X ILI,USTRATlONS 



FIG. PAGE 



11. Seeds of Standard Grasses. «, Rescue-grass; ^, Texas 



Blue-grass; c, Chess, or Cheat; d, Canada Blue- 

 grass; e, Bromus inermis; f, Kentucky Blue-grass. 

 (G. H. Hicks, Year-book, Department of Agricul- 

 ture, 1898) 59 



12. Gathering Kentucky Blue-grass Seed near Lexington, 



Kentucky. (From Bulletin 19, Bureau of Plant In- 

 dustry, United States Department of Agriculture) 61 



13. Curing Kentucky Blue-grass Seed Outdoors. 50,000 



bushels in one curing-bin. (From Bulletin 19, 

 Bureau of Plant Industry, United States Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture) 63 



14. Weed Seeds, a. Pepper-grass (Lepidium virginicum); 



b. Slender Rush {/uncus tenuis); c. Velvet-grass 

 (Holcus lanatus); d. Five-finger {Potentilla mons- 

 peliensis); e. Ox-eye Daisy {Chrysanthemum leucan- 

 themum); f. Sorrel {Rumex acetosella); g. False Flax 

 {Camelina sativa); h, Canada Thistle {Carduus ar- 

 vensis) ......... 67 



15. Home-made Seed-tester, a. Closed; i5, Open. (From 



Farmers' Bulletin 194, United States Department 



of Agriculture) ........ 73 



16. Timothy 76 



17. Distribution of "Other Tame Grasses," mostly Tim- 



othy. (Compiled from Census of 1900.) Each 

 large dot represents a county producing more than 

 5,000 acres. The smaller dots represent 1,000 

 acres each 79 



18. Kentucky Blue-grass 91 



19. Distribution of Kentucky Blue-grass. Each dot rep- 



resents a correspondent reporting blue-grass im- 

 portant in his section 94 



