16 DOCUMENT PRICE LIST 16, STH EDITION 



FARMERS' BULLETIN Continued. 



435. Experiment station work 62. Paper, 5e. 



436. Winter oats for the South. Paper, 5c. 



437. System of tenant farming and its results. Paper, 5c. 



438. Hog houses. Paper, 5c. 



439. Anthrax, with special reference to its suppression. Paper, 5c. 



440. Spraying peaches for control of brown-rot, scab, and curculio. Pa- 



per, 5c. 



441. Lespedeza, or Japan clover. Paper, 5c. 



442. Treatment of bee diseases. Paper, 5c. 



443. Barley, growing the crop. Paper, 5c. 



444. Remedies and preventives against mosquitoes. Paper, 5c. 



445. Marketing eggs through creamery. Paper, 5c. 



446. Choice of crops for alkali land. * Paper, 5c. 



447. Bees. Paper, 5c. . 



448. Better grain-sorghum crops. Paper, 5c. 



449. Rabies or hydrophobia. Paper, 5c. 



450. Some facts about malaria. Paper, 5c. 



451. Experiment station work 63. Paper, 5c. 



452. Capons and caponizing. Paper, 5c. 



453. Danger of general spread of gypsy and brown-tail moths through 



imported nursery stock. Paper, 5c. 



454. Successful New York farm. Paper, 5c. 



455. Red clover. Paper, 5c. 



456. Our grossbeaks and their value to agriculture. Paper, 5c. 



457. Experiment station work 64. Paper, 5c. 



458. Best 2 sweet sorghums for forage. Paper, 5c. 



459. House flies. Paper, 5c. 



460. Frames as factor in truck growing. Paper, 5c. 



461. Use of concrete on the farm. Paper, 5c. 



462. Utilization of logged-off land for pasture in western Oregon and 



western Washington. Paper, 5c. 



463. Sanitary privy. Paper, 5c. 



464. Eradication of quack-grass. Paper, 5c. 



465. Experiment station work 65. Paper, 5c. 



466. Winter emmer. Paper, 5c. 



467. Control of chestnut bark disease. Paper, 5c. 

 ' 468. Forestry in nature study. Paper, 5c. 



469. Experiment station work 66. Paper, 5c. 



470. Game laws for 1911. Paper, 5c. 



471. Grape propagation, pruning, and training. Paper, 5c. 



472. Systems of farming in central New Jersey. Paper, 5c. 



473. Tuberculosis, plain statement of facts regarding disease, prepared 



especially for farmers and others interested in live stock. Paper, 5c. 



474. Use of paint on farm. Paper, 5c. 



475. Ice houses. Paper, 5c. 



476. Dying of pine in Southern States. Paper, 5c. 



477. Sorghum sirup manufacture. Paper, 5c. 



478. How to prevent typhoid fever. Paper, 5c. 



479. Experiment station work 67. Paper, 5c. 



480. Practical methods of disinfecting stables. Paper, 5c. 



481. Concrete construction on live-stock farm. Paper, 5c. 



482. Pear and how to grow it. Paper, 5c. 



484. Some common mammals of western Montana in relation to agriculture 



and spotted fever. Paper, 5c. 



485. Sweet clover. Paper, 5c. 



486. Experiment station work 68. Paper, 5c. 



487. Cheese and its economical uses in diet. Paper, 5c. 



488. Diseases of cabbage and related crops and their control. Paper, 5c. 



489. Two dangerous imported plant diseases [white-pine blister rust and 



wart disease of potato]. Paper, 5c. 



490. Bacteria in milk. Paper, 5c. 



491. Profitable management of small apple orchard on general farm. Pa- 



per, 5c. 



492. More important insect and fungous enemies of fruit and foilage of 



apple. Paper, 5c. 



493. English sparrow as a pest. Paper, 5c. 



