8 BULLETINS OF THE BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY, 



Since the publication of the last bulletin indexed in these pages 

 (No. 100), the folloAving bulletins of the Bureau series have ap- 

 peared or are now in press, as indicated : 



No. 101. [The bulletin now in the reader's hands.] 



102. [Miscellaneous Papers. I. Summarj- of Recent Investigations of 



the Value of Cacti as Stock Food. II. A Successful Dairy Farm. 

 III. Planning a Cropping System. IV. The Application of Vege- 

 tative Propagation to Leguminous Forage Plants. V. The Con- 

 trol of Texas Root-Eot of Cotton. VI. The History of the Cow- 

 pea and Its Introduction into America. VII. A New Method for 

 the Determination of Nicotine in Tobacco. 1907. Price, 15 

 cents. 



103. Drj' Farming in the Great Basin. 1907. Price, 10 cents. 



•104. The Use of Feldspatliic Pocks as Fertilizers. 1907. Price, 5 cents. 



105. The Relation of the Composition of the Leaf to the Burning Quali- 



ties of Tobacco. 1907. Price, 10 cents. 



106. Seeds and Plants Imported. Inventory No. 12. [In press.] 



107. American Root Drugs. [In press.] 



108. The Cold Storage of Small Fruits. 1907. Price, 15 cents. 



109. American Varieties of Garden Beans. 1907. Price, 25 cents. 



110. Cranberrj^ Diseases. [In press.] 



111. Part I. The Larkspurs as Poisonous Plants. 1907. Price, 5 cents. 



Part II. The Fibers of Long-Staple Upland Cottons. 1907. 

 Price. 5 cents. Part III. Imported Low-Grade Clover and Al- 

 falfa Seed. [In press.] 



112. The Use of Suprarenal Glands in the Physiological Testing of Drug 



Plants. 1907. Price, 10 cents. 



113. The Comparative Tolerance of Various Plants for the Salts Com- 



mon in Alkali Soils. [In press.] 



114. Sap-Rot and Other Diseases of the Red Gum. [In press.] 



115. The Disinfection of Sewage Effluents for the Protection of Water 



Supplies. [In press.] 



116. The Tuna as Food for Man. [In press.] 



117. The Reseeding of Depleted Range and Native Pastures. [In press.] 



118. Peruvian Alfalfa. [In press.] 



Since its organization the Bureau of Plant Industry has con- 

 tributed the following papers to the series known as Farmers' Bul- 

 letins, copies of which will be sent without cost to any person in 

 the United- States or its possessions upon application to a Senator, 

 Representative, or Delegate in Congress, or to the Secretary of Agri- 

 culture, Washington, D. C. : 



No. 139, Emmer : A Grain for the Semiarid Regions ; No. 140, Pineapple 

 Growing; No. 147, Winter Forage Crops for the South; No. 148, Celery Cul- 

 ture; No. 154, The Home Fruit Garden: Preparation and Care; No. 156, The 

 Home Vineyard, with Special Reference to Northern Conditions; No. 157, The 

 Propagation of Plants; No. 161, Practical Suggestions for Fruit Growers; 

 No. 164. Rape as a Forage Crop; No. 167, Cassava; No. 168, Pearl Millet; No. 

 174, Broom Corn; No. 175, Home Manufacture and Use of Unfermented Grape 

 Juice; No. 176, Cranberry Culture; No. 181, Pruning; No. 185, Beautifying 

 the Home Grounds; No. 188, Weeds Used in Medicine; No. 194, Alfalfa Seed; 

 No. 195, Annual Flowering Plants; No. 198, Strawberries; No. 199, Corn 

 101 



