IT 
209 Controlling the Boll Weevil in Cotton Seed | 
and at Ginneries. Pp. 32. 
210. Experiment Station Work—XXVII._ Pp.32. 
211. The Use of Paris Green in Controlling the 
Cotton Boll Weevil. Pp. 23. 
213. Raspberries. Pp. 38. 
217. Essential Steps in Securing an Early Crop of 
Cotton. Pp. 16. 
218. The School Garden. Pp. 40. 
219. Lessons from the Grain Rust Epidemic of 
1904. Pp. 24. 
220. Tomatoes. Pp. 32. 
221. Fungous Diseases of the Cranberry. Pp. 16. 
222. Experiment Station Work—X XVIII. Pp. 32. 
223. Miscellaneous Cotton Insects in Texas. Pp. 
24. 
224. Canadian Field Peas. Pp. 16. 
225. Experiment Station Work—XXIX. Pp. 32. 
227. Experiment Station Work—XXX. Pp. 32. 
228. pea Planting and Farm Management. 
22. 
229. The Production of Good Seed Corn. Pp.24. 
231. BBIOvine for Cucumber and Melon Diseases. 
p. 24. 
232. Okra: Its Culture and Uses. Pp. 16. 
233. Experiment Station Work—XXXI. Pp. 32. 
234. The Guinea Fowl. Pp. 24. 
235. Preparation of Cement Concrete. Pp. 32. 
236. Incubation and Incubators. Pp. 32. 
237. Experiment Station Work—XXXII. Pp.32. 
238. a Fruit Growing in the Gulf States. 
. 48. 
239. maetiontosicn of Fence Wire. Pp. 32. 
241. Butter Making on the Farm. Pp. 32. 
242. An Example of Model Farming. Pp. 16. 
243. Fungicides and Their Use in Preventing Dis- 
eases of Fruits. Ee 32. 
244. Experiment Station Work—X XXIII. Pp. 32. 
245. Renovation of Worn-Out Soils. Pp. 16. 
246. Saccharine Sorghums for Forage. Pp. 37. 
248. The Lawn. Pp. 20. 
249. Cereal Breakfast Foods. Pp. 36. 
250. The Prevention of Wheat Smut and Loose 
Smut of Oats. Pp. 16. 
251. Experiment Station Work—X XXIV. Pp. 32. 
252. Maple Sugar and Sirup. Pp. 36. 
253. The Germination of Seed Corn. Pp. 16. 
254. Cucumbers. Pp. 30. 
255. The Home Vegetable Garden. Pp. 47. 
256. Eeeeration of Vegetables for the Table. 
p. 48. 
257. Soil Fertility. Pp. 39. 
258. Tepae or Tick Fever and Its Prevention. 
p. 45. 
259. Experiment Station Work—XXXV. Pp. 32. 
260. Seed of Red Clover and Its Impurities. Pp.24. 
261. The Cattle Tick. Pp. 22. 
262. Experiment Station Work—XXXVI. Pp. 32. 
263. Practical Information for Beginners in Irri- 
gation. Pp. 40. 
264. The Brown-Tail Moth and How to Control It. 
Pp. 22. 
266. a peecuueat of Soils to Conserve Moisture. 
p. 30. 
267. Experiment Station Work—XXXVII. Pp. 
32. 
268. Industrial Alcohol: Sources and Manufac- 
ture. Pp. 45. 
269. Industrial Alcohol: Uses and Statistics. Pp. 
270. ener Conveniences for the Farm Home. 
. 48. 
271. eines Crop Practices in Western Oregon and 
Western Washington. Pp. 39. 
. A Successful Hog and Seed-Corn Farm. Pp. 
16. 
. Experiment Station WorkK—XXXVIII. Pp. 
32 
74. Flax Culture. Pp. 36. 
75. me Gipsy Moth and How to ControlIt. Pp. 
95 
. Experiment Station Work—XX XIX. Pp.32. 
. The Use of Alcohol and Gasoline in Farm 
Engines. Pp. 40. 
. Leguminous Crops for Green Manuring. Pp. 
9 
27. 
