Farmers’ Bulletins 
Bulletins in this list will be sent free, so long as the supply lasts on application to any Senator, Represent- 
ative, or Delegate in Congress, each of whom has a limited allotment of the bulletins, or to the Secretary of 
Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 
218. School Garden. 
255. Home Vegetable Garden. 
256. Preparation of Vegetables for the Table. 
270. Conveniences for the Farm Home. 
318. Cowpeas. 
339. Alfalfa. 
345. Some Common Disinfectants. 
355. A successful Poultry and Dairy Farm. 
369. How to Destroy Rats. 
372. Soy Beans. 
375. Care of Food in the Home. 
391. Economical Use of Meats in the Home. 
411. Feeding Hogs in the South. 
434. Home Production of Onion Seeds and Sets. 
436. Winter Oats for the South. 
438. Hog Houses. 
441. Lespedeza or Japan Clover. 
461. Use of Concrete on the Farm. 
463. Sanitary Privy. 
474. Use of Paint on the Farm. 
475. Ice Houses. 
480. Methods of Disinfecting Stables. 
487. Cheese; Economical Uses in the Diet. 
515. Vetches. 
523. Tobacco Curing. 
524. Tile Drainage on the Farm. 
530. Important Poultry Diseases. 
537. How to Grow an Acre of Corn. 
540. Stable Fly. 
548. Storing and Marketing Sweet Potatoes. 
550. Crimson Clover; Growing the Crop. 
553. Pop Corn for the Home. 
565. Corn Meal as a food; Ways of using it. 
566. Boys Pig Clubs. 
571. Tobacco Culture. 
572. System of Farm Cost Accounting. 
574. Poultry House Construction. 
578. Handling and Feeding of Silage. 
580. Beef Production in the South. 
583. Common Mole. 
597. Road Drag and How Used. 
602. Clean Milk; Production and' Handling. 
603. Arsenical Cattle Dips. 
605. Sudan Grass. 
607. Farm Kitchen as a Workshop. 
608. Removing Garlic Flavor from Milk and Cream. 
610. Wild Onion; Methods of Eradication. 
614. A Corn-Belt Farming System Which Saves Har- 
vest Labor by Hogging Down Crops. 
619. Breeds of Draft Horses. 
627. House Centipede. 
630. Common Birds Useful to the Farmer. 
635. What a Farm Contributes Directly to the Farm- 
er’s Living. 
640. Hessian Fly. 
652. The Sheep-Killing Dog. 
655. Cottonseed Meal for Feeding Beef Cattle. 
657. Chinch Bug. 
658. Cockroaches. 
659. True Clothes Moth. 
660. Weeds; How to Control Them. 
667. Colts; Breaking and Training. 
671. Harvest Mites or “Chiggers.” 
683. Fleas as Pests of Man and Animal. 
686. Uses of Sorghum Grain. 
689. Plan for a Small Dairy House. 
690. Field Pea. 
695. Outdoor Wintering of Bees. 
697. Duck Raising. 
699. Hydrocyanic-Acid Gas Against Household Insects. 
702. Cottontail Rabbits in Relation to Trees and Farm 
Crops. 
707. Commercial Grading, Packing, and Shipping of 
Cantaloupes. 
713. Sheep Scab. 
719. Economic Study of Farm Tractor in Corn Belt. 
720. Prevention of Losses of Stock from Poisonous 
Plants. 
734. Fly Traps and Their Operation. 
739. Cutworms and Their Control in Corn and Other 
Cereal Crops. 
740. House Ants; Kinds and Methods of Control. 
743. The Feeding of Dairy Cows. 
745. Waste Land and Wasted Land on Farms. 
748. A Simple Steam Sterilizer for Farm Dairy 
Utensils. 
750. Roses for the Home. 
752. The Army Worm or “Grass Worm,” and Its Con- 
trol. 
754. The Bedbug. 
767. Goose Raising. 
780. Castration of Pigs. 
782. The Use of a Diary for Farm Accounts. 
790. Contagious Abortion of Cattle. 
791. Turkey Raising. 
7 92. How the Federal Farm Loan Act Benefits the 
Farmer. 
793. Foxtail Millet. 
796. Some Common Edible and Poisonous Mushrooms. 
797. Sweet Clover; Growing the Crop. 
799. Carbon Bisulphid as an Insecticide. 
801. Mites and Lice on Poultry. 
803. Horse Breeding Suggestions for Farmers. 
807. Bread and Bread Making. 
808. How to Select Foods: 1. What the Body Needs. 
810. Equipment for Farm Sheep Raising. 
818. The Small Vegetable Garden. 
825. Pit Silos. 
835. How to Detect Outbreaks of Insects and Save the 
Grain Crop. 
841. Home and Community Drying of Fruits and 
VegeU hies. 
871. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables as Conserve™ of 
Other Staple Foods. 
873. Utilization of Farm Wastes in Feeding Live 
Stock. 
Write United States Department of Agriculture, Division of Publi.ation for a complete list of Farmers’ Bul- 
letins. 
63 
