United States, Bureau of Plant Industry
Resource Information
The organization United States, Bureau of Plant Industry represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Internet Archive - Open Library.
The Resource
United States, Bureau of Plant Industry
Resource Information
The organization United States, Bureau of Plant Industry represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Internet Archive - Open Library.
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- United States, Bureau of Plant Industry
- Subordinate unit
- Bureau of Plant Industry
100+ Items by the Organization United States, Bureau of Plant Industry
8 Items that are about the Organization United States, Bureau of Plant Industry
Context
Context of United States, Bureau of Plant IndustryCreator of
- Agricultural methods for boll-weevil districts
- Barberry eradication : Aid allotted by state and other cooperative agencies to the barberry eradication campaign
- Barberry eradication : expenditure of federal funds by states, fiscal years 1918 to 1925, inclusive, and allotments for 1926
- Barberry eradication : federal allotments to states by fiscal years 1918 to 1926, inclusive
- Blister rust demonstration, May 19-21, 1928
- Blister rust news
- Bulb distribution
- Canning club work and home demonstration work (for agents)
- Classification of American Wheat Varieties
- Cowpeas in the cotton belt.
- Directions for taking rust survey notes
- Directory of field activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry. : Issued December 1924
- Discussion of particle size of insecticides and fungicides
- Div. of fruit and vegetable crops and diseases. : A simple method for the home preservation of pecans,
- Egyptian cotton news letter
- Explanation of records and reports used on cooperative blister rust work
- Field methods of eradicating ribes
- Grossularia and ribes species in the northeastern states
- Hairy vetch for the cotton belt.
- Home Fruit Garden in the East Central and Middle Atlantic States
- How teachers may use publications on the control of black stem rust of small grains by the eradication of the common barberry
- Iarovization in field practice
- Lesson plan
- Lesson plan series for intermediate grades and junior high school : harmful plants : the common barberry bush and black stem rust
- Lilium pardalinum
- List of publications of the Office of Grass and Forage Plant Investigations and the Division of Agrostology
- Maps illustrating the progress of the barberry eradication campaign
- Miscellaneous papers
- Miscellaneous papers
- Miscellaneous papers ..
- Miscellaneous papers ..
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Apr. 12
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Apr. 19
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Apr. 26
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Apr. 5
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Feb. 1
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Feb. 15
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Feb. 24
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Feb. 8
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Jan. 18
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Jan. 4
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 July 19
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 July 5
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 June 21
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 June 7
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Mar. 1
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Mar. 15
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Mar. 22
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Mar. 29
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 Mar. 8
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 May 10
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 May 17
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 May 24
- Miscellaneous papers, 1913 May 3
- Organization and instruction in boys' corn-club work
- Permanent pastures for the cotton belt.
- Progress in barberry eradication in 1931 and summarized results covering the period 1918-1931
- Progress of the barberry-eradication campaign in South Dakota, 1929
- Properties having barberry bushes
- Protect white pine from blister rust ...
- Publications of the Bureau of Plant Industry
- Publications of the Bureau of Plant Industry
- Publications of the Bureau of Plant Industry
- Publications on maturity test for peas,
- Questions relative to the barberry eradication campaign that every field man should be able to answer fully
- Rape as a forage crop in the cotton belt.
- Reaction of wheat varieties, selections, and hybrids to mosaic and mosaic-rosette
- Report of barberry planting
- Rye in the cotton belt.
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from September, 1900, to December, 1903 : Inventory no. 10; nos. 5501-9896
- Service and regulatory announcements
- Sorghum for forage in the cotton belt.
- State of Maine : cooperative white pine blister rust control work
- Sweet-potato growing in the cotton belt.
- The barberry eradication campaign organization, purpose, scope of the problem, and results
- The common barberry and the black stem rust
- The forcing and blanching of dasheen shoots.
- The ribes of the sugar pine and western white pine region of California
- The white pine blister rust situation in Michigan
- The work of the Newlands (formerly the Truckee-Carson) reclamation project experiment farm in ..
