18 DOCUMENT PRICE LIST 16, STH EDITION 



FARMERS' BULLETIN Continued. 



555. Cotton anthracnose and how to control it. Paper, 5c. 



556. Making and feeding of silage. Paper, 5c. 



557. Potato-tuber inoth. Paper, 5c. 



558. Agricultural outlook. Sept. 11, 1913. Paper, 5c. 



559. Use of corn, kafir, and cowpeas in the home. Paper, 5c. 



560. Agricultural outlook. Oct. 11, 1913. Paper, 5c. 



561. Bean growing in eastern Washington and Oregon, and northern 



Idaho. Paper, 5c. 



562. Organization of boys' and girls' poultry clubs. Paper, 5c. 



564. Gipsy moth and brown-tail moth, with suggestions for their control. 



Paper, 5c. 



565. Corn meal as food and ways of using it. Paper, 5c. 



566. Boys' pig clubs. Paper, 5c. 



567. Sugar-beet growing under irrigation. Paper, 5c. 



568. Sugar-beet growing under humid conditions. Paper, 5c. 



569. Texas or tick fever. Paper, 5c. 



570. Agricultural outlook. Dec. 27, 1913. Paper, 5c. 



571. Tobacco culture. Paper, 5c. 



572. System of farm cost accounting. Paper, 5c. 



573. Angora goat. Paper, 5c. 



574. Poultry house construction. Paper, 5c. 



575. Agricultural outlook. Feb. 7, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



576. Breeds of sheep for farm. Paper, 5c. 



577. Growing Egyptian cotton in Salt River Valley, Ariz. Paper, 5c. 



578. Making and feeding of silage. Paper, 5c. 



579. Crimson clover, utilization. Paper, 5c. 



580. Beef production in the South. Paper, 5c. 



581. Agricultural outlook. Mar. 18, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



582. Uses for chestnut timber killed by bark disease. Paper, 5c. 



583. Common mole of eastern United States. Paper, 5c. 



584. Agricultural outlook. Mar. 23, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



585. Natural and artificial incubation of hen's eggs. Paper, 5c. 



586. Collection and preservation of plant material for use in study of 



agriculture. Paper, 5c. 



587. Economic yalue of North American skunks. Paper, 5c. 



588. Economical cattle feeding in corn belt. Paper, 5c. 



589. Homemade silos. Paper, 5c. 



590. Agricultural outlook. Apr. 23, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



591. Classification and grading of cotton. Paper, 5c. 



592. Stock-watering places on western grazing lands. Paper, 5c. 



593. How to use farm credit. Paper, 5c. 



594. Shipping eggs by parcel post. Paper, 5c. 



595. Arsenate of lead as insecticide against tobacco hornworms in dark- 



tobacco district. Paper, 5c. 



596. Culture of winter wheat in eastern United States. Paper, 5c. 



597. Road drag and how it is used. Paper, 5c. 



598. Agricultural outlook. May 22, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



599. Pasture and grain crops for hogs in Pacific Northwest. Paper, 5c. 



600. Outfit .for boring taprooted stumps for blasting. Paper, 5c. 



601. New system of cotton culture and its application. Paper, 5c. 

 604. Agricultural outlook. June 23, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



608. Removal of garlic flavor -from milk and cream. Paper, 5c. 

 611. Agricultural outlook. July 21, 1914. Paper, 5c. 



JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH. [Monthly.] Paper, 25c., a 

 single copy ; $2.50 a year. A 1.23 : 



Contains the technical material contributed by the scientific bureaus of the 

 Agriculture Department formerly published in, the bulletins issued by the bureaus. 

 It was thought inadvisable to include in series intended for popular distribution, 

 such as the Farmers' Bulletins or Agriculture Department Bulletins, the reports 

 of scientific researches, which must necessarily be described in scientific termi- 

 nology that is so much Greek to the layman. By keeping this sort of material in 

 a series by itself, the interest of students and specialists will be served and no 

 puzzles will be put in the hands of the practical people. 



Vol. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1913. Paper, 25c. 



CONTENTS : 



Citrus ichangensis, promising, hardy, new species from southwestern China 



and Assam. 



Cysticercus ovis, cause of tapeworm cysts in mutton. 

 Serpentine leaf-miner. 



