n 



270. 

 271. 



272. 

 273. 

 274. 

 275. 

 276. 

 277. 

 278. 

 279. 

 280. 

 281. 

 282. 



284, 



287. 

 288. 

 299. 

 290. 

 291. 

 292. 

 293. 

 294. 

 295. 

 296. 

 298. 

 299. 



301 

 302. 



304. 

 305. 

 306. 

 307. 

 309. 

 310, 

 311. 

 312. 

 313. 

 314. 



316. 

 817. 

 318. 

 320. 

 321. 

 822. 

 323. 



324. 

 325. 

 326, 

 328, 

 329, 

 330, 

 331, 



332, 

 333, 

 334, 

 336, 



337, 



338, 

 339, 

 341, 

 342, 

 843. 



844. 



846. 

 846. 



347, 

 848, 

 849. 

 350. 

 851 

 862. 

 863 



Industrial Alcohol: Uses and Statistics. 



Modern Conveniences for the Farm Home. 



Forage Crop Practices In Western Oregon 

 and Western Washington. 



A Successful Hog and Seed-corn Farm. 

 Experiment Station Work— XXXVni. 



Flax Culture. , _ ^ „ . , x.. 



The Gipsy Moth and How to Control It. 



Experiment Station Work— XXXIX. 



Alcohol and Gasoline in Farm Engines. 



Leguminous Crops for Green Manuring. 



A Method of Eradicating Johnson Grass. 



A Profitable Tenant Dairy Farm. 



Experiment Station Work— XL. 



Cfiiftrv 



Spraying for Apple Diseases and the Codling 

 Moth in the Ozarks. 



Insect and Fungous Enemies of the Grape 

 Bast of the Rooky Mountains. 



Comparative Value of Whole Cottonseed 

 and Cotton-seed Meal in Fertilizing Cotton. 



Poultry Management. 



Nonsaccharine Sorghums. 



Beans. 



The Cotton BoUworm. 



Evaporation of Aj)ples. 



Cost of Filling Silos. 



Use of Fruit as Food. 



Farm Practice in Columbia Basin Uplands. 



Potatoes and Other Root CrOTS as Food. 



Experiment Station Work— XLI. 



Food Value of Com and Com Produote. 



Diversified Farming Under the Plantation 

 System. 



Home-grown Tea. 



Sea Island Cotton: Its Culture, Improve- 

 ment, and Diseases. 



Corn Harvesting Machinery. 



Growing and Curing Hops. 



Experiment Station Work— XLII. 



Dodder in Relation to Farm Seeds. 



Roselle: Its Culture and Uses. 



Experiment Station Work— XLIII. 



A Successful Alabama Diversification Farm. 



Sand-clay and Burnt-clay Roads. 



A Suoeeaaful Southern Hay Farm. 



Harvesting and Storing Com. 



A Method of Breeding Early Cotton to Es- 

 cape Boll-weevil Damage. 



Experiment Station Work— XLIV. 



Experiment Station Work— XLV. 



Cowpeaa. 



Experiment Station Work— XL VI. 



The Use of the Split-log Drag on Earth Roads. 



Milo as a Dry-laud Grain Crop. 



Clover Farming on the Sandy Jack-pine 

 Lands of the North. 



Sweet Potatoes. 



Small Farms in the Com Belt. 



Building Up a Run-down Cotton Plantation. 



Silver Fox Farming. 



Experiment Station Work— XLVII. 



Deer Farming in the United States. 



Forage Crops for Hogs In Kansas and Okla- 

 homa. 



Nuts and Their Uses as Food. 



Cotton Wilt. 



Experiment Station Work— XL VIII, 



Harmful and Beneficial Mammals of the 

 Arid Interior. 



Cropping Systems for New England Dairy 

 Farms. 



Macadam Roads. 



Alfalfa.' 



The Basket Willow. 



Experiment Station Work— XLIX. 



The Cultivation of Tobacco in Kentucky 

 and Tennessee. 



The Boll Weevil Problem, with Special Refer- 

 ence to Means of Reducing Bamage. 



Some Common Disinfectants. 



The Computation of Rations for Farm Ani- 

 mals by the Use of Energy Values. 



The Repair of Farm Equipment. 



Bacteria in Milk. 



The Dairy Industry in the South. 



The Dehorning of Cattle. 



TheTuberculinTestofCattleforTuberculosls. 