- The work of the San Antonio experiment farm
- The work of the Umatilla reclamation project experiment farm in ..
- Thoroughness of survey for common barberry
- To county agents and Canning Club girls ...
- Watch for common barberry bushes
- White pine blister rust in the northwest
- White-pine blister-rust control
- Winter oats in the cotton belt.
- Winter wheat in the cotton belt.
- Work of the Bell Fourche reclamation project experiment farm in ..
- Work of the Huntley field station in ..
- Work of the Scottsbluff reclamation project experiment farm in ..
- Work of the Yuma reclamation project experiment farm in ..
- [Form letter in regard to Notice of quarantine no. 63]
Contributor of
- "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" ; : Young pines spring up where blister rust has been controlled
- A Naval stores handbook dealing with the production of pine gum or oleoresin
- A check list of the publications of the Department of Agriculture on the subject of plant pathology
- A digest of the annual report of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Michigan, 1928
- A digest of the annual report of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Nebraska, 1928
- A digest of the annual report of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Wisconsin in 1928
- A dry rot of sweet potatoes caused by Diaporthe batatatis.
- A glad message, gladiolus "Europa"
- A list of American varieties of peppers
- A method for the determination of the specific gravity of wheat and other cereals
- A moisture tester for grain and other substances and how to use it
- A new basis for barley valuation and improvement
- A new type of Indian corn from China / : By G.N. Collins
- A new type of red clover
- A plant-disease survey in the vicinity of San Antonio, Texas.
- A preliminary report on rice growing in the Sacramento Valley
- A preliminary study of the forced curing of lemons as practiced in California
- A preliminary study of the germination of the spores of Agaricus campestris and other basidiomycetous fungi
- A protected stock range in Arizona
- A simple method of detecting sulphured barley and oats
- A spot disease of cauliflower
- A study of carbon dioxide gas retention in refigerator cars during the commercial freight shipment of sweet cherries
- A study of diversity in Egyptian cotton
- A study of farm equipment in Ohio
- A study of the improvement of citrus fruits through bud selection
- A summary of the Barberry Eradication Campaign including a digest of the Montana 1928 annual report
- A variety of maize with silks maturing before the tassels
- Absorption and excretion of salts by roots, as influenced by concentration and composition of culture solutions, I, Concentration relations of dilute solutions of calcium and magnesium nitrates to pea roots / by Rodney H. True and Harley Harris Bartlett
- Additional notes on the number and distribution of native legumes in Nebraska and Kansas
- Agricultural and botanical explorations in Palestine.
- Agricultural conditions in southern New York
- Agricultural explorations in Algeria
- Agricultural explorations in the fruit and nut orchards of China
- Agricultural observations on the Truckee-Carson Irrigation Project
- Agricultural survey of four townships in southern New Hampshire
- Agricultural varieties of the cowpea and immediately related species
- Agriculture in the central part of the semiarid portion of the Great Plains
- Agriculture without irrigation in the Sahara desert
- Alfalfa
- Alfalfa : instructions adapted to Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota
- Alfalfa : instructions adapted to Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Kentucky
- Alfalfa : instructions adapted to southern New Jersey, Delaware, southern Maryland, Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee, and the South Atlantic and Gulf states
- Alfalfa : instructions adapted to the New England states and New York
- Alfalfa in cultivated rows for seed production in semiarid regions
- American beet-sugar industry in 1910 and 1911
- American export corn (maize) in Europe
- American medicinal barks
- American medicinal leaves and herbs
- American root drugs,
- American varieties of garden beans
- American varieties of lettuce
- An electrical resistance method for the rapid determination of the moisture content of grain
- An improved method of artificial pollination in corn
- An improved method of separating buckhorn from red clover and alfalfa seeds
- Apple blotch : a serious disease of southern orchards
- Apple storage in the Wenatchee-Okanogan Valley
- Apples and peaches in the Ozark region.