. A Method of Eradicating Johnson Grass. 
2 LG. 
Pp. 1 
344 
280. 
281. 
282. 
283. 
284. 
285. 
. Poultry Management. 
. Nonsaccharine Sorghums. 
. Corn Harvesting Machinery. 
. Growing and Curing Hops. = 39. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLII. 
. Dodder in Relation to Farm Seeds. 
. Sweet Potatoes. 
. Small Farms in the Corn Belt. 
Balding up a Run-Down Cotton Plantation. 
A Profitable Tenant Dairy Farm. Pp. 16. 
Experiment Station Work—XL. Pp. 32. 
Celery. Pp. 36. ; 
Spraying for Apple Diseases and the Codling 
Moth in the Ozarks. Pp. 42. 
Insect and Fungous Enemies of the Grape 
East of the Rocky Mountains. Pp. 48. 
The Advantage of Planting Heavy Cotton 
Seed. Pp. 16. 
. Comparative Value of Whole Cotton Seed and 
eke rh Meal in Fertilizing Cotton. 
try. Pp. 48. 
Pp. 28. 
Beans. Pp. 28 
. The Cotton Bollworm. Pp. 32. 
. Evaporation of Apples. 
‘p. 38. 
Cost of Filling Silos. a 15. 
Use of Fruit as Food. Pp. 38 
. Farm Practice in the Columbia Basin Up- 
lands. Pp. 30. 
. Potatoes and Other Root Crops as Food. 
Pp. 45. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLI. Pp. 32. 
Method of Destroying Rats. Pp. 8. 
. The Food Value of Corn and Corn Products. 
Pp. 40. 
. Diversified Farming Under the Plantation 
System. Pp. 14. 
. Some Important Grasses and Forage Plants 
for the Gulf Coast Region. Pp. 15. 
Home-Grown Tea. Pp. 16. 
. Sea Island Cotton: Its Culture, Improve- 
ment, and Diseases. Pp. 48. 
"Pp. 32. 
Roselle: Its Culture and Uses. Pp. 
Experiment Station Work—XLIII. a st 32 
A Successful Alabama Diversification Farm. 
Pp. 24. 
Sand-Clay and Burnt-Clay Roads. Pp. 20. 
- A Successful Southern Hay Farm. Pp. 15. 
. Harvesting and Storing Corn. Pp. 32. 
. A Method of Breeding Early Cotton to Es- 
cape Boll-Weevil Damage. Pp. 20. 
. Progress in Legume Inoculation. Pp. 20. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLIV. Pp. 32. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLY. Pp. 32. 
. Cowpeas. ( 
. Demonstration Work in Cooperation with 
Pp. 26 
Southern Farmers. 
‘p. 22. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLVI. Pp. 32. 
. The Use of the Split-Log Drag on 
arth 
Roads. Pp. 14. 
. Milo as a Dry-Land Grain Crop. es 23. 
. Clover Farming on the Sandy Jack-Pine 
Lands of the North. Pp. 24. 
Pp. 39. = 
327. The Conservation of Natural Resources. 
p- 12. 
328. Silver Fox Farming. Pp. 22. 
329. Experiment Station Work—XLVII. Pp. 32. 
330. Deer Farming in the United States. Pp. 20. 
331. Forage Crops for Hogs in Kansas. Pp. 24. 
332. Nuts and their Uses as Food. Pp. 28. 
333. Cotton Wilt. Pp. 24. 
334. Experiment Station Work—XLVIII. Pp. 32. 
335. Harmful and Beneficial Mammals of the Arid 
Interior. Pp. 31. 
336. Game Laws for 1908. - 65. 
337. Cropping Systems for New England Dairy 
Farms. Pp. 24. 
338. Macadam Roads. Pp. 39. 
339. Alfalfa. Pp. 48. 
340. Declaration of Governors for Conservation 
of Natural Resources. Pp.8. 
341. The Basket Willow. (In press.) 
342. Experiment Station Work—XLIX. Pp. 32. 
343. The Cultivation of Tobacco in Kentucky and 
Tennessee. (In press.) 
