CORNELL UNIVERSITY AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT 



STATION. 



The Following Bulletins are Available for Distribution to Those Resi- 

 dents OF New York State Who May Desire Them as Long as the Supply 

 Lasts, 



93 The Cigar-Case-Bearer. 

 121 Suggestions for Planting Shrubbery. 



134 Strawberries under Glass. 



135 Forage Crops. 



136 Chrysanthemums. 



137 Agricultural Extension Work, Sketch of its 



Origin and Progress. 



139 Third Report upon Japanese Plums. 



140 Second Report upon Potato Cultvu'e. 



141 Powdered Soap as a Cause of Death Among 



Swill-Fed Hogs. _ 

 153 Sugar Beet Investigations. 

 14s Some Important Pear Diseases. 



146 Fourth Report of Progress on Extension 



Work. 



147 Fourth Report upon Chrysanthemums. 

 149 Quince Curculio. 



151 Gravity or Dilution Separators. 



152 Study in Milk Secretion. 



153 Impressions of Fruit-Growing Industries. 

 155 Second Report on the San Jose Scale. 



157 Grapevine Flea-Beetle. 



158 Source of Gas and Taint Producing Bacteria 



in Cheese Ciu-d. 



163 Three Important Fungus Diseases of the 



Sugar Beet. 



164 Peach Leaf Curl. 



165 Ropiness in Milk and Cream. 



166 Sugar Beet Investigations for iSqS. 



168 Studies and Illustrations of Mushrooms; II. 



170 Tent Caterpillars. 



171 Concerning Patents on Gravity or DUution 



Separators. 



172 The Cherry Fruit Fly; A New Cherry Pest. 

 17s Fourth Report on Japanese Plums. 



180 The Prevention of Peach Leaf-Curl. 

 182 Sugar Beet Investigations for 1809. 



185 The Common European Praying Mantis; A 



New Beneficial Insect in America. 



186 The Sterile Fungus Rhizoctonia. 



188 Spray Calendar. 



189 Oswego Strawberries. 



190 Three Unusual Strawberry Pests and a 



Greenhouse Pest, 



192 Further Experiments against the Peach- 



Tree Borer. 

 194 The Hessian Fly. Its Ravages in New York 



in 1 90 1. 

 19s Further Observations upon the Ropiness 



in ]Milk and Cream. 

 196 Fourth Report on Potato C\ilture. 



198 Orchard Cover Crops. 



199 Separator Skimmed Milk as Food for Pigs. 



200 Muskmelons. 



207 Pink Rot an Attendant of Apple Scab. 



208 The Grape Root-Worm. 



210 Commercial Bean Growing in New York. 

 215 The Grape Leaf-Hopper. 



219 Diseases of Ginseng. 



220 Sldmmed MUk for Pigs. 



221 Alfalfa in New York. 



222 Attempt to Increase the Fat in Milk by 



Means of Liberal Feeding. 

 225 Bovine Tuberculosis. 



227 Cultivation of Mushrooms by Amateurs. 



228 Potato Growing in New York. 



231 Forcing of Strawberries, Tomatoes, Cucum- 

 bers and Melons. 

 234 The Bronze Birch Borer. 



237 Alfalfa — A Report of Progress. 



238 Buckwheat. 



239 Some Diseases of Beans. 



240 The Influence of Mushrooms on the Growth 



of some Plants. 



242 Cabbages for Stock Feeding. 



243 Root Crops for Stock Feeding. 



244 Culture and Varieties of Roots for Stock 



Feeding. 



246 A Gasoline-Heated Colony Brooder-House. 



247 The Importance of Nitrogen in the Growth 



of Plants. 



249 Comparison of Four Methods of Feeding 



Early Hatched Pullets. 



250 Bovine Tuberculosis. 



251 Plant Breeding for Farmers. 



252 Spray Calendar. 



253 Black Rot on Grapes. 



Address, 



COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE, 



ITHACA, N. 



Y. 



498 