- Application of some of the principles of heredity to plant breeding
- Arrangement of parts in the cotton plant,
- Bacteriological studies of the soils of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation Project
- Barberry Eradication in 1929 : summarized results covering the period, 1918-1929
- Barberry eradication in Nebraska
- Barberry eradication in North Dakota
- Barium : a cause of the loco-weed disease
- Barley culture in the northern Great Plains
- Berseem : the great forage and soiling crop of the Nile Valley
- Blueberry time : a radio discussion by Miss Ruth Van Deman, Bureau of Home Economics and Dr. Frederick V. Coville, and W. R. Beattie, Bureau of Plant Industry in the Department of Agriculture period of the National Farm and Home Hour, broadcast by a network of 50 associate NBC stations, Tuesday, July 17, 1934
- Breeding drought-resistant forage plants for the Great Plains area
- Breeding new types of Egyptian cotton
- Bromus inermis
- Bulletin
- Bulletin on budwood selection
- Bulletin on budwood selection
- Bulletin on budwood selection
- Bulletin on budwood selection
- Cassava: its content of hydrocyanic acid and starch and other properties.
- Cassava: its content of hydrocyanic acid and starch and other properties.
- Change of vegetation on the South Texas prairies
- Changes in weight of standard packages of Vinifera grapes during transit from California to Eastern markets
- Circular
- Clover-seed production in the Willamette Valley, Oregon
- Cold resistance of alfalfa and some factors influencing it
- Color stability in raw cotton ...
- Common vetch or tares (Vicia sativa)
- Comparative tests of sugar-beet varieties
- Contributions to the study of maize deterioration : biochemical and toxicological investigations of Penicillium puberulum and Penicillium stoloniferum
- Control of decay in pulp and pulp wood
- Control of the white pine blister rust is practical and inexpensive ..
- Cotton literature, selected references
- Cotton selection on the farm by the characters of the stalks, leaves, and bolls
- Cottonseed treatment
- Cowpea (Vigna sinensis)
- Cowpeas
- Cranberry diseases
- Crop plants for paper making
- Crossbreeding corn
- Crown-gall and sarcoma
- Crown-gall of plants: its cause and remedy
- Curly-top, a disease of the sugar beet
- Danger in judging cotton varieties by lint percentages
- Date varieties and date culture in Tunis
- Delay in removal of currants and gooseberries, the host plants of the blister rust, may mean irreparable loss to the white pine wood lot
- Description of the comprehensive catalogue of botanical literature in the libraries of Washington
- Dimorphic branches in tropical crop plants : cotton, coffee, cacao, the Central American rubber tree, and the banana
- Dimorphic leaves of cotton and allied plants in relation to heredity
- Directions for collecting flowering plants and ferns
- Directions for examining all canned food before use
- Directory of activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry
- Directory of field activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry
- Disease resistance of potatoes.
- Disease-resistant varieties of vegetables for the home garden
- Diseases of deciduous forest trees
- Distribution of cotton seed in 1921
- Distribution of seeds and plants by the Department of Agriculture
- Drought resistance of the olive in the southwestern states
- Dry farming in relation to rainfall and evaporation
- Dry farming in the Great Basin
- Dry land agriculture. : Papers read at the second annual meeting of the Cooperative experiment association of the Great Plains area, held at Manhattan, Kans., June 26-27, 1907 ..
- Dry-land alfalfa
- Dry-land grains
- Dry-land grains for western North and South Dakota
- Dry-land grains in the Great Basin
- Dry-land olive culture in Northern Africa
- Dwarf milo (Andropogon sorghum)
- Economy in garden vegetables
- Effects of different systems and intensities of grazing upon the native vegetation at the Northern Great Plains Field Station
- Egyptian cotton in the southwestern United States
- Eleventh-hour gifts
- European currant rust on the white pine in America
- Evolution of cellular structures
- Experiments in blueberry culture
- Experiments in the control of grape anthracnose
- Experiments on the apple with some new and little-known fungicides
- Experiments with Egyptian cotton in 1908
- Fall jobs, outside and in
- Farm demonstration monthly
- Farm methods of applying land plaster in western Oregon and western Washington
- Farmers' cooperative demonstration work in its relation to rural improvement
- Federal expert explains local control of pine disease ; : The pine blister rust and the chestnut blight ; Pine blister rust control
- Feterita (Andropogon sorghum var.)
