XXVII 



Method of filling silos at Maryland Station, A. I. Hay ward 514 



Silos iiiiil sUat;.' in Nehruska, .1. G. Smith 28 



Silos and silaye, F. R. Emery 452 



Comparison of ensiling and field curing for Indian corn, H. F. Armsby and 



W.H.Caldwell 1. 457 



Silago I'.s. corn fodder. H. P. Armsby, W. Frear. and W. H. Caldwell 713 



Shrinkage of corn and sorghum silage in the silo at Arkansas Station 280 



Investigations as to the changes in feeding stuffs by souring in the silo. 



O. Kellner, Y. Kozai, and Y. Mori i 206 



Field-cured and ensiled meadow grass. E. Wolff and J. Eis'nlohr 638 



The loss of valuable ingredients of hay by exposure to rain, A. Emmer- 



ling 263 



Description of the Symmes hay cap, A. I. Hayward. 514 



Changes in potatoes in keeping, E. WoUny 493 



Pitting the sugar beet, C.C. James 132 



The curing of Havana seed leaf tobacco by artificial heat in Connecticut. 776 



Test of a new method for curing tobacco at North Carolina Station 709 



The fermentation of tobacco, E. Suchsland . 354 



HORTICULTURE. 



Influence of the 3epth of transplanting upon the heading of cabbages, L. 



H. Bailey 618 



Cabbages and cauliflowers, imported vs. American seed, P. Collier 38 



Tests of varieties of cabbages and cauliflowers at Utah Station, E. S. Rich- 

 man 625 



The forcing of English cucumbers, L. H. Bailey 240 



Ash analysis of White Glob3 onions at Connecticut State Station 143 



Culture of onions and celery in the South, W. F. Massey. 803 



Transplanting onions, L. P. Kinney 623 



Tests of varieties of peas at Arkansas Station, R. L. Bennett 284 



Stnchys tuberifcra, composition 740 



Large vs. small sweet i)otatoes for seed, J. S. Newman and J. Clayton 589 



Field experiments with, sweet potatoes at Newport, Arkansas, R. L. Ben- 

 nett 284 



Experiments with sweet potatoes and tomatoes at Georgia Station, G. 



Speth 693 



Experiments with sweet potatoes at Louisiana Station, H. A. Morgan and 



B. B. Ross - 698 



Field experiments with fertilizers on sweet potatoes in New Jersey . 3(X) 



Experiments with fertilizers on sweet potatoes in New Jersey, E. B. 



Voorhees _. 88.3 



Composition of tomatoes. N. I'asserini 189 



Chemical composition and anatomical structure of tomatoes, G. Brissiand 



T. Gigli 191 



Experiments with tomatoes, potatoes, and strawberries at Maryland Sta- 

 tion, T. L. Brunk 515 



Experiments with nitrate of soda on tomatoes by New Jersey State Sta- 

 tion, E. B. Voorhees 30, 293. 299, 879 



Notes on tomatoes in 1891 at New York Cornell Station, L. H. Bailey and 



E. G. Lodemann 405 



Experiments in the forcing of tomatoes. L. H. Bailey 91 



Tomatoes, comparison of methods of growing, P. Collier 38 



