250 



Additions to the Library. [July, 1907.] 



United States - 



Bailey, L. H. — The Outlook to Nature. (296 pp.) 1905. 5s. net. Principles of 

 Agriculture. (300 pp.) 1906. 4s.6d.net. Plant Breeding. (483 pp.) 1906. 

 5s. net. London : Macmillan. 



Herrick, R. F. — Denatured or Industrial Alcohol. (516 pp.) London : Chapman. 

 & Hall, 1907. 



Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Animal Industry :— Report for 1905.. 

 (364 pp.) 1907. 



Circ. 104. Welsh Black Cattle. (20 pp. + 5 plates). Circ. 105. Baby Beef- 

 (34 pp.) Circ. 108. Trichinosis : A Danger in the Use of Raw Pork for 

 Food. (6 pp.) 



Bull. 93. The Relation of Tuberculous Lesions to the Mode of Infection.. 

 (19 pp.) 1906. 



Bull. 95. The Bacteriolytic Power of the Blood Serum of Hogs. (62 pp.) 

 Bureau of Biological Survey : — 



Circ. 55. Directions for the Destruction of Wolves and Coyotes. (6 pp.) 



Circ. 56. Value of Swallows as Insect Destroyers. (4 pp. ) 



Circ. 57. Birds Useful in the War against the Cotton Boll-Weevil. (4 pp.) 



Circ. 58. Destruction of Deer by the Northern Timber Wolf. (2 pp.) 

 Bureau of Entomology : — 



Circ. 85. The Spring Grain-Aphis. (7 pp.) Circ. 86. The Corn Leaf- 

 Aphis and Corn Root-Aphis. (13 pp.) 



Bull. 64. — Part I. The Mexican Conchuela in Western Texas in 1905 ^ 

 Part II. Notes on the Economic Importance of Sowbugs : Part III. Notes, 

 on "Punkies." (28 pp.) 



Bull. 65. The Tobacco Thrips. (22 pp.) 



Bull. 66. — Part II. The Water-Cress Sowbug and Leaf-Beetle. (20 pp.) 

 Technical Series, No. 12, Part III. A Contribution to our Knowledge of the 

 Thysanoptera of California. (68 pp.) Washington, 1907. 

 Office of Experiment stations :■ — ■ 



Bull. 173. Corn- Harvesting Machinery. (48 pp.) 



Bull. 178. Course in Fruit Growing for movable Schools of Agriculture. (100 pp.) 

 Farmers' Bulletin. 



No. 280. A profitable tenant Dairy Farm. (16 pp.) 

 No. 282. Celery. (36 pp.) 

 No. 284. Insect and fungous Enemies of the Grape, East of the Rocky 



Mountains. (48 pp. ) 

 No. 285. Advantage of Planting heavy Cotton Seed. (16 pp.) 

 No. 286. Comparative Value of whole Cotton Seed and Cotton-Seed Mea 



in Fertilizing Cotton. (14 pp.) 

 No. 288. Non-saccharine Sorghums. (28 pp.) 

 No. 289. Beans. (28 pp.) 

 No. 290. The Cotton Boll- Worm. (32 pp.) 

 Forest Service : — 



Circ. 52. The Lumber Cut of the United States in 1905. (23 pp.) Circ. 76. 

 Silver Maple. (3 pp.) Circ. 81. Forest Planting in Illinois.. (32 pp.) 

 Circ. 82. Hardy Catalpa. (8 pp.) Circ. 83. Russian Mulberry. (3 pp.) 

 Circ. 84. White Ash. (4 pp.) Circ. 85. Slippery Elm. (4 pp.) Circ. 86.. 

 Box Elder. (3 pp.) Circ. 87. White Willow. (4 pp.) Circ. 88. Black 

 Walnut. (5 pp.) Circ. 89. Tamarack. (4 pp.) Circ. 90. Osage Orange. 

 (3 pp.) Circ. 91. Coffeetree. (4 pp.) Circ. 92. Green- Ash. (4 pp.) 

 Circ. 93. Yellow Poplar. (4 pp.) Circ. 94. Black Cherry. (3 pp.) Circ. 95. 

 Sugar Maple. (4 pp.) Circ. 98. Quantity and Character of Creosote in 

 well preserved Timber. (16 pp.) 



[Books may be borrowed from the Board's Library on certain conditions,, which 

 may be ascertained on application.] 



