INSECTS 95 



The following Farmer's Bulletins, (revised to 1921) 

 are available for distribution to those interested, by 

 the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, 

 D.C.— 



Farmer's Bulletin No. 47, Insects Affecting the Cotton 

 Plant; No. 447, Bee Keeping; No. 440, The Peach Twig 

 Borer; No. 120, The Principal Insects Affecting the 

 Tobacco Plant; No. 856, Important Insecticides; No. 835, 

 The Principal Insect Enemies of Growing Wheat; 

 No. 799, Carbon Bisulphide as an Insecticide; No. 243, 

 Insecticides and Fungicides; No. 152 (revised) Mange 

 in Cattle; No. 155, How Insects Affect Health in Rural 

 Districts; No 492, The Control of the Codling Moth; 

 No. 172, Scale Insects and Mites on Citrus Trees; No. 196, 

 Usefulness of the Toad; No. 209, Controlling the Boll 

 Weevil in Cotton Seed and at Ginneries; No. 211, The 

 Use of Paris Green in Controlling the Cotton Boll 

 Weevil; No. 872, The Cotton Bollworm; No. 848, The 

 Control of the Boll Weevil; No. 223, Miscellaneous 

 Cotton Insects in Texas; No. 908, The Control of the 

 Codling Moth and Apple Scab. 



Bulletins of the Bureau of Entomology may be 

 obtained from the same source, while the supply lasts, 

 as follows: 



Destructive Locusts; The Honey Bee; The San Jose 

 Scale; The Principal Household Insects of the United 

 States; The Gypsy Moth in America; The Periodical 

 Cicada; The Chinch Bug; The Hessian Fly; Insects 

 Injurious to Vegetables; Notes on Mosquitoes; Some 

 Insects Attacking the Stems of Growing Wheat, Rye, 

 Barley, and Oats. 



