[Continued from page 2 of cover. 



121. Miscellaneous Papers. l',H)8. 



122. Curlv-Top, a I^isease of SuRar Beets. 19IIS. 



12:j. The Decay of Oranges in Transit from ("alifornia. 1908. 



124. The Prickly Pear as a Farm Crop. 190S. 



125. Dry-Land Olive Culture in Norlhern Africa. 1908. 

 120. Nomenclature of the Pear. 1908. 



127. The Improvement of Mountain Meadows. 1908. 



128. Egyptian Cotton in the Southwestern United States. 190S. ■ 



129. Bariuiu , a Cause of the Loco-Weed Disease. 1908. 



130. Dry-Land Agriculture. 1908. 



131. Miscellaneous Papers. 1908. 



133. Peach Kernels, etc., as By-products of the Fruit Industry. 1908. 



134. InQuence of Soluble Salts upon Leaf Structure of Wheat, etc. 1908. 



135. Orchard Fruits in Virginia and the South Atlantic States. 1908. 

 13('>. Methods ami Causes of Evolution. 1908. 



137. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 14. 1909. 



138. Production of Cigar-Wrapper Tobacco in Connecticut Valley. 1908. 



139. American Medicinal Barks. 1909. 



140. "Spineless" Prickly Pears. 1909. 



141. Miscellaneous Papers. 1909. 



142. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 15. 1909. 



143. Principles and Practiial Methods of Curing Tobacco. 1909. 



144. Apple Blotch, a Serious Disease of Southern Orchards. 1909. 



145. Vegetation AtTected by Agriculture in Central America. 1909. 

 14C. The Superiority of Line Breeding over Narrow Breeding. 1909. 



147. Suppressed and Intensified Characters in Cotton Ilyl rids. 1909. 



148. Seecfs and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 10 1909. 



149. Diseases of Deciduous Forest Trees. 1909. / 



150. Wild Alfalfas and Clovers of Sileiia. l'X9. 



151. Fruits Recommended for Culti^ at ion. 1909. 



152. Loose Smuts of Barley and Wheat. l'^09. 



153. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 17. 1909. 



154. Farm Water Supplies of Minnesota. Pj09. 



155. The Control of Black-Hot of the Ciiape. 1909. 



156. A Study of Diversity in EgjiJtian t otton. li:09. 



157. The Truckee-Carson Experiment Farm. 1909. 



158. The Root-Rot of Tobacco Caused by Thielavia Basicola. 1909. 



159. Local Adjustment of Cotton Varieties. 1909. 

 100. Italian Lemons and Their By-prodi.cts. 1909. 

 Itil. A New Type of Indian Corn from China. 1909. 



162. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 18. 1909. 



103. Varieties of American Upland Cotton. 1910. 



104. Promising Root (^rops for the South. 1910. 



105. Application of I'rinciples of Heredity to Plant Breeding. 1909. 

 100. The Mistletoe Pest in the Southwest. 1910. 



107. New Methods of Plant Breeding. I'JIO. 



108. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 19. 1909. 



109. Variegated Alfalfa. 1910. 



170. Traction Plowing. 1910. 



171. Some Fungous Diseases of Economic Importance. 1910. 



172. Grape Investigations in Vinifera Regions. 1910. 



173. Seasonal Nitrification as Iniluenced by Crops and Tillage. 1910. 



174. The Control of Peach Brown-Rot and Scab. 1910. 



175. The History and Distriliution of Sorghum. 1910. 



170. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 20. 1910. 



177. A Protected Stock Range in .Vrizona. 1910. 



17S. Improvement of the Wheat Crop in California. 1910. 



179. The Florida Velvet Bean and Related Plants. 1910. 



180. Agricultural and Botanical Explorations in I'alestine. 1910. 



181. The Curly-Top of Beets. 1910. 



182. Ten Years' E.xperience with the Swedish Select Oat. 1910. 

 1S3. Field Studies of the Crown-Gall of the Grape. 1910. 



184. The Production of Vegetable Seeds: Sweet Corn ami Garden Peas and Beans. 1910. 



185. Cold Resistance of Alfalfa and Some Factors Influencing It. 1910. 



18G. Field Studies of the Crown-Gall and Hairy-Root of the Apple I'ree. 1910. 



187. .\ Study of Cultivation Methods and Crop Rotation for the (ireat I'lams Area. 1910. 



188. Dry Farming in Relation to Rainfall and Evaporation. 1910. 



189. The Source of the Drug Dioscoiea. 1910. 



190. Orchard Green-Manure Crops in California. 1910. 



191. The Value of First-Generation Hybrids in Corn. 1910. 



192. Drought Resistance of the Olive in the Southwestern Slates. 1911. 



193. Experiments in Blueberry Culture. 1910. 



194. Summer Apples in the Middle -Vtlantic States. 1911. 



195. The Production of Volatile Oils and Perfumery Plants in the United States. 1910. 

 190. Breeding Drought-Re.sistant Forage Plants for the (ireat Plains Area. 1910. 



197. The Soy Bean: History, Varieties, and Field Studies. 1910. 



198. Dimorphic Branches in Tropical Crop Plants. 1911. 



199. Determination of Deterioration of Maize, with Incidental Reference to Pellagra. 1910. 

 200.,Breeding New Types of Egyptian Cotton. 1910. 



201. Natural Vegetation as an indicator of the Capabilities of Land for Crop Production in the Great 



Plains Area. [In press.) 



202. The Seedling-Inarch and Nurse-Plant Methods of Propagation. (In press.) 



203. The Importance and Improvement of the Grain Sorghimis. 1911. 



204. Agricultural E.xplorations in the Fruit and Nut Orchards of China. (In press.) 



205. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 21. (In press.) 



206. The Blister Rust of White Pine. (In press.) 



207. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 22. (In press.) 



208. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 23. ( In press.) 



209. Grimm Alfalfa and Its Utilization in the Northwest. (In press.) 



210. Hindi Cotton in Egypt. (In press.) 



211. Bacteriological Studies of the Soils of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation Project. (In press.) 



212. A Study of Farm Equipment in Ohio. (In press.) 

 213 



