^26 BOARD OF AGRICtTLTUEE. 



INDIANA AGRICULTURAL AND HORTICULTURAL ASSOCIATION 

 — Coutiuued. 



PAGE 



Spraying for San Jose Scale 419 



Valuable Remedy for Codling Moth 420 



Root Rot in Fruit Trees 422 



Black Knot of Plum and Cherry 425 



Brown Rot of Plums 426 



Making Cider and Vinegar 427 



Grading and Packing Apples 429 



The Small Apple Package 430 



INDIANA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY— 



Midsummer Meeting at Orleans 221 



Fruit Possibilities in Southern Indiana— Campbell 222 



Fruit Possibilities in Southern Indiana — Benton 224 



Fruit Possibilities in Southern Indiana— Stevens 225 



. Condition of Success in B^'ruit Growing— Hobbs 226 



How Much and When Shall We Educate Our Boys?— McMahan 230 

 Market Varieties of Apples and Pears in Southern Indiana— 



Hobbs 232 



Stone Fruits— Stuart 236 



Soil Fertilization (See South Bend Meeting)— Huston 252 



The Apple and How to Grow It— Burton 237 



Packing and Marketing Fruit— GofC 238 



Midsummer Horticultural and Purdue School of Agriculture at 



South Bend, Ind 240 



The Culture of Native Plants 253 



Secretary's Financial Report 329 



Appointment of Committee of Exhibits 329 



Peach Culture in Indiana— Dean 329 



M 



McMahan, H. F— Address by 230 



MIDSUMMER HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY- 



Midsummer Horticultural Institute at South Bend, Ind 240 



Address by John B. Stoll . . ; 240 



Address by President S. H. Fulton 243 



Orchard Fertilizers— Huston 252 



The Relation of Forestry to Industries 264 



Address by Prof. E. S. Goth 282 



The Culture of Native Plums— Goth '. 283 



