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



ior.4. Comparison of corn oUb obtained by exi.ellor and benzol extraction metliods. A. F. 



Sic vers. 1022. 

 lOfM. Metliods of manufacturiui; potato chips. Mar^'arot Connor Vosbury. 1922. 

 ■JO'ifl. Marketing cotton seed for plantinR piirpo.ses. J. E. Barr. 11)22. 

 1057. The cJiaulnioogi'a ti<'<- and some related species. A survey conducted in Siam, 



Burma, A.-^sam, and Bi'iiijal. Joseph F. Rook. 1922. 

 ior.8. Sterility of oats. Cliarlolte Klllott. 1922. 

 1059. Research methods in the studv of forest environment. Carlos G. Bates and 



Raphael Zon. 1922. 

 loc.o. Sitka .>-piuce : Its us"s, growth, and management. N. Lexoy Carey. 1922. I 



KMil. Lonpleaf pine. Wlllnir R. Mattoon. 1922. 

 10(j2. Relation of the character of the endoKperm to the .susceptibility of dent corn to root 



rotting. John r. Trost. 1922. 



1063. Sweet-potato storage studies. II. C. Thompson and James 11. Beattlo. 1922. 



1064. Oleoresin production : A microscopic study of the effects produced on the woody 



tissues of Southern pines by tllfferent methods of turpeutiuing. Elolse Gerry. 

 1922. 



10f)5. The test weight of grain : A simpl" metliod of determining the accuracy of the test- 

 ing apiiaiatiis. E. (I. Boerner and E. II Ropes. 1922. 



IdOii. Curculios that attack the young fruits and shoot.s of walnut and hickory. Fred K. 

 Brooks. 1922. 



10t>7. Testa of drainage pumping plants In the Southern States. W. B. Gregory. 1922. 



10n><. Farm ownership and tenancy in the Bhick Trairie of Texas. J. T. Sanders. 1922. 



10(19. Relation of production to income from dairy cows. J. C. McDowell. 1922. 



1070. Farm management In Catawba County, N. C. J. M. Johnson and E. D. Strait. 



1922. 



1071. Influence of season of freshening on production and income from dairy cowb. J. C. 



McDowell. 1922. 



1072. The handling, shipping, and cold storage of Bartlett pears in the Pacific Coast 



States. J. R. M.igness. 1922. 

 107.3. Some changes in tl.e < ..miK)siiioii of California avocados during growth. C. G. 



Church and E. M. Chace. 1922. 

 1074. ClassiUcatlon of Amerit-an wheat varieties. J. Allen Clark, John LI. Martin, and 



Carl, ton R. Ball. 1922. 

 107.'). The whipping quality of cream. C. J. Babcock. 1922. 



1076. Biology of the lotus borer {Pyrausta penitalis Grote). George G. Ainslie and 



W. h. Cailwright. 1922. 



1077. Portland cement concrete roads. James T. Voshell and R. E. Toms. 1922. 



1078. Beaver habits, l)eaver control, and po.ssibllitles in beaver farming. Vernon Bailey. 



1922. 



1079. Experiments with spray solutions for preventing Insect injury to green logs. F. C. 



Craighead. 1922. 



1080. Effect of low temperature on the hatching of gipsy-moth egga. John N. Summers. 



1922. 



1081. Biology of the papaya fruit fly. Toxitrppana curvicauda, in Florida. Arthur C. 



Mason. 1922. 



1082. The piv.ductiou of tulip bulbs. David Grlfllths 1922. 



1083. Farm and terminal market prices: Wheat, corn, and oats. Crop movement year, 



1920 21. I. \V. Strowbridg.-. 1922. 



1084. Inspection of fruit and vegetable canneries. F. B. Linton. 1922. 



1085. Broad-nosed grain weevil. Richard T. Cotton. 1922. 



lOSn. Slirinkage of soft pork under commercial conditions. L. B. Burk. 1922. 

 1087. Alfalfa root studies. Samuel Garver. 1922. 



loss. Zvgobothrla nidicola, an important parasite of the brown tail moth. C. F. W. 

 ■ .Meii.>,.|)eck. 1922. 



1089. Reindeer in Alaska. Seymour Hadwen and Lawrence J. Palmer. 1922. 



1090. Thr effects of inbreeding and e!o^sl)ri'.-iling on ;;ninea pig^ : I. Decline In vigor; 



II. Differentiation among Inbred families. Sewall Wright. 1922. 



1091. Life history of the kangaroo rat. Charles T. Norhies and Walter 1'. Tavlor. 1922. 



1092. Pedigreed ilber flax. Robert L. Davis. 1922. 



1093. The gipsy moth on era n In "try I)ogs. Charles W. Minott. 1922. 



1094. Metho<l8 of winter-wheat production at the Fort Hays branch station. John S. Cole 



and A. L. Ilallstrd. I9_'2. 



1095. Producers' cooperative inilk-distributlng plants. O. B. Jesness, W. H. Barber, A. V. 



Swartout, and C. E. Clement. 1922. 

 1090. By-products from crushing pranuts. J. B. Reed. 1922. 



1097. Tiic eir.>ct of silage on flavor and odor of milk. James A. Gamble and Erneirt 



Kelly. 1922. 



1098. Imtjonnding water In a bayou to control breeding of malaria mosquitoes. D. L. 



Van Dine. 1922. 

 1090. Frost injury to tomatoes. R. B. Ilan'ey and R. C. Wright. 1922. 



1100. Method of determining grease and dirt in wool. D. A. Spencer, J. I. Hardy, and 



Mary J. Bramlon. 1922. 



1101. Unit fetiuirements for producing market milk in Delaware. J. B. Bain and 



Raloh I'. Ilotls. 1922. 



1102. Kernel-spot of the pecan and Its cause. J. B. Dcmaree. 1022. 



1103. Sununarv of insert conditions throughout the United States during 1921. J. A. 



Hyslop. 1922. 



1104. Internal browning of the vellow Newtown apple. W. S. Ballard, J. R. Magness, 



and Lon A. Hawkins. 1922. 



1105. Natural reproduction of western yellow pine In the Southwest. O. A. Pearson. 



1923. 



1106. I^gul phases of cooperative associaMons. L. S. llulbert. 1922. Rev. 1923. 



1107. Th.' I. ad cable borer or short-circuit beetle in California. II. E. Burke, R. D. 



Hartman. and T. K. Snvder. 1922. 

 IIOS. Tahls for the micro copic Mentltlejitlon of inorganic salts. William II. Fry. 1922. 

 1109. SnleH methods and policies of a growers' national marketing agency. Asber 



Uubsoa and J. Burton Cbanuy. 1023. 



