List of Contents (1954-1959)

1959 Spring Summer Fall Winter

1958 Spring Summer Fall Winter

1957 Spring Summer Fall Winter

1956 Spring Summer Fall Winter

1955 Spring Summer Fall Winter

1954 Spring Summer Fall Winter

 
 
<< back Spring 1959, Volume 6, No. 1                       top>>

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)


<< back Summer 1959, Volume 6, No. 2                    top>>

Opportunities for Farm Profits (Lee, Jr., and Chastain)

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)


<< back Fall 1959, Volume 6, No. 3                            top>>

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., )


<< back Winter 1959, Volume 6, No. 4                       top>>

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.)


<< back Spring 1958, Volume 5, No. 1                       top>>

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.)


<< back Summer 1958, Volume 5, No. 2                    top>>

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)


<< back Fall 1958, Volume 5, No. 3                            top>>

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)


<< back Winter 1958, Volume 5, No. 4                       top>>

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)


<< back Spring 1957, Volume 4, No. 1                        top>>

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)


<< back Summer 1957, Volume 4, No. 2                    top>>

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)


<< back Fall 1957, Volume 4, No. 3                            top>>

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)


<< back Winter 1957, Volume 4, No. 4                       top>>

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)


<< back Spring 1956, Volume 3, No. 1                      top>>

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)


<< back Summer 1956 Volume 3, No. 2                     top>>

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)


<< back Fall 1956, Volume 3, No. 3                          top>>

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)


<< back Winter 1956, Volume 3, No. 4                       top>>

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)


<< back Spring 1955, Volume 2, No. 1                       top>>

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)


<< back Summer 1955, Volume 2, No. 2                    top>>

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)


<< back Fall 1955, Volume 2, No. 3                            top>>

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


<< back Winter 1955, Volume 2, No. 4                      top>>

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)

 

<< back Spring 1954, Volume 1, No. 1                      top>>

Plant and Animal Breeding What It Means to the Farmer (Simmons)

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)

 

<< back Summer 1954, Volume 1, No. 2                   top>>

Research Units Form System Serving All of Alabama (Smith)

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)

 

<< back Fall 1954, Volume 1, No. 3                           top>>
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)

 

<< back Winter 1954, Volume 1, No. 4                    top>>
Titles Unavailable

 



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