- Field pea
- Field pea (Pisum sativum)
- Field studies of the crown-gall of the grape
- Floral abnormalities in maize
- Forage conditions on the northern border of the Great basin, : being a report upon investigations made during July and August, 1901, in the region between Winnemucca, Nevada, and Ontario, Oregon
- Forage crops for the sand-hill section of Nebraska
- Forage-crop experiments at the San Antonio field station
- Foreign plant diseases. : A manual of economic plant diseases which are new to or not widely distributed in the United States.
- Fruit growing for home use in the central and southern Great Plains
- Fruits recommended by the American pomological society for cultivation in the various sections of the United States and Canada
- Ginning long staple American upland cotton
- Gooseberry pie versus white pine lumber
- Grape investigations in the Vinifera regions of the United States with reference to resistant stocks, direct producers, and Viniferas
- Grape-spraying experiments in Michigan in 1909
- Green corn
- Grimm alfalfa
- Grimm alfalfa and its utilization in the Northwest
- Handling wheat from field to mill
- Heredity and cotton breeding.
- Hindi cotton in Egypt.
- Illustrated lecture on green manuring
- Illustrated lecture on growing and handling irish potatoes
- Illustrated lecture on orchard management
- Illustrated lecture on practical improvement of farm grounds
- Illustrated lecture on soy beans
- Illustrated lecture on the city and suburban vegetable garden
- Improvement of pastures in eastern New York and the New England states
- Improvement of the oat crop
- Improvement of the wheat crop in California
- Index to papers relating to plant-industry subjects in the yearbooks of the United States Department of Agriculture
- Indoor gardens
- Indoor herb gardens for thrifty kitchens
- Inventory of seeds and plants imported
- Inventory of seeds and plants imported
- Investigations of rusts
- Investigations on peaches 1938
- Investigations on the precooling and transportation of Florida citrus fruit, 1939-40 : summarized report
- Investigations on the precooling and transportation of Florida citrus fruit, 1940-41 : summary extracted from H.T. & S. office report no. 79
- Investigations on the precooling and transportation of Florida citrus fruits, 1939
- Italian lemons and their by-products
- Italian rye grass (Lolium italicum)
- Japanese bamboos : and their introduction into America
- Johnson grass: : report of investigations made during the season of 1901.
- Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.)
- Kudzu (Pueraria thunbergiana)
- Land suitable for raising white pine can still be bought in New England for from $3 to $7 per acre ; : White pines and abandoned farms
- Large pines become the prey of the blister rust : prompt action in control advisable
- Large pines become the prey of the blister rust : prompt action in control advisable
- Legume inoculation and the litmus reaction of soils
- Let the mother trees do the work
- Lime-sulphur mixtures for the summer spraying of orchards
- Local adjustment of cotton varieties.
- Macaroni wheats
- Making and maintaining a lawn
- Marketing for vegetables
- Methods and causes of evolution
- Methods of legume inoculation
- Methods used for controlling and reclaiming sand dunes.
- Michigan Station shows profits in white pine
- Minor articles of farm equipment
- Minor articles of farm equipment
- Miscellaneous papers
- Miscellaneous papers
- Moisture content and shrinkage in grain
- Mutative reversions in cotton
- Natural vegetation as an indicator of the capabilities of land for crop production in the Great Plains area
- New Hampshire's most valuable forest crop, white pine
- New methods of plant breeding
- New sugar-beet varieties for the curly-top area
- Nomenclature of the pear : a catalogue-index of the known varieties referred to in American publications from 1804 to 1907
- North American species of Agrostis.
