6 MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATION 9, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



2S6. Strength tests of stnictiiral timbers treatod by couimerclnl wood-prosorvlnR proc- 



e8S<8. II. S. Hctts and .1. A. Ncwlln. I!tl5. 

 2R7. A di'vico for samplini; Krain. S'-cdH. and otbcr material. E. (5. Boeriier. 1915. 



288. Cu8tt>m ulniilnj; as a fai-tor In cottonswd dt'ttrioration. D. A. Saunders nnd P. V. 



C'ardon. r.!!;"). 



289. Ited-clovi r seed production : rolllnatii)n studios. J. M. \Vost«atP. H. S. Coe, A. T. 



Wianrko. K. K. Kobblns. II. I). Ihiulics, L. II. Painm.l, and .1. N. -Martin. 1915. 



290. Rail Kliir)nM'nts and distribution of fresh tomatoes, 1914. Wells A. Slierman, Paul 



I'>ieblieli. and Houston F. Walker. 1915. 



291. PredinK millet and sotko for drouKlit adapiaticm. A. C. Dillman. 1916. 



292. l)lstril)utlon and mlicratlon of North American gulls and tlieir allies. Wells W. 



«.'ooke. 1915. 

 29.'{. The grasshopper outbreak In New Mexico during the summer of 1913. Harrison 

 E. Smith. 1915. 



294. Lessons on cotton for rural common schools. C. II. Ijane. 1915. 



295. The Zimmerman pine moth. .Tosef Ilniiiiier. 1915. 



:.'9»?. Our forejuMi tnulc in farm anrl forest products. Perry Elliott. I'.'IH. 



297. ('erc:'.l Investi^rntions on I lie Hollo Fourche experiment farm. Cecil Salmon. 1915. 



298. Peach supply and distriUutlon in 1914. Wells A. Rherman, Houston F. Walker, 



and L. Herbert Martin. 1915. 



299. The iis'ii's : Tlieir cbnraclerisi ics and management. W. D. Sterrett. 1915. 

 .".(•9. Rxcavatin;; macliini ry used In land drainase. D. Xj. Ynrnell. 1915. 



301. Sliver fox farmiiij; In" eastern North .Vmerlca. Ned Dearborn. 1915. 



S02. Apple market Investigations, 1914-15. Clarence W. Moomnw and M. M. Stew- 

 art. 1915. 



303. A bnctcrioIoL'Ical study of retail Ice cream. S. Henry Avers and William T. John- 

 son. Jr. 1915. 



30 1. Land drainiiire by means of pumps. S. JL Woodward and C. W. Okev. 1915. 



305. F'xerdses with plants nnd animals for southern rural schools. E. A. Miller. 1915. 



30fl. Some efTects of selection on the production of alknlolds in belladonna. A. V. 

 Sicvers. 1915. 



307. Tests of corn varieties on the Great Plains. L. L. Zook. 1915 



308. Sbort-leaf pine : Its economic Importance and forest manaKoment. Wilbur R. 



Mattoon. 1915. 



309. Zacaton as a paper-making material. Charles J. Brand and Jason L. Merrill. 



1915. 



310. Digestibility of s^me animal fats. C. F. I,an>;worthy and A. D. ITolmes. 1915. 



311. The Iinndlinsj and ni.irketinir of the Arizona Egyptian cotton of the Salt River 



Vnllpy. J. O. M.irtln. 1915. 

 812. Phospbnte- rock and iiietliods proposed for its utilization as a fertilizer. William 

 H. Wacsraman and William II. Fry. 1915. 



313. Features of flie sbeep industries of the United States, New Zealand, and Australia 



oompTied. F. R. Marshall. 1915. 



314. Method" frr the ex.iniin.ition of bituminous road materials. Pr<^vost Hubbard nnd 



Ch.irles S. Reeve. 1915. 



315. Cantaloupe marketintr in the lareer cities, with car-lot .<!upplv, 1914. Wells A. 



Sherman. A. Dexter Gail, Jr.. nnd Faith L. Yenw. 1915. 

 31R. Willows: Their growth, use. nnd Importance. Geortre N. I/amb. 1915. 



317. Lnrcli mistletoe: Some economic considerations of Its injurious effects. James R. 



Weir. lOir, 



318. The bonavist lablnb. or hvaclnth bean. C. V. Piper and W. J. Morse. 1915. 

 31'V Formenfed milks. L. A. Rogers. 1910 



3l.'0. Farm praetice in the cultivation of corn. II. R. Categ. 1910. 

 ."21. Cosit of fencing farms in the North Central States. 11. N. Humphrey. 1910. 

 322. TTtillzalion of .American flax straw In the paper and fiber-board Industry. Jason L. 

 Merrill. 1910. 



823. Importiinfe ;ind character of the milled rice imported Into the United States. F. B. 



Wise. 1915. 



824. Community i)roduction of Durango cotton in the Imperial Valley. Argyle Mc- 



Lachlan. 1915. 



825. rFoneybees : Wintering, yields, Imports, nnd exports of honey. Samuel A. Jones. 



1915. 

 320. Birds of Porto Rico. AI<x Wetmore. 1910. 



327. The spruce ;iiid bnlsam fir trees of the Rocky Mountain region. George B. Sud- 



worth. 19Hi. 



328. Milling nnd linking tests of wheat containing ndmixtures of rye, corn, cockle, king- 



head, aiKl veteb. R. C. Miller. 191.",. 

 829. Notes Of) five .North .American buffalo gnats of the gonu.s simulium. Arthur W. 



Jobhins Pomeroy. 1910. 

 330. The milling of rlie anil Its meehanlcal and chemical effect upon the grain. F. B. 



Wise and A. W. P.roomell. 1910. 

 831. The handling and .^liipning of trc.-'h cherries and prunes from the Willamette Vnllev. 



II. J. Ramsey. 1910. 



332. Commnnitv prodintlon of TOgvptian cotton In the United States. C. S. Scofleld. 



T. II. Kearney. C. J. Brand, O. F. C.ok. nnd W. T. Swingle. 1910. 



333. Termites, or "while ants." in the United States: Their damage nnd methods of 



prevention. Thomas F^. Snvder. 1910. 

 834. DIreetlons f,,r blneherry eiiltiire. 1910. Frederick V. Coville. 1915. 

 335. Development of sngjir and aiid In grapes <lurinL' ripening. Wlllinm B. Allwood, 



B J. H.irtman. J R. Eo(T. M. J. Inirb-. and S. F. SherwcK.d. 1910. 

 3.30. Cereal experiments In Maryland and Virginia. T. R. Stanton. 1910. 



337. A study of the tenant system of farming In the Yazoo-MlsslsslppI delta. H. A. 



Boeirer and E. A. fJoldenweiser. 1910. 



338. Maehlnery cost of farm operaticms In western New York. II. II. Mowry. 1910. 

 ' ii9i). Experiments on the economical use «f Irrigation water In Idaho. Don II. Bark. 



1910. 

 340. Experiments In vaccination nu'alnst anthrax. Adolph Elchhorn. 1915. 

 841. Farm nianngeinent practice of Chester Countv, Pa. W. J. Splllman, H. M. Dixon, 



nnd G. A. Billings. 1910. 



