DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE BULS. 276-300. 



Club — Bulletin No. Paeg. 

 home projects, organization in public school, plan and 



suggestions 281 2-4 



project, cotton, record blank for rural school 294 14-15 



Cocoa — 



butter, imports and sources, 1910-1914 296 34 



foreign trade, 1851-1914 296 31 



imports with chocolate, 1910-1914, value 296 3 



Coconut oil, imports and sources, 1907-1914 296 34 



Codling moth, effect of various insecticides, experiments. . 278< 28-^ ^Q 40 



Coe, H. S., J. M. Westgate, and others, bulletin on " Red- 

 clover seed production : Pollination studies " 289 1-31 



Coffee — 



exports, 1910-1914, value 296 2 



foreign trade, 1790-1914 296 30-31 



imports, 1910-1914, value 296 2 



substitutes and source, 1910-1914 296 31 



Colorado, peach shipments, 1914, season and stations 



shipping i 298 7, 10 



Conifers — 



occurrence in northern hardwood forests 285 6-16 



standing timber privately owned in Lake States 285 9 



Connecticut, peach shipments 1914, season and stations 



shipping 298 10 



Cooke, Wells W., bulletin on "Distribution and migration 



of North American gulls and their allies " 292 1-71 



Cooperage, slack, consumption of hardwoods by industry.. . 285 30 



Cordwood, volume tables 285 62-63 



Cork wood, imports, 1851, 1914 .". 296 48-49 



Corn — 



foreign trade, 1850-1914 296 25-26 



oil, exports, 1900-1914 296 33 



yield of forage in Great Plains, comparison with other 



forage plants 291 10,13-14 



Cotton — 



crop, storage houses, importance and economic value. . 277 2-3 

 culture, single-stalk, at San Antonio, bulletin by Row- 

 land M. Meade -. 279 1-20 



custom ginning, factor in seed deterioration, bulletin by 



D. A. Saunders and P. V. Cardon 288 1-8 



deterioration of varieties, custom ginning as factor 288 1-8 



exports, 1910-1914, value 296 2 



fire-insurance schedules 277 27-28 



flowering record in single-stalk and wide-spaced culture. 279 7-11 



foreign trade, 1851-1914 296 23-24 



gin- 

 custom, methods of operation 288 2-6 



seed mixture in roll box, studies and determina- 

 tion 288 3-6 



growers, cooperation in warehouse enterprise, sueges- 



tions 277 37 



growing — 



distance between rows, experimenis 279 19 



school lessons 294 6-12 



single-stalk method, experimental test, tabulated 



results 279 3-19 



thinning experiments 279 5, IS-li) 



vegetative branches, development and suppres- 

 sion, studies and experiments 279 5-7 



holding 277 6 



imports, 1910-1914, value .- 296 2 



insect enemies and diseases, school lessons 294 12-13 



insurance — 



relation to fire protection of warehouses '. . . 277-j -\5-26' °7-37 



relation to storage method 277 4-5 



