620 ANNUAL REPORTS OF DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



New Farmers' Bulletins issued during the fiscal year ended June SO, /9/7— Continued. 



Bulle- 

 tin No. 



418 



419 

 420 

 421 

 422 

 423 

 424 

 425 

 426 

 427 

 428 

 429 

 430 

 431 

 432 

 433 

 434 

 435 

 43G 

 437 

 438 

 439 

 440 

 441 

 442 

 443 

 444 

 445 

 446 

 447 

 448 

 449 

 450 

 451 

 462 

 453 



466 



Title of bulletin. 



Game I.aws for 1910 - 



Kxperiment Station Work — LIX 



Oats: Distribution ami Uses 



Control of Blowing Soils 



Demonstration Work on Southern Farms 



Forest N urserie^ for Schools 



Oats: G rowing the Crop 



Kxperiment Station \\ ork— LX 



Canning I'eaches on the Farm 



Barley Culture in the Southern Slates 



Testing Farm Seeds in the Home and In the Rural School 



Industrial Alcohol: Sources and manufaciure 



ICxjieriment Station Work— LXI 



The Peanut 



How a City Family Managed a Farm 



Cabbage 



The Home Production of Onion Seed and Sets 



Experiment Station Work — LXII 



Winter Oats for the South 



A System of Tenant Farming and Its Results 



Hog 1 1 ouses 



.\nthrax, with Special Reference to Its Suppression 



Spraying Peaches for the Control of Brovvn-Uot, Scab, and Curculio. 



Lespedeza, or Japan Clover 



The Treatment of Bee Diseases 



Barley: Growing the Crop 



Remedies and Preventives Against Mosquitoes 



Marketing Eggs Through the Creamery 



The Choice of Crops for Alkali Land 



Bees. 



Total 

 number 

 of copies. 



Better G rain-Sorghum Crops 



Rabies or I i y drophobia 



Some Facts About Malaria 



Experiment Station Work— LXIII 



Capons and Caponizing 



Danger of General Spread of the Gypsy and Brown-Tail Moths Through Imported 



Nursery Stock 



Our Grosbeaks and Their Value to Agriculture 



Total (48 bulletins) . 



85.000 

 30,000 

 30,000 

 25,000 

 50,000 

 45,000 

 45,000 

 30,000 

 40,000 

 30,000 

 50,000 

 20,000 

 20,000 

 35,000 

 40,000 

 40,000 

 30,000 

 90,000 

 15,000 

 30,000 

 30,000 

 30,000 

 45,000 

 15,000 

 30,000 

 20,000 

 00.000 

 20,000 

 30,000 

 30,000 

 20,000 

 04,000 

 75,000 

 30,000 

 30,000 



50,000 

 20,000 



2.054,000 



THE YEARBOOK FOR 1910. 



The seventeenth volume of the Yearbook was issued May 10. It 

 contained 28 articles, 49 full-page illustrations, 8 of which are colored, 

 and 31 text figures in its 711 pages. The annual report of the 

 Secretary, occupying the first 156 pages, supplemented by the statis- 

 tical matter, found in the 211 pages of the Appendix, gives a more 

 complete and comprehensive summary of agricultural conditions in 

 the United States than can be found in any other single publication. 



The 320 pages devoted to the 28 articles contributed by members 

 of the scientific corps of the department contain data upon many of 

 the important questions now prominent in the public eye and equally 

 vital to the country and city population both as producers and con- 

 sumers of the agricultural products of the nation. 



The volume is distributed principally by Senators, Representatives, 

 and Delegates in Congress, the department's quota being reserved 

 for its volunteer correspondents. 



REVISED EDITIONS OF THE HORSE AND CATTLE BOOKS. 



Under joint resolutions of Congress, revised editions of the Special 

 Report on Diseases of the Horse and the Special Report on Diseases 

 of Cattle werp authorized. The editions are limited to 100,000 copies 

 each— 70,000 for the use of the House and 30,000 for the use of the 

 Senate. The Horse Book is now in press and will doubtless be issued 