- North American species of Leptochloa
- Notes on Egyptian agriculture
- Notes on dry farming
- Notes on the number and distribution of native legumes in Nebraska and Kansas
- Observations on the mosaic disease of tobacco.
- Orchard fruits in the Piedmont and Blue Ridge regions of Virginia and the South Altantic states.
- Orchard green-manure crops in California
- Origin of the Hindi cotton
- Para grass (Panicum barbinode)
- Peanut butter
- Peanut growing in the cotton belt.
- Pears
- Persian gulf dates and their introduction into America
- Peruvian alfalfa
- Peruvian alfalfa : a new long-season variety for the southwest
- Physical, chemical, milling, and baking experiments with hard red spring wheat
- Physiological Role of Mineral Nutrients in Plants
- Pine values aid farm values in the Northeastern States
- Planning bulbs for winter and spring bloom
- Plant Inventory No. 15; Nos. 22511 to 23322 - Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From April 1 to June 30, 1908
- Plant news
- Planting of white pine stimulated by control of blister rust
- Planting the vegetable garden according to a food budget : a dialogue between Miss Ruth Van Deman, Bureau of Home Economics and W. R. Beattie, Bureau of Plant Industry delivered in the Department of Agriculture period of the National Farm and Home Hour, broadcast by a network of 48 associate NBC stations, Wednesday, April 4, 1934
- Potato diseases in San Joaquin County, California
- Preliminary report on the Klamath Marsh experiment farm
- Prickly comfrey as a forage crop
- Principles and practical methods of curing tobacco
- Progress in barberry eradication in 1932 and summarized results covering the period 1918-1932
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Colorado in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Indiana in 1928
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Indiana in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Indiana in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Iowa in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Iowa, 1928
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Iowa, 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Michigan in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Michigan in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Minnesota in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Minnesota in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Minnesota, 1928
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Montana in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Nebraska in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Nebraska in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in North Dakota in 1928
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in North Dakota in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in North Dakota in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Ohio in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Ohio in 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in South Dakota, 1928
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in South Dakota, 1930
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Wisconsin in 1929
- Progress of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Wisconsin in 1930
- Progress of the barberry eradication campaign in Illinois, 1928
- Progress of the barberry eradication campaign in Illinois, 1929
- Progress of the barberry eradication campaign in Illinois, 1930
- Promising root crops for the South, I, Yautias, taros, and dasheens
- Protect western white pine and sugar pine from blister rust
- Protect white pine from blister rust
- Protect white pine from blister rust
- Protection of white pine from blister rust pays big dividends
- Put your idle acres to work ; : Plant quarantine conference held at Washington
- Put your worn-out pastures to work
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Questions and answers
- Ramie
- Range improvement in Arizona : (Cooperative experiments with the Arizona experiment station.)
