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A few years since great numbers of the report were left in the store room because the contingent fund was not sufficient to pay postage and express charges.

Since we have adopted the plan of distributing through the farmers institutes, the supply is exhausted before the close of the year, and we could profitably use ten thousand copies to meet the increasing demand for these reports.

The report of Farmers' Institutes embraces 327 pages, and to meet the urgent calls for it, ten thousand copies extra, in pamphlet form, have been issued.

The increasing interest in agricultural and live stock improvement among the tax payers and producers is a gratifying feature in the work of the Board of Agriculture, and it is unfortunate that the reports can not appear earlier.

The statistical matter in this report is not so full as in former reports, because the returns of assessors, on which our acreage of cereals is based, are not available at the time we are required by law to furnish copy for the printer.

The number of institutes reported is greater than in any former year, and there are from several counties more petitions for institutes than can be held under the present division of the per capita fund.

A financial statement, showing receipts and disbursements by the Board for institutes, will be found on pages 346-349. The reports of expenditures by local societies will be found on pages 350-353.

By the courtesy and help of the officers of the Agricultural Experiment Station, and of the presidents and some of the professors of the three State universities, and by careful arrangement of circuits to save travel, the Board has been enabled to hold more institutes, at less cost than has any other State, notwithstanding in some western states the speakers and officers of their institutes are furnished free transportation, while in Ohio our speakers pay the railways fuil rates.

The increasing use of commercial fertilizers has enlarged the work of sampling, analyzing and reporting fertilizers. The demand for the fertilizer reports has made it necessary to increase our issue, and yet many general agents are unable to get as many copies as they have agents.

The State Fair was very successful and gave the Board means for painting buildings and making other needed improvements on the Fair Grounds, which are said to be the most complete and attractive in the country.

All of which is very respectfully submitted.

L. N. BONHAM, Secretary.

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Annual Report Ohio Experiment Station. (See Appendix 1, A.)

Annual Report Board of Live Stock Commissioners. (See Appendix 4, A.)

Annual Report Dairy and Food Commissioner. (See Appendix 5, A.)

Annual Report State Horticultural Society. (See Appendix 9, A.)

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Best Manner of Operating a Small Farm, and Advantages of Small Farming,

by L. D. Moore

394-395

Bishop, T. L., on Preparation of the Land for a Wheat Crop..

420-422

Brigham, J. H., on Roads and Road-making

486-491

Brown, Waldo F., Incidental Profits of the Farm..........

370-373

Bohl, Mrs. M. S., Necessity of the Farmers' Library..

Board of Live Stock Commissioners. (See Appendix 4, А.)

Bundy, D. C., on The Present Situation of the Farmer.........

Butter Dairying, by Mrs. N. H. Tillman

PAGE

503-504

407-411

446-449

Buker, D., on Cattle and Sheep vs. Corn and Wheat on Hill Land (for Profit)... 458-459

C

Cattle and Sheep vs. Corn and Wheat on Hill Land (for Profit), by D. Buker... 458-459
Clark, Dr. J. H., Protect the Forest..........

478-482

Committees......

39

Coler, E. E., address by, on The Pig for the Farmer and how to Produce it
Clover as a Feed, Green and Dry, address by Wm. Scott.............

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Coach Horses, address by J. B. McLaughlin

142-143

Cowden, W. N., address by, on Reforms Needed in our Methods of Handling

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Dairyman's Cow and Her Keep, address by Wm. H. Gilbert..........
Dairy test, Ohio State Fair.............

112-117

272-276

Dairy and Food Commissioner, annual report. (See Appendix 5, A.)

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Estes, J. M, on Tobacco-Instructions for its Cultivation and Curing....

439-443

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Fair, Dr. W. C., address by, on How to Breed Trotting and Pacing Horses to
make Money..........

130-133

Farmers' Institutes in Counties, report on

339-523

State Secretary's report..

