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



266. The destruction of cellulose by bacteria and filamentous fun^. I. G. McBeth and 



F. M. Scales. 1!»1S. 



267. Nonpereunial niinJicaKt'S : The agronnmlc value and botanical relationship of the 



si)ecles. Kolaiid McKeo ami 1'. L. Hieker. 1013. 



268. Tobiuco marketiuj? In the Inlted States. E. H. Mathvwson. 1913. 



269. Experiments in wh'-at hree<llu>: : Kxperinieiital error in the nursery and variation in 



nitrogen and yield. E. C. .\lontt,'onurv. 191.3. 



270. Contiibutiuus to the study ot maize deterioration. Biochemical and toiiloRical 



investigations of I'cnivillium juibvrulum and I'enihUHum stolon-ifo-um. Carl L. 

 AlsherK and Otis K. Blaek. l!il.{. 



271. Some etlects of refrUeration on sulphured and unsulphured hops. W. W. Stock- 



bcriter and Frank Uahak. 1912. 



272. Ilendlfy of a nmizo variation, (i. N. Collins. 1913. 



273. The musciidlne K'apes. (ieor^e C. Ilusniaun and Charles Dearing. 1913. 



274. Wild wheat in I'aie.^tlne. O. F. Cook. 1913. 



275. Apiil<s and peaches In the Ozark region. II. P. (Jould and W. F. Fletcher. 1913. 

 270. The utillf.ation of waste raisin seeds. Frank Uahak. 1913. 



277. A hlochenilcal study of the curly-top of su^ar beets. Herbert H. Bunzel. 1913. 



27M. l"li»rai abnormalities in niai/.i-. James II. Kompton. 1913. 



27!t. The effects of artitlcial shading on plant growlii in Loui.siann. IL L. Shantz. 1913. 



280. The •' rough bark " disease of the yellow Newtown apple. John W. Kolx-rts. 1913. 



281. A dry rot of sweet potatoes caused bv Di(ti)ortlu: batatatU. L. L. Ilarter and 



Ethel C. Meld. 1913. 



282. Se<ds and plants Imixirtcd during the period January 1 to March 31, 1912. Inventory 



.No. 30: Nos. 3i;:}r,9 to 33278. lfH.3. 



283. Cereal experiments in the Texas panh.indle. John F. Ross and A. II. Leldlgh. 1913. 



284. The water requirem-nt of plants: I. Iiivtstlgatiuns In the Great Plains In 1910 and 



1911. Lyman J. Bripgs and II. L. Shantz. 1913. 

 2S5. The water requirement of plants: II. A review of the literature. Lyman J. Briggs 

 and II. L. Shantz. 1913. 



CIRCUL.\R8 



1. Self-boiled llmc-sulphur mixture as a i)romisiug fungicide. W. M. Scolt. 1908. 



2. An improved method of separating buckhorn from red clover and alfalfa seeds. 



Harry B. Shaw. 1!)08. 



3. Some stem tumors or knots on apple and quince trees. George G. Iledgcock. 1908. 



4. The treatment of damping-off in coniferous seedlings. Perley Spauldlng. 1908. 



5. Barley culture in the northern Great Plains. Mark Alfred Carleton. 1008. 



t>. The cultivation and handling of goldenseal, .\liee llenkel and G. Fred Klug. 1908. 



7. The field treatment of tobacco root rot. Lyman J. Briggs. 1908. 



8. The smuts of sorghum. Edward M. Freeman and Harry J. C. Umberger. 1908. 



Rev. i;tlO. 



9. Texas root rot of cotton : Field experiments In 1907. C. L. Shear and George F. 



Miles. 1908. 



10. Notes on dry farming. William M. Jardine. lt»08. 



11. Danger in judging cotton varieties by lint iHTcentages. O. F. Cook. 1908. 



12. Dry-land grains. William M. Jardine. 1908. 



13. The work of the San Antonio -Experiment Farm In 1907. Frank B. lleadley and 



Stephen H. Ha -tings. 11(08. 



14. Change of v( getabon on the south Texas prairies. O. F. Cook. 1908. 



IT). The fertilizing value of hairy vetch for Connecticut tobacco fields. T. R. Robinson. 

 1908. 



16. A. new basis for barley valuation and improvement. Albert Mann. 1908. 



17. Index to papers relating to plant-industry subjects in the yearbooks of the United 



States Department of Agriculture. J. E. Rockwell. lilOH. 



15. Reapfxa ranee of a primitive character in cotton hybrids. O. F. Cook. 1908. 



19. The decay of Florida orange.s wbile in transit and" on the market. Lloyd S. Tenny, 



G. W. Ilosford, and II. M. White. 1008. 



20. An electrical revistance method for the rapid determination of the moisture content 



of grain. Lyman J. Briggs. 190.S. 



21. Farmers' cooiierative demonstration work In Its relation to rural improvement. 



S. A. Knai.p. l'.;08. 



22. Farm methods of applying land plaster in western Oregon and western Washington. 



Byron Hunter. 1900. 



23. Potato diseas«>H in San Joaquin County, Calif. W. A. Orton. 1909. 



24. Alfalfa in cultivated rows for seed production in semiarid regions. Charles J. 



Brand and J. .M. Westgate. 1909. 



25. The cost of cleMrlng logged-off land for farming in the Pacific Northwest. Harry 



Thomjison. 1909. 

 20. Somi- fac.ors affei-tliig the keening qualities of American lemons. Rodney H. True 

 and Arthur F. Slevers. 1900. 



27. LIme-suIphur mixtures for the summer spraying of orchards. W. M. Scott. 1909. 



28. Clover-.seed pro(lu<tion in the Willamette Vallev. Oreg. Bvron Hunter. 1000. 



29. Experiments with Egyptian cotton in 100m. Thomas H. Kearney and William A. 



l'eter:^on. looo. 



30. Improvement of tlie oat crop. C. W. Warburton. 19'19. 



31. Notes on the number and distribution of native legumes in Nebraska and Kansas. 



Joseph Allen Wnrnn. lO'iO. 



82. Moisture content and shrinkage in grain. J. W. T. Duvel. 1909. 



83. The neeessity for new standards of hop valuation. W. W. Stockberger. 1909. 



84. The work of tin- San .Nntotvio ExiKrlment Farm in 1908. Frank B. Headley and 



Stephen HasfingH. 1009. 



85. Thf ftresent status of the white-pine blights. Perley Bpaulding. 1909. 



?0. The lud rot of the coconut palm. John R. Johnston. 1909. 

 7. Comparative tests of sugar-beet varlitles. J. E. W. Tracy and Joseph F. Reed. 

 1909. 

 88. Euroi>can currant rust on the white pine in America. Perley Spauldlng. 1909. 



