Processed Leaflets — Continued^ 



RabMt Raising 



55 WL, Pertinent facts on the angora wool rabtit, 



73 WL. Inheritance of "woolly" in rabbits. 



79 WL, Vent diseases of domestic rabbits, 



85 WL, Self-feeding system for market rabbits. 



86 WL, Sanitation in domestic rabbitries. 



90 WL, Hemorrhagic septicemia of domestic rabbits; Contagious nasal ca- 

 tarrh (snuffles), subcutaneous absesses (boils), and other forms, 

 101 WL. Principles of breeding rabbits. 



116 WL, Suggestions for control of coccidiosis in rabbits. 

 139 V/L, Rabbit-'pen construction in relation to sore hocks. 

 166 WL, Infectious myxomatosis of domestic rabbits, (Mosquito disease; 



big-head disease.) 

 173 WL, Pryer rabbit production, 



3-994, Rabbit manure as a fertilizer, 

 3-1136, Publications on rabbits, caviea, and other stock. 



Reptiles gud Amphibians 



70 WL, Poisonous snakes in the United States, 



92 WL, The American chameleon and its care, 



103 WL, Pacts about snakes. • 



3-664. The toad. 



3-1205, Dealers in reptiles, 



Big-Game Animals 



137 WL, Pall and winter food habits of deer in northeastern Minnesota, 



144 WL, Raising deer in captivity, 



148 V/L, Status of the American bison in the United States and Alaska, 1939. 



175 WL, Big-game inventory of the United States, 1939, 



3-1057, Agencies having big-game animals for disposal, 



National V/ildlife Refuges 



95 WL, Preserves and ranges maintained for buffajo and other big game, 



109 WL, Port Niobrara Game Preserve, Nebraska, 



146 WL, Lake Mattamuskeet Wildlife Refuge, 



154 WL, Plora of the Patuxent Research Refuge, Maryland. 



157 WL. Sullys Hill National Game Preserve, North Dakota. 



164 WL. Research in the administration of Federal refuges, 



179 WL. National wildlife refuges administered by the Pish and 

 Wildlife Service. 



