These bulletins are sent free of charge to any address upon applica- 
tion to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 
INo: 15: 
No. 16. 
No. 18. 
9. Important Insecticides: Directions for their Preparation and Use. Pp. 20. 
20. Washed Soils: How to Prevent and Reclaim Them. Pp. 22. 
. Barnyard Manure. Pp. 32. 
22. Feeding Farm Animals. Pp. 32. 
23. Foods: Nutritive Value and Cost. Pp. 32. 
24. Hog Cholera and Swine Plague. Pp. 16. 
5. Peanuts: Culture and Uses. Pp. 24. 
26. Sweet Potatoes: Culture and Uses. Pp. 30. 
27. Flax for Seed and Fiber. Pp. 16. 
. Weeds, and How to Kill Them. Pp. 30. 
9, Souring of Milk and Other Changes in Milk Products. Pp. 23. 
. Grape Diseases on the Pacific Coast. Pp. 16. 
. Alfalfa, or Lucern. Pp. 23. 
. Silos and Silage. Pp. 31. 
3. Peach Growing for Market. Pp. 24. 
. Meats: Composition and Cooking. Pp. 29. 
35. Potato Culture. Pp. 23. 
36. Cotton Seed and Its Products. Pp. 16. 
. Kafir Corn: Characteristics, Culture, and Uses. Pp. 12. 
. Spraying for Fruit Diseases.~ Pp. 12. : 
. Onion Culture. Pp. 31. 
. Farm Drainage. Pp. 24. 
. Fowls: Care and Feeding. Pp. 24. 
2. Facts About Milk. Pp. 29. 
3. Sewage Disposal on the Farm. Pp. 22. 
. Commercial Fertilizers. Pp. 24. 
. Some Insects Injurions to Stored Grain. Pp. 32. 
. Irrigation in Humid Climates. Pp. 26. 
. Inseets Affecting the Cotton Plant. Pp. 32. 
. The Manuring of Cotton. Pp. 16. 
. Sheep Feeding. Pp. 24. . 
. Sorghum as a Forage Crop. Pp. 24. 
. Standard Varieties of Chickens. Pp. 48. 
. The Sugar Beet. Pp. 48. 
. How to Grow Mushrooms. Pp. 20. 
32 
FARMERS’ BULLETINS. 
[Only the bulletins named below are available for distribution. ] 
Some Destructive Potato Diseases: What They Are and How to Prevent 
Them. Srp. 3. 
Leguminous Plants for Green Manuring and for Feeding. Pp. 24. 
Forage Plants for the South. Pp. 30. 

. Some Common Birds in Their Relation to Agriculture. Pp. 40. 
5. The Dairy Herd: Its Formation and Management. Pp. 24. 
ixperiment Station Work—I. Pp. 32. “ 
Butter Making on the Farm. Pp. 16. 
) 
