THE STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
made its twenty-ninth annual report in a volume of 560 pages, containing information of value relative to the soil and climate of our State; the amount and value of our products for a term of years: the State, County and District Exhibitions; the meetings of the ten Industrial Associations having headquarters in the Agricultural Rooms, and discussions as to the best means to promote the development of our material resources. Not least in interest is an appendix containing a report of the meeting of the Indian Pioneer Society, an a list of persons who have resided in the State during its history, suggesting that valuable witnesses yet live whose testimony should be perpetuated in permanent form to interest and instruct the present and coming generations.