FARMERS BULLETINS 



31 



5L'2. 

 5:.'3. 

 524. 

 025. 

 52C. 

 527. 

 52S. 

 529. 

 530. 

 531. 



532. 

 533. 

 534. 

 535. 

 53<;. 

 537. 

 538. 

 53it. 

 540. 

 5*1. 

 542. 



543. 

 544. 

 545. 

 54«!. 

 547. 

 548. 



540. 

 550. 

 P.^.l. 

 552. 

 553. 

 554. 

 555 



55a 



557. 

 558. 



559. 



5(10. 

 5»n. 



w.i. 



504. 



5C5. 



500. 



507. 

 5r,s. 

 5fi;t. 

 570 

 571. 

 572. 

 573. 

 574. 



570. 

 577. 



57M. 



570. 



.-vo. 



5.S1. 

 5K-_'. 

 5R3. 

 584. 

 585 

 BSO. 



5 87. 

 588. 

 580. 

 500. 

 501. 

 502. 

 5!i3. 

 501. 

 505. 



596. 



1913. 

 Clawson, 



1013. 



Hunt. 1913. 



and lladleigh 



1913. 



J. II. Arnold 

 1913 



1013. 

 Supersedes 



Experiment station work — LXXIII. 1913. 



Tobacco curing. W. W. Garni r. 1013. 



Tile drninap- on the farn». A. (i. Smith. 1918. 



KaislnK guinea pigs. David i:. Lautz. 1913. 



Mutton and its vahn' in the diet. ('. F. l.angworthy and Caroline I 



Expeiinicnt station work — LXXIV. 101.3. 



Hints to poultry rai.sers. Harry M. Lainon. 1913. 



Vetcli KrowinK in the South Atlantic States. A. O. Smith. 



Important poultry diseases. I>. K. Salmon. 1913. 



Larkspur, or " poison weed." ('. Dwight Marsh, A. B. 



Marsh. 1913. 

 Experiment station work — LXXV. 1013. 



Good seed potatoes and how to produce them. William Stuart. 1913 

 l»urum wheat. Cecil Salmon and J. Allen ("lark. Ull.'i. 

 Sugar and its value as food. Mary Hiiimau Ahel. 1913. 

 Slo. k poisoning due to scarcity of food. (". Dwight Marsh 

 How to grow an acre of corn." ('. 1'. Hartley. 1!I1.3. 



Sites, soils, and varieties of citrus grov.s In the (iulf States. P. II. Rolfs 

 rmpagation of citrus trees in the Gulf States. P. H. Rolfs. 1913. 

 The st.iM" fiv. K. C. r.isl'.opp. 1013. 

 Farm butter making. .1. U. Keithley. 1013. 

 Culture, fertilization, and frost protection of citrus groves In the Gulf States. 



P. H. K.lfs. 1013. 

 Common whiti' grubs. John J. Davis. 1913. 

 Potato-tuber diseases. W. A. Orton. 1913. 

 Controlling Cjinada thistles. H. R. fox. 1013. 

 How to manage a corn crop In Kentucky and West Virginia. 

 The yellow fever mosquito. L. O. Howard. 1013. 

 Storing: and marketing sweet iKitatoes. H. C. Thompson. 



Farmers' Hulletin 520. 

 Experiment station work. — LXXVI. 1913. 

 Crimson clover: (Jrowing the crop. J. M. Westgate. 1013. 

 Till- cultivation of .Vnn'rican ginseng. Walter V:i!i Flcit. 1013. 

 Kafir as a grain crop. Carleton U. Pall and Penton K. Kotbgeh. 

 Pop corn for tho home. C. P. Hartiev and .T. G. Willier. 1!H3. 

 Pop corn for the market. C. P. Hartliy and J. (J. Willier. 1013. 

 Cotton anthracnose and how to control it. W. W. Gilbert. 1013. 

