LIST OF FARMERS’ 
. The Production of Good Seed Corn. 
. Spraying for Cueumber and Melon Diseases. 
2. Okra: Its Culture and Uses. 
233. Experiment Station Work—X XXI. 
4. The Guinea Fowl. 
5. Preparation of Cement Concrete. 
5. Incubation and Incubators. 
. Experiment Station Work—X XXII. 
. Citrus Fruit Growing in the Gulf States. 
. The Corrosion of Fence Wire. 
. Butter Making on the Farm. 
. An Example of Model Farming. 
3. Fungicides and Their Use in Preventing Dis- 
eases of Fruits. 
4. Experiment Station Work—XX XIII. 
5. Renovation of Worn-out Soils. 
}. Saccharine Sorghums for Forage. 
8. The Lawn. 
. Cereal Breakfast Foods. 
. The Prevention of Wheat Smut and Loose 
Smut of Oats. 
. Experiment Station Work—X XXIV. 
2. Maple Sugar and Sirup. 
. The Germination of Seed Corn. 
. Cucumbers. 
. The Home Vegetable Garden. 
5. Preparation of Vegetabies for the Table. 
. Soil Fertility. 
. Texas or Tick Fever and Its Prevention. 
. Experiment Station Work—XXXV. 
. Seed of Red Clover and Its Impurities. 
. Experiment Station Work—XX XVI. 
. Practical Information for Beginners in Irriga- 
tion. 
. The Brown-tail Moth and How to Control It. 
}. Management of Soils to Conserve Moisture. 
. Experiment Station Work—XXXVII. 
. Industrial Aleohol: Sources and Manufacture. 
. Industrial A.cohol: Uses and Statisties. 
. Modern Conveniences for the Farm Home. 
. Forage Crop Practices in Western Oregon and 
Western Washington. 
. A Suecessful Hog and Seed-corn Farm. 
. Experiment Station Work—X XXVIII. 
. Flax Culture. 
. The Gipsy Moth and How to Control It. 
76. Experiment Station Work—XXXIX. 
. The Use of Alcohol and Gasoline in Farm En- 
gines. 
. Leguminous Crops for Green Manuring. 
. A Method of Kradicating Joonson Grass. 
. A Profitable Tenant Dairy Farm. 
. Experiment Station Work—XL. 
. Celery. 
. Spraying for Apple Diseases and the Codling 
Mot. in the Ozarks. 
. Insect and Fungous Enemies of the Grape East 
ofthe Rocky Mountains. 
. The Advantage of Planting Heavy Cotton 
Seed. 
- Comparative Value of Whole Cotton Seed and | 
Cotton-seed Meal in Fertilizing Cotton. 
. Poultry Management. 
8. Nonsaccharine Sorghums. 
Bea 
ns. 
. The Cotton Bollworm. 
. Evaporation of Apples. 
. Cost of Filling Silos. 
3. Use of Fruit as Food. 
. Farm Practice in the Columbia Basin Uplands. 
. Potatoes and Other Root Crops as Food. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLI. 
. Food Value of Corn and Corn Products. 
. Diversified Farming Under the Plantation Sys- 
tem 
. Some ‘Important Grasses and Forage Plants 
for the Gulf Coast Region. 
. Hlome-grown Tea. 
. Sea-Island Cotton: Its Culture, Improvement, 
and Diseases. 
. Corn Harvesting Machinery. 
. Growing and Curing Hops. 
378 
305. 
306. 
- Roselle: Its Culture and Uses. 
. Experiment Station Work—X LIII. 
. A Successful Alabama Diversification Farm. 
. Sand-clay and Burnt-clay Roads. 
- A Successful Southern Hay Farm. 
. Harvesting and Storing Corn. 
. A Method of Breeding Early Cotton to Escape 
. A Primer of Forestry. 
BULLETINS. 
Experimen Station Work—XLII. 
Dodder in Relation to Farm Seeds. 
Boll-weevil Damage. 
. Progress in Legume Inoculation. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLIV. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLV. 
Cowpeas. 
. Demonstration Work in Cooperation with 
Southern Farmers. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLVI. 
. The Use of the Split-log Drag on Earth Roads. 
. Milo as a Dry-land Grain Crop. 
. Clover Farming on the Sandy Jack-pine Lands 
of the North. 
. Sweet Potatoes. 
. Small Farms in the Corn Belt. 
3. Building up a Run-down Cotton Plantation. 
. Silver Fox Farming. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLVII. 
Deer Farming in the United States. 
. Forage Crops for Hogs in Kansas and Okla- 
homa. 
. Nuts and Their Uses as Food. 
. Cotton Wilt. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLVIII. 
. Harmful and Beneficial Mammals of the Arid 
Interior. 
. Game Laws for 1908. 
. Cropping Systems for New England Dairy 
Farms. 
. Macadam Roads. 
. Alfalfa. 
. The Basket Willow. 
. Experiment Station Work—XLIX. 
. The Cultivation of Tobacco in Kentucky and 
Tennessee. 
. The Boll Weevil Problem with Special Refer- 
ence to Means of Reducing Damage. 
. Some Common Disinfe: tants. 
). The Computation of Rations for Farm Ani- 
mals by the Use of Energy Values. 
. The Repair of Farm Equipment. 
8. Bacteria in Milk. 
. The Dairy Industry in the South. 
. The Dehorning of Cattle. 
. The Tuber: ulin Test of Cattle for Tuberculosis. 
£2. The Nevada Mouse Plague of 1907-8. 
3. Experiment Station Work—L. 
- Onion Culture. 
. A Successful Poultry and Dairy Farm. 
5. Peanuts. 
. Methods of Poultry Managements at the 
Maine Agricultural Experiment Station. 
Part II: Practical 
Forestry. 
. Canning Vegetables in the Home. 
. Experiment Station Work—LI. 
. Meadow Fescue: Its Culture and Uses. 
2. Conditions Affecting the Value of Market Hay. 
. The Use of Milk as Food. 
. A Profitable Cotton Farm. 
. Potato Growingin Northern Sections. 
5. Experiment Station Work—LII 
17. Lightning and Lightning Conductors. 
. The Eradiction of Bindweed, or Wild Morn- 
ing-Glory. 
. How to Destroy Rats. 
. Replanning a Farm for Profit. 
. Drainage of Irrigated Lands. 
. Soy Beans. 
. Irrigation of Alfalfa. 
. Experiment Station Work—LIII. 
. Care of Foodin the Home. 
. Game Laws for 1909. 
. Harmfulness of Headache Mixtures. 