339-342

Institute law

342-343

Rules of State Board

343-345

Financial statement..

346-349
501-503
76
43-45

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Success vs. Failure-Why Some Succeed While Others Fail, by G. W. Whipp 379-381

Agricultural Progress, by J. R. Woodward.......

381-385

The Pride of the Farm, by W. H. Evans

385-388

To Whom, How, When and Where Shall the Farmer Market his Products?

by H. H. Kirk.......

388-394

Best Manner of Operating a Small Farm and Advantages of Small Farm-

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How to Keep the Boys on the Farm, by C. T. Northrop............

402-407

The Present Situation of the Farmer, by D. C. Bundy.

407-411

The Dreamland Farmer, by J. G. Ickes.......

411-415

Some of the Secrets of Successful Wheat Culture, by T. B. Terry.

416-420

Preparation of the Land for a Wheat Crop, by T. L. Bishop

420-422

The Use of Rye on the Farm, by J. M. Jamison......

422-425

Points of Advantage in Crop Culture, by J. F. Keller........

425-431

Clover and Fertilizers, by V. E. Wampler.........

432-435

Our Corn Crop-Some Essentials in the Cultivation and Management of a

Corn Crop, by E. A. Peters.........

436-438

Tobacco-Instructions for its Cultivation and Curing, by J. M. Estes......... 439-443

Onions-How to Raise Them, by J. Kleinfelder...

443-445

Butter Dairying, by Mrs. N. H. Tillman

446-449

At What Age Should Hogs Intended for Breeders be Brought to Maturity,

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Cattle and Sheep vs. Corn and Wheat on Hill Land (for Profit), by D. Buker 458-459

Ensilage, by E. M. Strong........

460-462

Spraying to Destroy Insects and to Prevent Fungous Diseases in Plants, by

W. J. Green.......

463-465

Principles and Practice of Pruning, by W. W. Farnsworth....

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The Present System of Road-work a Failure, and a Remedy Suggested, by

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The Country Home and its Influence, by Mrs. E. J. Branson........

495-497

A. Poem, by Mrs. S. E. Coffman......

497-498

A Little Thank-Offering, by Mrs. Geo. Mentzer........

499-501

What a Farmer's Wife Should Know, by Mrs. H. Lorgbon......

SELECTED PAPERS-Continued-

PAGE

Necessity of the Farmer's Library, by Mrs. M. S. Bohl...............
Literature, by M. G. Townsend.......

503-504

504-506

What Shall our Young People Read? by Miss A. C. Ackley.........

506-509

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Looking on the Practical Side of Life, by Mrs. S. O. Eggert...

516-519

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Farnsworth, W. W., on Principles and Practice of Pruning

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Grain Feeding of Young Things vs. Starving as a Means of Toughening, dis-
cussion.....

140-141

Green and Dry Clover as a Feed, by Wm. Scott.......

89-92

Green, W. J., on Spraying to Destroy Insects and to Prevent Fungous Diseases
of Plants.....

463-465

Gilbert, Wm. H., address by, the Dairyman's Cow and her Keep...............

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How to Produce the Pig for the farmer, address by E. E. Coler

83-84

How to Breed Trotting and Pacing Horses to make Money, address by Dr. W.

C. Fair

130-133

How the Small Farm has Paid, by G. S. Penfield

....

396-398

How to Keep the Boys on the Farm, by C. T. Northrop..........

402-407

Horticultural Society. (See Appendix 9, A.)

I

Irrigation, discussion

Importance of Sheep Husbandry to the Farmers of Ohio, address by Hon. Wm.

Lawrence

Institute speakers and their topics...........

Incidental Profits of the Farm, by Waldo F. Brown..

Ickis, J. G., on the Dreamland Farmer

J

Jamison, J. M., on the use of Rye on the Farm..

K

Karb, Hon. Mayor, address by, at Farmers' Convention.................
Kellerman, Prof. W. A., address by, on Rusts and Smuts of Wheat

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