- Range investigations in Arizona
- Range management in the state of Washington
- Reappearance of a primitive character in cotton hybrids
- Reclamation of Cape Cod sand dunes
- Red clover (Trifolium pratense)
- Relation of drought to weevil resistance in cotton
- Report of experimental work dealing with maturity precooling transit refrigeration of California plums during the 1942 season : a cooperative investigation
- Report of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Colorado and Wyoming in 1930
- Report of the Barberry Eradication Campaign in Colorado, 1928
- Report of transportation tests with lettuce and carrots from Salinas, California, to Chicago, Ill., Philadelphia, Pa., Baltimore, Md., and New York City, August 18-30, 1939
- Report on a transportation test with sweet cherries in refrigerator cars : influence of the height of load, mechanical circulation of air, and the use of carbon dioxide gas as a supplement to standard refrigeration : from Yakima, Wash., to New York, N.Y., June 21 to July 1, 1942
- Report on experimental work dealing with maturity precooling transit refrigeration of California plums during the 1941 season : a cooperative investigation
- Report on experimental work dealing with the precooling transit refrigeration ripening of California Bartlett pears during the 1941 season : a cooperative investigation
- Report on experimental work dealing with the precooling transit refrigeration ripening of California Bartlett pears during the 1942 season : a cooperative investigation
- Report on shipping tests with early potatoes from Kern County, California, 1938
- Results of cotton experiments in 1911
- Ribes of Oregon
- Ribes of Washington
- Roller-gin construction, maintenance, and operation,
- Root-knot and its control
- Sap-rot and other diseases of the red gum
- Saving green tomatoes
- Saving sweetpotatoes from black rot
- Seasonal nitrification as influenced by crops and tillage
- Seed sterilization and its effect upon seed inoculation
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From April 1 to June 30, 1910 / Plant Inventory No. 23; Nos. 27481 to 28324
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From Jan.1 to March 31, 1911
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From January 1 to March 31, 1908 : Inventory No. 14; Nos. 21732 to 22510
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From January 1 to March 31, 1909 : Plant Inventory No. 18; Nos. 24430 to 25191
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From January 1 to March 31, 1910 : Plant Inventory No. 22 Nos. 26471 to 27480
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From January 1 to March 31, 1912 : Plant Inventory No. 30; Nos. 32369 to 33278
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From July 1 to September 30, 1908 : plant inventory no. 16; nos. 23323 to 23744 -
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From July 1 to September 30, 1909 : Plant Inventory No. 20; Nos. 25718 to 26047
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From July 1 to September 30, 1910 : Plant Inventory No. 24; Nos. 28325 to 28880
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From July 1 to September 30, 1911 : Plant Inventory No.28; Nos. 31371 to 31938 -
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From October 1 to December 31, 1908 : Plant Inventory No. 17; Nos. 23745 to 24429
- Seeds and Plants Imported During the Period From October 1 to December 31, 1909 : Inventory No.21; Nos. 26048 to 26470
- Seeds and Plants Imported From April 1 to June 30, 1911 : Plant Inventory No. 27; Nos. 30462 to 31370
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from April 1 to June 30, 1909 : plant inventory no. 19; nos. 25192 to 25717
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from December, 1903, to December, 1905; : inventory no. 11, nos.9897 to 16796 ..
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from December, 1905, to July, 1906 : inventory no. 12, nos. 16797 to 19057
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from July, 1906 to December 31, 1907 : inventory no. 13; nos. 19058 to 21730
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from October 1 to December 31, 1909 : inventory no. 25; nos. 28833 to 29327
- Seeds and plants imported during the period from October 1 to December 31, 1911: : inventory no. 25; nos. 28883 to 29327
- Seeds and plants imported through the Section of Seed and Plant Introduction for distribution in cooperation with the Agricultural experiment stations : inventory no. 9, numbers 4351-5500
- Self-boiled lime-sulphur mixture as a promising fungicide
- Smuts of sorghum
- Soil inoculation for legumes; : with reports upon the successful use of artificial cultures by practical farmers.
- Soils of the prairie regions of Alabama and Mississippi and their use for alfalfa
- Some conditions influencing the yield of hops
- Some diseases of the cowpea
- Some effects of refrigeration on sulphured and unsulphured hops
- Some factors affecting the keeping qualities of American lemons
- Some factors influencing the efficiency of Bordeaux mixture
- Some fungous diseases of economic importance. : I. Miscellaneous diseases
- Some new alfalfa varieties for pastures
- Some stem tumors or knots on apple and quince trees
- Soy bean
- Soy beans in the cotton belt.
- Spanish almonds and their introduction into America
- Special contests for corn-club work
- Spermatogenesis and fecundation of Zamia.
- Spur feterita
- Stock ranges of northwestern California : notes on the grasses and forage plants and range conditions
- Storing the garden crop
- Studies of fungous parasites belonging to the genus Glomerella.
