234 INDIAN CORN CULTURE. 
CHAPTER XVIII. 
LITERATURE ON INDIAN CORN. 
Thousands of articles on Indian corn and 
its culture have been printed in agricultural! 
papers, and numerous addresses on this plant 
have been published in agricultural and other 
reports. The bulletins of most of the agri- 
cultural experiment stations have published 
experimental data the result of culture or feed- 
ing tests. The stations of Illinois, Indiana, 
Ohio, New York, Massachusetts, Missouri, Kan- 
sas, Wisconsin and Minnesota have given spe- 
cial attention to problems concerning the grow- 
ing or feeding of this plant. Special chapters 
on corn have also been published in books de- 
voted to the cereals in general and in cyclope- 
dias and agricultural voluimes. 
So far as the writer has been able to ascer- 
tain, but few books or pamphlets have been 
published on Indian corn or maize. The fol- 
lowing titles, given in sequence of issue, are of 
those publications in the author’s possession. 
This list probably could be extended some, 
though not materially: 
Parmentier, A. A. Le mais on blé de Turquie, 
