8 :MISCELLANE0US publication 9, U. S. DEPT, OF AGRICULTURE 



39C. Second aiinaal report of bird counts In thp United States, with discussion of resiilte. 



WvUs \V. Cooke. lOKi. 

 397. The >;r;iziii;i industry of the blncgrass region. Lyman Carrier. 1910. 

 31)8. CoituI expeiiuicnts at the Judith Basin Sulistiitioni Moccasin, Mont. N. C. Donald- 



Siin. liMU. 

 399. The production of Kwcct-orange oil and a new machine for |)eeling citrus friuts. 



Po.-sihility 111" til.' coinnnTciai production of s\vci-t-oran;;p oil from waste orange3. 



S. C. liood and G. A. Itnssfll. 1910. 

 i(H). Kxporlments widi Mnniuix wheat. Carleton R. Bail and J. Ailiii Claris. 1910. 

 401. Markoiiun mid distrihution of western nuiskmelons in 1915. 0. W. Schleiissnet 



iin<i C. U'. Kitchen. 1910. 

 401i. Ccnai e.xperiniciii.s at tlie .Vliron Firld Station, Altron, C<do. George A. iI<'Murdo. 



1910. • 



40.'{. A system of accounts for livestoclc shijiping associations. John R. numuhr<»y and 



W. 11. Kerr. 1010. 

 404. Hemp hurds as paper-making mnterial. Lyster II. Dewey and Jason L. Merrill. 



1''10. 

 40.'>. I^upini's as pnis^nous plants. C. D. Marsh, A. B. Clawson, and IladlelKh Marsh. 



1910. 

 40(i. liistingiiishing characters of the seeds of Sudan grass and Johnson gras.s. F. IT. 



Hillinau, 1910. 

 407. I'roen'ss reports of experiments In dust prevention and road preservation. 1915. 



1910. 

 40S Experiments during 101. 5 In the destruction of fly larvae In horse manure. F. C. 



Co' k and R. H. Hutchison. 1916. 

 —40^ Factors afTtcfins; interest rates and other charges on short-time farm lonna. 



C. W. Tboinpsoii. 191 0. 



410. Value to farm families of food, fuel, and use of house. W. C. Funk. 1910. 



411. Systems of renting truck farms In southwe.stern New Jersey. Howard A. Turner. 



1910. 



412. The nominl day's -work of farm Implements, workmen, and crews In western New 



York. II. If. Mowry. 1916. 

 41.3. Infiiiincp of age on the value of dairy cows and farm work horses. J. C. Mc- 

 Dowell. 1916. 



414. Convict labor for road work. J. E. Ponnvbacker, II. K. Fairbank, and W. F. Drajxr. 



1910. 

 4ir>. The recovery of potash from ahinite. W. II. Waggam.Tn and J. A. Cnllen. 1010. 



416. Red spider on cotton. E. A. McGregor and F. L. McDonongh. 1917. 



417. The genus calosonia. A. F. Burgess and C. W. CoMl'is. 1017. 



415. Western vellow nine In Oregon. Thornton T. Mungor. 1017. 



419. The grape leaf folder. J. F. Strauss. 1016. 



4:iO. Cooling hot-bottled Pasteurized milk by forced air. S. Henry Ayres, John T. 

 Bowen, and W. T. Johnson, jr. 1010. 



421. The EUgar-beet tlirips. Wni. H. White. 1010. 



422. Tl.e <»girpl''nt tortoise- beetle. Thomas IT. Jones. 1916. 



423. I.rfibor reqtdrements of dairy farms as Influenced by milking machines. Harold 



N. lliinipbrcv. 1010. 

 4?4. Till' C.ltcinwood borer. F. B. Milliken. 1916. 

 425. Farming on the cnt-ovor lands of Michig;in, Wi-sconsin. and Minnesota. J. C. 



Mcl).u-ell nnd W. B. Wnlki r. 1010. 



420. Sugar pine. J^jul.s T. Larsen and T. I). Woodbury. 1910. 



427. The potato tnl er moth. J. K. Grnt. 1017. 



428. Mi'iHrrii/o falcatu, a yellow-flowered altalfa. R. A. Oakley and Samuel Ctarrer. 



1017. 



429. r>lfe historv of the codling motn In the Pecos Valley, New Mexico. A. L. Qualntanco 



and K. W. Geyer. 1917. 



430. Cereal experiments on the Cheyenne Exinriment Farm, Archer, Wyoming. Jenkin 



W. Jones. 1916. 

 4.31. Sacbrood. G. F. White 1917. 

 423. The siiikc-horned lent miner, an enemy of grAins and grasses. Philip Luglnbill and 



T. D. Urhahns. 1910. 

 43.3. Chani-'es In fres'i beef during cold storage above freezing. Ralph Hoaglnnd, 



Charles N, McBryde, and Wllmer C. Powlck. 1917. 

 434. Juri'-'ing the dairy cow as a subject of Instruction In secondary schools. H. P. 



Birrows and H. P. Davis. 1010. 

 43.-. Tlie apple leaf-sewer. P.. R. Lea< li. 1010. 

 4^.6. Tl^e desert corn (lea beptle. V. Ti. Wlldermuth. 1917. 



4:i7. I'Ipt headed borers afTfviing forest trees in the Inilcd States. H. K. Burke. 1017. 

 4'IS. The pear leaf worm. R. L. Noiigaret. W. M. David«oii. and E. J. Newcomer. 1010. 

 4.39. Thp soybean, with special reference to its utillzalion for oil, cake, and other iirod- 



iicts. r. V. Piper and W. J. Morse. 1916. 



440. Lumbering In the sugar and yellow pine region of California. Swift Berry. 1917. 



441. The action of matiganese under add and neutral soil conditions. J. J. Skinner and 



F. R. Reld. 1010. 



442. Posslbllltv of the commercial production of lemon-grass oil In the United States. 



S. C. Hood. 1017. 



443. The New Mexico range caterpillar and its controL V. L. Wlldermuth and D. J. 



Caffrev. 1010. 



444. False blossom of the cultivated cranberry. C. L. Shear. 1916. 



445. Th<- navel orange of Balila ; with notes on .some little-known Brazilian fruits. 



P. II. Dorsetf, A. D. Shamel. and Wilson PojH-noe. 1917. 

 440. The oo.st of prod\icliig ajiplcs In the Wenatchee Valley, Wa.sh. O. H. Miller and 

 S. M, Thomson. 1017. 



447. Water penetration In the gumbo soils of the Belle Fourche reclamation project- 



O. K. Mathews. 1916. 



448. Separation and identUlcntion of food c<dorlng snhstances. W. E. Mathewson. 1917. 



449. A study of the electrolytic method of silver cleaning. IL L. I^ang and C. F. Walton, 



jr. 1910. 

 4.-0. Improvement of GMrka spring wheat In yield and quality. J. Alien Clark. 1916. 

 451. The chemical composition of lime-sulphur animal dips. Robert M. Chapln. 1910. 



