APPENDIX 

 LITERATURE FOR GARDENERS 



United States Farmers' Bulletins. — The list of bulletins 

 of this title includes many subjects of value to gardeners. 

 They will help teachers, and many will be useful in the schools 

 as supplementary readers. Each teacher should write to her 

 congressman at Washington, asking for the number of copies 

 of each bulletin which she is likely to need in the esercises 

 and contests suggested in this circular. Find your congress- 

 man's name, and in writing refer to the Farmers' Bulletins 

 by number. 



hist of Farmers' Bulletins of Help to Oardeners 



44 — Commercial Fertilizers. 282 — Celery. 



61 — Asparagus Culture. 289 — Beans. 



77 — Liming of Soils. 324 — Sweet Potatoes. 



121 — Beans, Peas, etc., as Food. 354 — Onion Culture. 

 154 — The Home Fruit Garden. 406 — Soil Conservation. 

 157 — The Propagation of Plants. 407 — The Potato as a Truck Crop. 

 181 — Pruning. 428 — Testing Seeds. 



185— Beautifying the Home 433 — Cabbage. 



Grounds. 488 — Diseases of Cabbage and 



188 — ^Weeds in Medicine. Eelated Crops. 



192 — ^Barnyard Manure. 494 — Lawns and Lawn Soils. 



195 — Annual Flowering Plants. 633 — Good Seed Potatoes and How 

 196 — Usefulness of the American to Produce Them. 



Toad. 537 — How to Grow an Acre of 



198 — Strawberries. Corn. 



204 — The Cultivation of Mush- 543 — Common White Grubs, 

 rooms. 544 — Potato-tuber Diseases. 



213 — Raspberries. 548 — Storing and Marketing 



218 — The School Garden. Sweet Potatoes. 



220 — Tomatoes. 553 — Pop Corn. 



232 — Okra — Its Culture and I^ses. 561 — Bean Growing. 

 254 — Cucumbers. 583— Oommon Mole. 



255 — The Home Vegetable Garden. 586 — Preservation of Plant Ma- 

 257 — Soil Fertility. terial for Agriculture. 



340 



