1919] AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION. 295 



Ohio agricultural statistics, 1916-17 and 1917-18 {Ohio Agr. Statis., 

 1916-17, pp. 7S; 1917-18, pp. 80). — These volumes continue information pre- 

 viously noted (E. S. R.. 37, p. 11)1 ). 



[Agricultural statistics of Uruguay], R. B. Wilson {An. Estadis. Agr. 

 [Uruyuay], 1917-18, pp. XLI'+eoy),— Statistics for 1917-18 are given, con- 

 tinuing the information previously noted (E. S. R., 38, p. 896). The index is 

 inserted in this numl)er in Spanish, French, and English. In the appendix are 

 included data for 1916 relating to number and extension of farms, stock of 

 cattle and other live stock, machinery and implements, and bee and silk 

 culture. 



Imports, exports, and supplies of agricultural produce of the TJnited 

 Kingdom during the war {.Jour. Bd. Agr. \_Lundoii], 25 {1919), No. 12, pp. 

 l/i62~1J/7/f). — A summary is given of the returns for the year 1918 relating 

 to prices and supplies of agricultural produce in the United Kingdom, with 

 special reference to imports and with comparisons through the period 1914-1918. 



[Agricultural statistics] {Statis. Abs. Brit. Self-Gov. Dominions [etc.], 52 

 (1900-1914), pp. 318-379; 53 {1901-1915), i)p. 328-389 ) .—These pages of these 

 volumes continue to date the information on agricultural production, imports, 

 and exports for the British self-governing dominions, crown colonies, posses- 

 sions, and i)rotectorates previously noted (E. S. R., 33, p. 295). 



[Agricultural statistics of Canada] {Canada Yearbook, 1917-18 pp. 166- 

 230). — Among the data included in these pages are those relating to area and 

 yield of field crops, number and value of live stock, land values, wages, manu- 

 facturing of agricultural products, prices, and miscellaneous agricultural sta- 

 tistics. 



Report of the Canada Food Board {Rpt. Canada Food Bd., 1918, pp. [5] + 

 87, figs. 5).— This report of February 11 to December 81, 1918, sets forth the 

 Canadian policy of food control and the work of the Food Board as affecting 

 supplies of important food connnodities. 



[Agricultural statistics of the Union of South Africa, 1914—15 and 

 1915-16] {Statis. Year Book Union So. Africa, Nos. 3 {191^-15), pp. 4-17, 46- 

 55, 134-137; 4 {1915-16), pp. 8-22, 40-49, 116-132) .—The first of these numbers 

 of the yearbook. No. 1 of which was previously noted (E. S. R., 33, p. 789), 

 gives statistics of urban and rural population of the Cape of Good Hope for the 

 years 1910 to 1914, inclusive, and statements, for the Union as a whole, of 

 numbers of animals, exports of agricultural and pastoral products, and the 

 transactions of agricultural cooperative societies. In the second, population 

 enumerations for all .districts of the Union, according to the 1911 census, and 

 information in regard to agriculture more detailed than in the preceding 

 report are given. 



AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION. 



Agricultural education, 1916-1918, C. H. Lane {U. S. Bur. Ed. Bui 44 

 {1918), pp. 40). — This is the usual review of progress in agricultural instruc- 

 tion, in 1916-1918, in secondary and elementary schools, in agricultural colleges, 

 agricultural extension and short courses, and the Graduate School of Agricul- 

 ture; of agricultural education at meetings; the educational work of the U. S. 

 Department of Agriculture ; and of the principal developments in agricultural 

 education in foreign countries. The bulletin represents advance sheets from 

 the Biennial Survey of Education in the United States, 1916-1918 (E. S. R., 

 39, p. 392). 