- Studies on refrigeration of Puerto Rican red spanish pineapples, 1938
- Sudan grass (Andropogon sorghum var)
- Sudan grass (Andropogon sorghum var.)
- Sudan grass, a new drought-resistant hay plant
- Suggested cropping systems for the black lands of Texas
- Suggestions to potato growers on irrigated lands
- Suggestions to settlers on the Belle Fourche Irrigation Project
- Suggestions to settlers on the sandy soils of the Columbia River Valley
- Summer apples in the Middle Atlantic States
- Suppressed and intensified characters in cotton hybrids,
- Sweet corn from the garden
- Ten years' experience with the Swedish select oat
- Tests of irrigated and rain-grown American upland cotton, crop of 1939
- Texas root-rot of cotton: : field experiments in 1907
- The "rough-bark" disease of the yellow Newtown apple.
- The "spineless" prickly pears
- The Chinese wood-oil tree
- The Distinguishing characters of the seeds of quack-grass and of certain wheat-grasses
- The Florida velvet bean and related plants
- The Home vegetable garden : a radio discussion by Miss Ruth Van Deman, Bureau of Home Economics and W.R. Beattie, Bureau of Plant Industry, delivered in the Department of Agriculture period of the National Farm and Home Hour, broadcast by a network of 49 associate NBC stations, Wednesday, March 14, 1933
- The Lyon velvet bean (Stizolobium niveum)
- The Mangum terrace in its relation to efficient farm management
- The Mosaic disease of sugar cane and other grasses
- The Purpling Chromogen of a Hawaiian Dioscorea
- The South African pipe calabash
- The blister rust of white pine
- The bud-rot of the coconut palm
- The cold storage of small fruits
- The commercial status of durum wheat
- The comparative tolerance of various plants for the salts common in alkali soils
- The control of apple bitter-rot
- The control of black-rot of the grape.
- The control of cotton wilt and root-knot
- The control of peach brown-rot and scab
- The cost of clearing logged-off land for farming in the Pacific Northwest
- The cultivated black currant a menace to white pine ; : Blister rust increasing rapidly in Northeastern States
- The cultivation and handling of goldenseal
- The cultivation and manufacture of tea in the United States
- The cultivation of hemp in the United States
- The curly-top of beets
- The danger of using foreign potatoes for seed
- The decay of Florida oranges while in transit and on the market
- The decay of cabbage in storage : its cause and prevention
- The decay of oranges while in transit from California
- The decay of timber and methods of preventing it
- The deterioration of corn in storage
- The determination of the deterioration of maize, with incidental reference to pellagra,
- The development of single-germ beet seed,
- The disinfection of sewage effluents for the protection of public water supplies
- The dry rot of potatoes due to Fusarium oxysporum
- The effects of artificial shading on plant growth in Louisiana.
- The federal extension horticulturist
- The fertilizing value of hairy vetch for Connecticut tobacco fields
- The field treatment of tobacco root-rot
- The germination of packeted vegetable seeds
- The history and cause of the coconut bud-rot.
- The history and distribution of sorghum
- The importance and improvement of the grain sorghums
- The improvement of mountain meadows
- The influence of a mixture of soluble salts, principally sodium chlorid, upon the leaf structure and transpiration of wheat, oats, and barley
- The limitation of the satsuma orange to trifoliate-orange stock
- The loose smuts of barley and wheat
- The mistletoe pest in the Southwest
- The mulberry and other silkworm food plants
- The necessity for new standards of hop valuation
- The nematode gallworm on potatoes and other crop plants in Nevada
- The ornamental value of the saltbushes
- The pecan
- The picking and handling of peanuts
- The present status of the tobacco industry
- The present status of the white-pine blights
- The prickly pear and other cacti as food for stock,
- The prickly pear as a farm crop
- The principles of mushroom growing and mushroom spawn making
- The production of Easter lily bulbs in the United States.