The Nevada Mouse Plague of 1907-8. 



Experiment Station Work— L. 



360. 

 361. 

 362. 

 363. 

 364. 

 366. 



367. 



870. 

 371. 

 372. 

 378. 

 374. 

 875. 

 377. 

 378. 

 379. 

 380. 

 381. 

 382. 

 383. 

 384. 

 885. 

 386. 

 387. 



891. 

 392. 

 393. 

 394. 



395. 

 396. 

 897. 



399. 

 400. 

 401. 



402. 

 403. 

 404. 

 405. 

 406. 

 407. 

 408. 

 409. 

 410. 

 411. 

 412. 

 413. 

 414. 

 415. 

 416. 

 417. 

 418. 

 419. 

 420. 

 421. 

 422. 

 423. 

 424. 

 426. 

 426. 

 427. 

 428. 



429. 

 430. 

 431 

 432. 

 433, 

 484. 

 436. 

 436. 

 487. 



Onion Oultoie. 



A Successful Poultry and Dairy Farm. 



Methods of Poultry Management at theMaine 



Agricultural Experiment Station. 

 A Primer of Forestry. Part II; Practical For- 



Canntug Vegetables in the Home. 



Experiment Station Work— LI. 

 Meadow Fescue: Its Culture and Uses. 



Conditions AflectingtheValueof Market Hay. 



The Use of MUk as Food. 



A Profitable Cotton Farm. 



Farm Management In Northern Potato- 

 growing Sections. 



Experiment Station Work— LII. 



Li^tnlng and Lightning Conductors. 



The Eramcation of Bindweed, or Wild Morn- 

 ing-glory. 



How to Destroy Rats. 



Replanning a Farm for Profit. 



Drainage oi Irrigated Lands. 



Boy Beans. 



Irrigation of Alfalfa. 



Experiment Station Work— LIII. 



Care of Food In the Home. 



Harmfulness of Headache Mixtures. 



Methods of Exterminating Tezas-fever Tick, 



Hog Cholera. 



The Loco-weed Disease. 



Experiment Station Work— LIV. 



The Adulteration of Forage-plant Seeds. 



How to Destroy English Sparrows. 



Experiment Station Work— LV. 



Boys' and Girls' Agricultural Clubs. 



Potato Cultureon Irrigated Farmsof the West 



ThePreservativeTreatmentof Farm Timbers. 



Experiment Station Work— L VI. 



Bread and Bread Making. 



Pheasant Raising in the United States. 



Economical Use of Meat In the Home. 



Irrigation of Sugar Beets. 



Habit-forming Agents. 



Windmills In Irrigation in Semiarld West. 



Sixty-day and Kherson Oats. 



The Muskrat. 



Bees. 



Farm Practice in the Use of Commercial Fer- 

 tilizers in the South Atlantic States. 



Irrigation of Grain. 



A More Profitable Corn-planting Method. 



Protection of Orchards in Northwest from 

 Spring Frosts by Fires and Smudges. 



Canada Bluegrass: Its Culture and Uses. 



The Construction of Concrete Fence Posts. 



Irrigation of Orchards. 



Experiment Station Work — LVII. 



Soil Conservation. 



The Potato as a Truck Crop. 



School Exercises in Plant Production. 



School Lessons on Corn. 



Potato Culls as a Sourceof Industrial AlcohoL 



Feeding Hogs In the South. 



Experiment Station Work— LVni. 



The Care of Milk and Its Use in the Home. 



Com Cultivation. 



Seed Corn. 



Cigar-leaf Tobacco in Pennsylvania. 



Eice Culture. 



Game Laws for 1910. 



Experiment Station Work— LIX. 



Oats: Distribution aud Uses. 



Control ol Blowing Soils. 



Demonstration Work on Southern Farms. 



Forest Nurseries for Schools. 



Oats: Growing the Crop. 



Experiment Station Work- LX. 



Canning Peaches on the Farm. 



Barley Culture In the Southern States. 



Testing Farm Seeds In the Home and In the 

 Rural School, 



Industrial Alcohol : Sources and Manufacture. 



Experiment Station Work— LXI. 

 . The Peanut. 



How a City Family Managed a Farm. 

 ;. Cabbage. 



.The Home Production of Onion Seed aud Sets. 

 I. Experiment Station Work— LXII. 



Winter Oats for the South. 

 A System of Tenant Farming and Its Be- 

 suits. 



o 



