliage for Decoration (Orr) |
| Winter Topcoast Fiber Preference (Riemer and Classcock) |
| Balance Sheet of Alabama Agriculture (Kern, Jr.) |
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Spring
1958, Volume 5, No. 1 top>> |
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Growing Demand for Fishing Permits on Farm Ponds (Prather) |
| Are Alabama Boll Weevils Getting Harder to Kill? (Arant and Burkhalter) |
| Which Meat Gets Shoppers' Dollars? (Marshall, Jr., and Danner) |
| Raise Heifers Cheaper by Cutting Out Grain (Autrey and Hawkins) |
| What's To Be Gained From Irrigation Of Peachs (Hagler and Carlton) |
| "Stimulighting" Hens A New Develoment for Upping Egg Production (King) |
| Planting Cotton on Time Urgent This Year (Cope, Jr.) |
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Summer
1958, Volume 5, No. 2 top>> |
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Life History of European Corn Borer Important (Eden) |
| Pasture Renovation (Patterson and Searcy) |
| Enjoy Cooler Summer Temperatures from Attic Ventilation (Grub) |
| Market Facilities Lagging Behind Peach Production? (Danner and Smith) |
| Terraclor Effective Control for Southern Bligh (Diener) |
| Boron Fed Layers Keeps Down Flies (Goodman) |
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Fall 1958,
Volume 5, No. 3 top>> |
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Opportunity to Grow (Wilson) |
| Do Antibiotics Increase Egg Production? (Ingram) |
| Disease Control of Small Grains Has Twofold Purpose (Lyle) |
| New Uses for Low Grade Sweetpotatoes (Harris and Barber) |
| Radioactive Herbicides Aid Research (Lyle) |
| Minor Elements for Fruits and Vetables (Wear and Hagler) |
| Winter Legume Crops for Green Manure (Cope, Jr.) |
| Peanuts Lose Weight in Storage (Yeager and Ward) |
| Insects Are Forests' Worst Enemy (Hyche) |
| Coastal Bermudagrass vx Alfalfa Hay as A Dairy Feed (Hawkins) |
| Are Farm Ponds Worth the Money? (Hutchinson and White) |
| Nematodes and Root-Rot Cause Seedling Damage (Hopper) |
| Worms--Cut Production of Chickens (Edgar) |
| Boll Weevils--Then and Now (Roy and Arant) |
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Winter
1958, Volume 5, No. 4 top>> |
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Farming on 30 Acres (Blackstone and Gissendanner) |
| A Quick Test for Seed Peanuts (Browne) |
| Selection--the Key to More Fall Lambs (Wiggins) |
| 2,4-D Effect On Oats (Searcy and Sharman) |
| Now Commercial Fish Farming (Swingle) |
| The Black Belt Substation Story--A Review of Services to the Region (McGraw and Smith) |
| Presto-Pi Liked by Comsumers in Study (Marshall, Jr.) |
| Lime for Good Stand and Yield of Cotton (Rouse and Adams) |
| Facts About the Imported Fire Ant (Arant, Hays and Speake) |
| Bean and Squash Yields Upped by Soil Fumigation (Johnson and Ware) |
| How Much Protein for Dairy Cows? (Hawkins) |
| New Buildings for Teaching and Research (Smith) |
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Spring 1957, Volume 4, No. 1 top>> |
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Soil and Quality Pine Seedlings (May and Gilmore) |
| Progress Made in Control of European Corn Borer (Eden) |
| Shoot for Heavier, Quality Calves Says Market Study (Danner) |
| Managed Calf Crop Increases Beef Profits (Anthony and Warren) |
| Sulfur Is A Necessary Element for Plant Life (Ensminger) |
| Wiley Sorgo--A New Variety for Quality Sirup Production (Langford) |
| Chemical Control of Johnson and Bermudagrass Now A Fact (Searcy) |
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Summer
1957, Volume 4, No. 2 top>> |
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Weed Strawberries with Chemicals (Livingston, Carlton and Hagler) |
| Plastic Hose A Labor Saver In Sprinkler Irrigation (Bouwer and Helms) |
| Perennial Summer Grasses for Upland Pastures (Langford) |
| Tanks Replace Milk Cans (Marshall and Yeager) |
| Fowl Pox A Constant Threat (Edgar and Bond) |