- The production of cigar-wrapper tobacco under shade in the Connecticut Vally
- The production of hairy vetch seed
- The production of the Easter lily in northern climates
- The production of tulip bulbs
- The production of vegetable seeds: : sweet corn and garden peas and beans
- The production of volatile oils and perfumery plants in the United States
- The relation of barium to the loco-weed disease
- The relation of crown-gall to legume inoculation
- The relation of lime and magnesia to plant growth. : I. Liming of soils from a physiological standpoint,
- The relation of the composition of the leaf to the burning qualities of tobacco
- The reseeding of depleted range and native pastures.
- The revegetation of overgrazed range areas : preliminary report
- The root-rot of tobacco caused by Thielavia basicola.
- The rusts of grains in the United States
- The seed-corn situation
- The seedling-inarch and nurse-plant methods of propagation
- The seeds of the bluegrasses
- The separation of seed barley by the specific gravity method
- The shrinkage of corn in storage
- The source of the drug Dioscorea, : with a consideration of the Dioscoreae found in the United States
- The soy bean; : history, varieties and field studies
- The state and federal governments are cooperating in the control of the pine blister rust
- The structure and development of crown gall : a plant cancer
- The substitution of lime-sulphur preparations for Bordeaux mixture in the treatment of apple diseases
- The sulphur bleaching of commercial oats and barley
- The superiority of line breeding over narrow breeding.
- The timber rot caused by Lenzites sepiaria
- The transportation of sweet cherries under refrigeration and refigeration supplemented with carbon dioxide gas
- The treatment of damping-off in coniferous seedlings
- The truckee-carson experiment farm
- The tuna as food for man
- The use of carbon dioxideas a supplement to refigeration in the express transportation of sweet cherries
- The use of solid carbon dioxide as a refigerant and as a source of gas to supplement standard refigeration in the transportation of sweet cherries
- The utilization of pea-cannery refuse for forage
- The value of first-generation hybrids in corn
- The vitality and germination of seeds.
- The vitality of buried seeds
- The weed factor in the cultivation of corn
- The wild alfalfas and clovers of Siberia : with a perspective view of the alfalfas of the world
- The wilting coefficient for different plants : and its indirect determination
- The work of the San Antonio Experiment Farm in 1907
- The work of the San Antonio Experiment Farm in 1908
- The work of the San Antonio experiment farm
- Three much-misrepresented sorghums
- Three new plant introductions from Japan
- Timothy rust in the United States,
- Tobacco breeding
- Tobacco marketing in the United States.
- Tomato news
- Tourists and the pine blister rust
- Traction plowing
- Variegated alfalfa,
- Varieties of American upland cotton
- Varieties of tobacco seed distributed in 1905-6, with cultural directions
- Vegetation affected by agriculture in Central America
- Velvet beans
- Wart disease of the potato : a dangerous European disease liable to be introduced into the United States
- Water Requirement of Plants - 2. a Review of the Literature
- Water Requirement of Plants - I. Investigations in the Great Plains in 1910 and 1911
- Weevil-resisting adaptations of the cotton plant
- What is farm management?
- White pine can be protected from the blister rust
- White pine is profitable if protected from blister rust
- White-pine blister rust in the western United States
- Wild currants and goodseberries cause blister rust infecton on white pines
- Wild medicinal plants of the United States.
- Wild rice : its uses and propagation
- Wild rice : its uses and propagation
- Winter wheat in western South Dakota
- [Bermuda grass (Cynodon dactylon)]
- [Correspondence respecting the non-issuing of trade catalogs] : letter dated Jan. 12, 1921 to the United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, Washington, D. C.
- [List of seeds offered] : [correspondence, dated 1/19/24, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry over non-issue of a trade catalog]
- Unknown Label
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.archive.org/resource/iJMnmXrtY1E/" typeof="Organization http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Organization"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.archive.org/resource/iJMnmXrtY1E/">United States, Bureau of Plant Industry</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.archive.org/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.archive.org/">Internet Archive - Open Library</a></span></span></span></span></div>