8 a EXPERDIEXT STATION. [Jan. 



Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station: Twentieth (1908); 



Twenty-first, Part 11. (1909); Twenty-second, Part I. (1910); 



Twenty-third, Part I. (1911); Twenty-fourth, Parts I. and II. 

 (1912); Twenty-fifth, Part I. (1913). 



Circulars. 



No. 20. Lime in Massachusetts Agriculture. 



No. 27. Seedmg Mowing-s. 



No. 29.' Soil Analysis. 



No. 36. Poultry Manures, their Treatment and Use. 



No. 37. Green Manuring and Cover Crops. 



No. 38. Cabbage, Cauliflower, Turnip, Rape and Other Crucifers. 



No. 40. Downy Mildew of Cucumbers. 



No. 41. The Control of Onion Smut. 



No. 42. Fertilizers for Potatoes. 



No. 43. Cut Worms. 



Home Mixed Fertilizers. 



Orchard Experiment. 



Fertilizers for Corn. 



Composition and Digestibility of Fodder Articles; Composition of Fer- 

 tilizer Materials, Refuse Substances, Garden Crops and Soils. (A 

 seiDarate from the twenty-third annual report.) 



For distribution in Massachusetts, Bulletin No. 180 of the Connecticut 

 Agricultural Exijeriment Station : Studies on the Tobacco Crop of 

 Connecticut, by Director E. H. Jenkins. 



The plan followed in the distribution of our publications 

 during the past year has been the same as for several years, 

 and is described in the twenty-fourth annual report. The de- 

 mand, however, has gi-eatly increased and the size of editions 

 must be correspondingly increased. The edition of a number 

 of the bulletins has recently been entirely exhausted within a 

 few weeks after publication, while requests for them will con- 

 tinue for months and even years. With the increase in interest 

 in scientific agriculture and country life, with the multiplica- 

 tion of institutions in which agriculture is taught, and of those," 

 both public and private, devoted to agricultural experiment and 

 demonstration, with the fuller development of agricultural ex- 

 tension service under the recently enacted Lever bill, and the 

 organization of the county league or agent system, is sure to 

 come a yet more rapid growth in demand for station publica- 

 tions. 