| Microbe vs Microbe (Curl) |
| Better Hogs Through Performance Testing (Squiers) |
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Fall
1957, Volume 4, No. 3 top>> |
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Which Cattlemen Keep Sharp Eyes on Performance Tests (Warren) |
| Save It! Why Haul It? (Swingle) |
| Milking Parlor Designed with Pocketbook in Mind (Grub) |
| Pasture or Concrete For Growing Hogs? (Tucker) |
| Control Soil Insects with Insecticide Fertilizer Mixtures (Eden) |
| More Molasse for Alabama (Cope, Jr.) |
| Saint or Sinner? (Davis and Haugen) |
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Winter
1957, Volume 4, No. 4 top>> |
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Wide-Open Market for High Quality Christmas Trees (Alvord) |
| New Process Produces Superior Jam and Jelly (Harris) |
| Quality Broilers at Lower Feed Costs (Cottier) |
| Work-Free Dairy Feeding (Rollo) |
| A Word of Caution About Insecticidal Residues (Blake, Jr.) |
| What's Your Woodlot Worth? (Christen) |
| Crimson Clover--Still the Top Forage Produce (Langford) |
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Spring
1956, Volume 3, No. 1 top>> |
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A Report from the Agricultural Experiment Station (Smith) |
| Fight Against Grain Insects Begins Now! (Eden) |
| Pecans Need Zinc (Hagler) |
| Weeds in Pastures Costly (Searcy) |
| Maintaining Enough Soil Potassium Importan (Rouse) |
| You Can Now Inoculate Against Coccidiosis (Edgar) |
| Cash In On Seasonal Price Changes (White and Yeager) |
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Summer
1956 Volume 3, No. 2 top>> |
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Quality Pastures Are Money Savers! (Evans) |
| New Remedy For Roundworm In Poultry (Edgar) |
| Systemics--May be Future Control of External Parasites (Adkins, Jr.) |
| A Single Design for Low-Cost Barns (Grub) |
| Improved Sorghums Produce High Yields of Silage and Syrup (Langford and Stokes) |
| Trend Toward Larger Farms in Alabama (Yeager) |
| Hogs Need Zinc Too! (Tucker) |
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Fall 1956,
Volume 3, No. 3 top>> |
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Nuclear Energy and Farm Research at Auburn (Wilson) |
| CRD--A Dreaded Poultry Disease Complex (McNeil) |
| Mechanical Harvest Takes Away Drudgery of Hand Picking (Corley) |
| Thin Or Not To Thin? (Livingston) |
| Important Fire Ant--On the March in Alabama (Blake, Jr.) |
| Soil Testing--Leading to Important Changes in Fertilization (Wilson) |
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Winter
1956, Volume 3, No. 4 top>> |
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Light for Broilers How Much? (Moore and Moultrie) |
| Alabama's Changing Agriculture (Yeager) |
| Sericea--Short As A Nutritive Roughage (Hawkins) |
| Nitrogen Not Guilty! (Roberts) |
| Wild Garlic and Onions Now Can be Controlled (Searcy) |
| Man-Made Weather for Cotton Research (Rouse and Sowell) |
| Fertility Important to Quality Production (Hagler and Carlton) |
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Spring
1955, Volume 2, No. 1 top>> |
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New Cottons an Corns Are Products of Years of Plant Breeding (Smith and McCain) |
| Systemics-- A New Approach to Fighting Ornamental Plant Insects (Arthur) |
| Nematodes--Tiny But Mighty Research Under Way Points to Developement of Better and Cheaper Controls (Cain) |
| Planting and Cultivating Are Important Steps in Cotton Mechanization (Corley, Stokes, and Kummer) |
| Chemical Weed Control in Cotton Cuts Hoe Labor 80-100% (Searcy) |
| Even More Meat Per Pound of Feed May be Expected from Poultry Nutrition Research (Ingram) |
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Summer
1955, Volume 2, No. 2 top>> |
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Cotton Insects Can Cost State's Growers $50 Million in A Single Year (Arant) |
