406 



TwExTv-KiGHTH Annual Report 



No. 123. January 1, 1917. Making Soft Cheeses on the Farm. 



— By W. S. Cunningham 



-No. 124. Februarv 15, 1917. Some Uses of Dynamite on the Farm. 



—By H. C. Heard 

 No. 125. -March 15, 1917. Garget or Mammitis in Cows. 



—By R. H. Williams 



No. 126. May 3, 1917. Recommendations on Ways and Means to Improve the 

 Food Supply in Arizona. — By R. H. Forbes 



Scientific and Technical Papers : 



A State Water Code for Arizona. 



Trans. Twentv-third International Irrigation Congress, 1916. 



—By G. E. P. Smith 

 The Proposed State Water Code. 



E.\tension Circular No. 11, Noxemher, 1916. — By G. E. P. Smith 



Chapter on Agriculture in the San Simon Valley. 



U. S. oeol. Survey Water Supply Paper 425A, May 7, 1917. 



Cotton Pests in the Arid and Semi- A rid Southwest. 



Journ. Economic Entomolgy, Vol. 10, No. 3, 1917. 



Popular Articles : 



A Survey of Arizona's Water Supply. 



Arizona Magazine VII, May, 1917. —By G. E. P. Smith 



Some Problems of the Tractor Buyer. 



Southwestern Stockman-Farmer, October 17 , 1917. — By G. E. P. Smith 



The History of Livestock in Arizona. 



Arizona Magazine, September, 1916. 



Sheep Breeding in the Southwest. 



American Sheep Breeder, October, 1916. 



Breeding for the West. 



Breeders' Gazette, Marcli 1, 1917. 



Capitalizing the Range. 



Breeders' Gazette, March 8, 1917. 



Alfalfa Bloat. 



Hoard's Dairyman, .April 6, 1917. 



Horses for the Dry-Farming Country. 



Breeders' Gazette, .-Vpril 19, 1917. 

 A Range Problem. 



Arizona Magazine, May, 1917. 



Silage in Arizona. 



Rural World, June 16, 1917. 



The Future of the Range. 



.Agricultural Review, March, 1917. 



—By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Williams 

 —By R. H. Forbes 



PROJECTS 



A restatement at this time is advisable of the projects of work 

 being carried on by the Experiment Station inasmuch as under 

 the pressure of war conditions it is necessary to make these projects 

 as immediately economic in character as is practicable. Most of 

 the activities of the Station are directly related to the big things of 

 Southwestern agriculture — to water stipply, to climatic conditions, 



