INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT. 9 



Crowiiifr; No. 204, 'i'lie C iilt ivatiun of Mushrooms; .NO. :.'()s, N'arieties of Fruits 

 IJecommended for Planting:; No. 213, Raspberries; No. 214, Beneficial Itacteria 

 for lA'g-iiniinous Crops; No. 215, Alfalfa Crowing; « No. 217, Essential vSteps 

 in Securing an Early Cro]) of Cotton; No. 218, The School C.arden ; No. 219. 

 Lessons from the (Irain-Rnst Kpideniic of 1904; No. 220. Tomatoes; No. 221, 

 Fungous Diseases of the Cranberry; No. 224, Canadian Field I'eas; No. 229, 

 The Production of Good Seed Corn; No. 231, Spraying for Cucimiber and 

 .A[elon Diseases; No. 2:52, Okra : Its Culture and Uses; No. 238, Citrus Fruit 

 (irowing in tlie Gulf States; No. 240, Inoculation of Legumes ; No. 242, An 

 Example of Model Farming; No. 243, Fungicides and Their Use in I'reventing 

 Diseases of Fruits; No. 245, Renovation of Worn-Out Soils; No. 246. Sac- 

 charine Sorghums for Forage ; « Xo. 247, The Control of the Codling Moth and 

 Ajiiile Scab; No. 248, The Lawn; No. 250, The Prevention of Stinking Smut of 

 Wheat and Loose Smut of Oats ; No. 253, The Germination of Seed Corn ; No. 254, 

 Cucumbers; No. 255, The Home Vegetable Garden; No. 260, Seed of Red Clover 

 and Its Impurities; No. 271, Forage-Crop Practices in Western Oregon and 

 Western Washington; No. 272, A Successful Hog and Seed Corn Farm; No. 

 274, Flax Culture; No. 278, Leguminovis Crops for Green Manuring; No. 279, 

 A Method of Eradicating Johnson Grass ; No. 280, A Profitable Tenant Dairy 

 Farm ; No. 282, Celery ; o No. 283, Spraying for Apple Diseases and the Cod- 

 ling Moth in the Ozarks ; "No. 284, Insect and Fungous Enemies of the Grape 

 East of the Rocky :Mountains ; No. 285, The Advantage of Planting Heavy 

 Cotton Seed ; No. 286, Comparative Value of Whole Cotton Seed and Cotton- 

 Seed Meal in Fertilizi^ig Cotton ; No. 288, Nonsaccharine Sorghums ; No. 289, 

 Beans; No. 291, Evaporation of Apples; No. 292, Cost of Filling Silos; No. 

 294, Farm Practice in the Columbia Basin Uplands ; No. 299, Diversified Farm- 

 ing Under the Plantation Sjstem ; No. 300, Some Important Grasses for the 

 Gulf Coast Region; No. 301. Home-Grown Tea; No. 302, Sea Island Cotton; 

 No. 304, (Jrowing and Curing Hops; No. 306, Dodder In Relation to Farm 

 Seeds ; No. 307, Roselle : Its Culture and Uses. 



In addition, the Bureau of Plant Industry has contributed the 

 following papers to the Yearbooks of the Department of Agricul- 

 ture from 1901 to date, all of which have been reprinted for distri- 

 bution in separate form. The editions of those bearing numbers 

 marked with a star (*) are exhausted. The others can be obtained 

 without cost upon addressing a request therefor to the Secretary of 

 Agriculture, AVashington, D. C. 



No. 225. The Relation of Nutrition to the Health of Plants; No. 229, Little- 

 Known Fruit Varieties Considered Worthy of Wider Dissemination ; *No. 230, 

 Commercial Aj^ple Orcharding; *No. 238, Agricultural Seeds — \Miere Grown 

 and How Handled-; *No. 242, Agriculture in the Tropical Islands of the United 

 States ; No. 246, The Home Fruit Garden ; No. 254, The Hemp Industry in the 

 United States; No. 262, The Contamination of Public Water Supplies by Alga;; 

 No. 264, Industrial Progress in Plant Work; *No. 266, Top- Working Orchard 

 Trees; *No. 277, Bacteria and the Nitrogen Problem; No. 278, Systems of 

 Farm Management in the United States ; No. 279, Improvement of Cotton by 

 Seed Selection; No. 281, Grape, Raisin, and Wine Production in the United 

 States ; No. 283, Promising New Fruits ; No. 284, Plants as a Factor in Home 

 Adornment ; No. 287, Improvement of Corn by Seed Selection ; No. 290, Ferti- 



a Contributed jointly by the Bureaus of Entomology and Plant Industry. 

 101 