| Cotton Insecticides--Are of Little Value If Not Properly Applied (Corley, Stokes, and Kummer) |
| Seed Treatment Protects Seedling Oats Against Disease and Results in Better Stands (Lyle) |
| No Stoop--Not Squat! V-Type Parlor Cut Milking Time 25% Per Cow (Yeager, White and Alvord) |
| Thirty Years Research Has Provided Timber Owners Better Methods for Higher Returns (DeVall) |
| Freeze 'EM' Surplus Eggs Can Be Processed for Home Use and for Market (Goodman) |
| Believe in Signs? Descolored Camellia Leaves Indicate Deficiency of Plant Nutrients (Orr) |
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Fall 1955,
Volume 2, No. 3 top>> |
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Even on Abandoned Crop Land Pines Pay (Livingston and Carothers) |
| Results Tell the Time for Planting Oats (McCain and Selman) |
| Hybrid Vigor at Lower Cost (Moultrie, Cottier and King) |
| Grow or Buy Nitrogen for Corn? (Cope, Jr.) |
| Peanuts--A Favorite Delicacy of Stored Food Insects (Hyche and Arthur) |
| What Happens To Peanuts During Storage? (Ward, Jr., Yeager, and Butt) |
| Research Points to Arrest of Plant World Thugs Threatening White Clover Curl |
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Winter
1955, Volume 2, No. 4 top>> |
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Today's Research and Tomorrow's Demands (Wilson) |
| Early Peaches Mean More Profits for Growers (Hagler and Johnson) |
| Soil Tests--the Key to More Profits from Peanuts (Scarsrook and Cope, Jr.) |
| Sheep on the Comeback in Alabama (Martin) |
| Fumigants--Destroy Soil Pests (Lyle, Cairns and Smith) |
| Leucosis the Killer of 50 Million Hens A Year in the U.S (Cottier, Moultrie and King) |
| Productivity--The Basis of Farm Land Values (Alvord) |
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Spring 1954, Volume 1, No. 1 top>> |
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Plant and Animal Breeding What It Means to the Farmer (Simmons)
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| Higher Milk Production from Better Sired Replacements (Autrey) |
| Eighteen Years' Breeding Behind/Auburn Strain White Leghorn (Moultrie, King, and Cottier) |
| New Alabama White Clover Now in the Making (Gibson) |
| Better Yields Result from Crop Variety Testing Program (Rogers) |
| Trees Can Be No Better than Their Parents (Garin and May) |
| Cooperation Speeds Up New Corn Hybrids to Farmers (McCain) |
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Summer 1954, Volume 1, No. 2 top>> |
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Research Units Form System Serving All of Alabama (Smith)
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| Insect Damage to Stored Corn Can Be Greatly Reduced (Eden) |
| Research Results Show Farm Storage Is Safe and Profitable (Butt) |
| Fall and Winter Grazing for Alabama (Langford) |
| How Cotton Yields Are Affected by Depth of Seedbed Preparation (Corley, Stokes, and Kummer) |
| Portable Pens Superior for Raising Calves (Autrey) |
| More Eggs for Market in the Fall (King) |
| Factors Affecting Farm Prices of Livestock and Livestock Products (Lanham) |
| Beef Breeders Aided by Station's Sire-Testing Program (Gregory) |
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Fall 1954, Volume 1, No. 3 top>> |
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| Superior Hogs Sought in Breeding Program (Squiers) |
| A More Tasty, Nurtitious Sericea Is Now Pssible (Donnelly and Hawkins) |
| Soil Testing Makes It Possible for Alabama Farmers to Get the Most from Their Fertilizer Dollars (Wilson) |
| Land Selection and Preparation Are First Steps in Cotton Mechanization (Corley, Stokes and Kummer) |
| Egg Profits or Losses? Profitable Operation Hinges On Good Management and Marketing Practices (Blackstone and Henderson) |
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Winter 1954, Volume 1, No. 4 top>> |
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