DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. 



371 



Publications other than Fanners' Bulletins received and distributed from July 1, 



1901, to June 30, 190;2 — Continued. 



Publication. 



EXTRACTS FROM YEARBOOKS — continued. 



No. 213. The Value of Potatoes as Food, from Yearbook 1900 



No. 214. Practical Forestry in the Southern Appalachians, from Year- 

 book 1900 - - 



No. 215. Commercial Pear Culture, from Yearbook 19(J0 



No. 216. Objects and Methods of Investigating Certain Physical Proper- 

 ties of Soils, from Yearbook 1900 



No. 217. Developing of the Trucking Interests, from Yearbook 1900_ _ 



No. 218. The Date Palm and Its Culture, from Yearbook 1900 



No. 219. Free Delivery of Rural Mails, from Yearbook 1900 



No. 220. Testing Commercial Varieties of Vegetables, from Yearbook 1900. 



No. 221. The Use and Abuse of Food Preservatives, from Yearbook 1900.. 



No. 222. The Influence of Refrigeration on the Fruit Industry, from Year- 

 book 1900 - 



No. 223. Our Native Pa.sture Plants, from Yearbook 1900. 



No. 224. William Saunders, from Yearbook 1900._ 



No. 225. The Relation of Nutrition to the Health of Plants, from Year- 

 book 1901 



No. 226. Mohair and Mohair Manufactures, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 228. Some Tj-pical Reservoirs in the Rocky Mountain States, from 

 Yearbook 1901 - - 



No. 230. Commercial Apple Orcharding, from Yearbook 1901 — 



No. 231. The Tuberculin Test for Tuberculosis, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 232. The Pui-pose of a Soil Survey, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 233. Some Problems of the Rural Common School, from Yearbook 

 1901 



No. 234. The Future Demand for American Cotton, from Yearbook 1901 . 



No. 235. Insects as Carriers and Spreaders of Diseases, from Yearbook 

 1901 -- 



No. 236. The Timber Resources of Nebraska, from Yearbook 1901 _ _ 



No. 237. Progress in Plant and Animal Breeding, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 238. Agricultural Seeds: Where Grown and How Handled, from 

 Yearbook 1901 



No. 239. The Cotton-Seed IndustryVfrom' Yearbook 1901 



No. 240. Road Building with Convict Labor in the Southern States, from 

 Yearbook 1901 _ _ ---. -- 



No. 241. Grazing in the Forest Reserves, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 242. Agi-iculture in the Tropical Islands of the United States, from 

 Yearbook 1901 



No. 243. The Present Status of the Mexican Cotton-Boll Weevil, from 

 Yearbook 1901 



No. 244. Dietaries in Public Institutions, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 245. Government Cooperation in Object-Lesson Road Work, from 

 Yearbook 1901 



No . 246. The Home Fruit Gardens, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 247. Two Vanishing Game Birds: The Woodcock and the Wood 

 Duck, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 248. Experimental Work with Fungous Diseases of Grasshoppers, 

 from Yearbook 1901 -.- - - -- 



No. 250. Floods and Flood Warnings, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 252. Agricultural Investigations in the Island Possessions of the 

 United States, from Yearbook 1901 __. 



No. 2.55. The Chinook Winds, from Yearbook 1901 



No. 257. Influence of Environment on the Chemical Composition of 

 Plants, from Yearbook 1901 



Received. 



:^,ooo 



Distrib- 

 uted. 



515 