 Tin' making and feeding of silage. T. E. Woodward, George M 



Ward, and K. L. Shaw. 1013. 

 Tho potato-tuber moth. F. H. Chittenden. 1913. 

 Agricultural outlook: Weather conditions during the past month (August) with 



relation to crops. September, 1913. 

 Use of corn, kafir, and cowpeas in the liome. C. F. Lnngworthy and Caroline L. 



Hunt. 1013. 

 .\-'riiultnral outlook. Agricultural forecasts. St^ptemher, 1013. 

 Bean glowing in eastern Washington and Oregon and northern Idaho. Lee W. 



Fiuharty. 1913. 

 The organization of boys and girls' poultry clubs. Harry M. Lamon. 1913. 

 Tbe agricultural outlook : Crop production in the T'nlted States. October. 1918. 

 The gipsv moth and the brown-tall motli, with suggestions for their control. A. F. 



Rurgess. 1913. 

 Corn meal as a food and ways of using it. C. F. Langworthy and Caroline L. 



Hunt. 1014. 

 Doys' pig clubs, with special reference to their organization In the South. W. F. 



Ward. 1913. 

 Sugar-beet growing un<ler irrigation. C. O. Townsend. 1914. 

 Sugar-beet growing under buiiild coM<lltlons. C. O. Townsend. 1914. 

 Texas or tick fever. .John U. .Mobler. 1914. 

 The agricultural outlook. (December.) 1913. 

 Tobacco culture. W. W. Garner. 1914. 

 .\ svstem of farm cost accounting. (". R. I.iadd. 1014. 

 Tbr- angora goat. L. L. Heller. 1014. 

 !•■ ultry hous.' eoiiHtructlon. Alfred H. L<'e. 1914. 

 The .igricultural outlook: Livestock of the United States. (As on .January 1.) 



1014. 

 Preeds of sheep for the farm. F. It. Marshall, 1914. 

 Growing Egvptlan cotton in Ihi- Salt River Valley, Ariz. E. W. Hudson. 1914. 



' ■ T. E. Woodward. George M. Rommel, W. F. 



1913. 



Rommel, W. F. 



Westgate. 1914. 



F. Ward and Dan T. 



The makUer and feeding of ullage 



Ward, ,ind F. L Sbaw. 1014. 

 Crimson elner : rtlliznllon. .1. M 

 Peef [iroclnetion In the South. W 

 The agrlenltiiral otitlook. 1014. 



T'ses for eheslnut timber killed by the bark dlsense. .T 

 Tbe coiiunon mole of the e.-i-itern I'nlti-fl States. Tlieo. 

 The agricultural outlook 1014. 

 Natural and artlflcl.il Incubation of hens' eggs. Harry M. Lamon. 1914. 

 Collection anrl preservation of jibint material for use In the stmlv of agriculture. 11. 



n. Derr and C. H. Lime. 1014. 

 Econondc value of N'.irlh .Vmerlcan skunks. D. E. Lnntz. I9I4 

 Economic cattle feeding In the Corn Pelt. J. S. Cotton and W, F. Ward. 1914. 

 Homemade hIIos Helmer Rablld, A. K. Rlsser, and K. E. Parks. 1914 

 The agricultural outlook. 1914. 



The elassin.allon and grading of cotton, p F Fnrle nnd W. S. Donn. 1014. 

 Stoekwatering pbi'-es on wi'stern gra/lng lands. Will G. Karnes. 1014. 

 How t" use farm credit. T. N. ('luv.r 1011 

 Shljtping eggs by parcel post Lewis P. I'lohr. 1914. 

 Arsenate of lead as an Insei-tlclde Hgnlnst the folmroo liornworms In the dark 



tobacco districts. A. C. Morgan and D. C. Parninn. 10H. 

 The culture of winter wheat In the eastern United States. Clyde E. Leighly. 1914. 



Gray. 1014. 



Nellls. 1914. 

 SehelTer. 1914. 



