DOCUMENT PRICE LIST 16, STH EDITION 13 



FARMERS' BULLETIN Continued. 



253. Germination of seed corn. Paper, 5c. 



254. Cucumbers. Paper, 5c. 



255. Home vegetable garden. Paper, 5c. 



256. Preparation of vegetables for the table. Paper, 5c. 



257. Soil fertility, address delivered before Rich Neck Farmers' Club of 



Queen Anne County, Md. Paper, 5c. 



258. Texas or tick fever and its prevention. Paper, 5c. 



259. Experiment station work 35. Paper, 5c. 



260. Seed of red clover and its impurities. Paper, 5c. 



262. Experiment station work 36. Paper, 5c. 



263. Practical information for beginners in irrigation. Paper, 5c. 



264. Brown-tail moth and how to control it. Paper, 5c. 



265. Game laws for 1906. Paper, 5c. 



266. Management of soils to conserve moisture, with special reference to 



semiarid conditions. Paper, 5c. 



267. Experiment station work 37. Paper, 5c. 



268. Superseded by 429. 



269. Industrial alcohol, uses and statistics. Paper, 5c. 



270. Modern conveniences for the farm home. Paper, 5c. 



271. Forage-crop practices in western Oregon and western Washington. 



Paper, 5c. 



272. Successful hog and seed-corn farm. Paper, 5c. 



274. Flax culture. Paper, 5c. 



275. Gipsy moth and how to control it. Paper, 5c. 



276. Experiment station work 39. Paper, 5c. 



277. Use of alcohol and gasoline in farm engines. Paper, 5c. 



278. Leguminous crops for green manuring. Paper, 5c. 



279. Method of eradicating Johnson grass. Paper, 5c. 



280. Profitable tenant dairy farm. Paper, 5c. 



281. Experiment station work 40. Paper, 5c. 



282. Celery. Paper, 5c. 



283. Spraying for apple diseases and codling moth in the Ozarks. Paper, 5c. 



284. Insect and fungous enemies of grape east of Rocky Mountains. 



Paper, 5c. 



285. Advantage of planting heavy cotton seed. Paper, 5c. 



286. Comparative value of whole cotton seed and cottonseed meal in fer- 



tilizing cotton. Paper, 5c. 



287. Poultry management. Paper, 5c. 



288. Nonsaccharine sorghums. Paper, oc. 



289. Beans. Paper, 5c. 



290. Cotton bollworm, summary of its life history and habits. Paper, 5c. 



291. Evaporation of apples. Paper, 5c. 



292. Cost of filling silos. Paper, 5c. 



293. Use of fruit as food. Paper, 5c. 



294. Farm practice in Columbia Basin uplands. Paper, 5c. 



295. Potatoes and other root crops as food. Paper, 5c. 



296. Experiment station work 41. Paper, 5c. 



297. Superseded by 369. 



298. Food value of corn and corn products. Paper, 5c. 



299. Diversified farming under plantation system. Paper, 5c. 



300. Some important grasses and forage plants for Gulf Coast region. 



Paper, 5c. 



301. Home-grown tea. Paper, 5c. 



302. Sea Island cotton, its culture, improvement, and diseases. Paper, 5c. 



303. Corn-harvesting machinery. Paper, 5c. 



304. Growing and curing hops. Paper, 5c. 



305. Experiment station work 42. Paper, 5c. 



306. Dodder in relation to farm seeds. Paper, 5c. 



307. Roselle, its culture and uses. Paper, 5c. 



308. Game laws for 1907. Paper, 5c. 



309. Experiment station work 43. Paper, 5c. 



310. Successful Alabama diversification farm. Paper, 5c. 



311. Sand-clay and burnt-clay roads. Paper, 5c. 



312. Successful southern hay farm. Paper, 5c. 



313. Harvesting and storing corn. Paper, 5c. 



314. Method of breeding early cotton to escape boll -weevil dn range. 



Paper, 5c. 



