﻿125 
  

  

  Dropping 
  Walnuts. 
  Ibid., 
  p. 
  259. 
  

  

  Chestnut 
  Bark 
  Disease. 
  Part 
  V 
  of 
  the 
  Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  the 
  Connecticut 
  

   Agricultural 
  Experiment 
  Station, 
  New 
  Ha\en, 
  1912. 
  Very 
  full 
  account, 
  100 
  

   pages, 
  plates, 
  charts 
  and 
  bibliography. 
  

  

  The 
  Chestnut 
  Bark 
  Disease. 
  Ibid., 
  bul. 
  178, 
  September, 
  1913. 
  

  

  So-called 
  Chestnut 
  BHght 
  Poisoning. 
  Ibid. 
  Part 
  I 
  of 
  the 
  Annual 
  Report 
  for 
  

   1914. 
  12 
  pages 
  and 
  plate. 
  

  

  Supposed 
  Poisonous 
  Properties 
  of 
  Chestnuts 
  Grown 
  on 
  Trees 
  Affected 
  with 
  

   Chestnut 
  Blight. 
  C. 
  Dwight 
  March. 
  Jovrnal 
  of 
  the 
  American 
  Medical 
  Asso- 
  

   ciation, 
  July 
  4 
  1914,, 
  p. 
  30. 
  

  

  Studies 
  in 
  Juglans, 
  1. 
  Study 
  of 
  a 
  Form 
  of 
  Juglans 
  Calif 
  ornica, 
  Watson. 
  By 
  

   Ernest 
  B. 
  Babcock. 
  University 
  of 
  California 
  Publications 
  in 
  Agricultural 
  Sciences 
  

   Vol. 
  2, 
  No. 
  1, 
  pp. 
  1-46, 
  pis. 
  1-12. 
  December 
  4, 
  1913. 
  

  

  Studies 
  in 
  Juglans, 
  II. 
  Further 
  Observations 
  on 
  a 
  New 
  Variety 
  of 
  Julians 
  

   Californica, 
  Watson, 
  and 
  on 
  Certain 
  Supposed 
  Walnut-Oak 
  Hybrids. 
  By 
  

   Ernest 
  R. 
  Babcock. 
  Ibid. 
  Vol. 
  2, 
  No. 
  2, 
  pp. 
  47-70, 
  pis. 
  13-19. 
  Oct. 
  31, 
  1914. 
  

  

  Production 
  of 
  the 
  Walnut 
  in 
  the 
  Northwest. 
  Ferd 
  Groner. 
  Fifth 
  Annual 
  

   Report, 
  Oregon 
  State 
  Horticultural 
  Society, 
  December, 
  1913. 
  p. 
  159. 
  

  

  Top-Working 
  Seedhng 
  Pecan 
  Trees. 
  W. 
  N. 
  Hutt. 
  Bul. 
  224, 
  North 
  Carolina 
  

   Agricultural 
  Experiment 
  Station, 
  Raleigh, 
  January, 
  1914. 
  Excellent 
  description 
  

   and 
  illustrations. 
  

  

  Birds 
  as 
  Carriers 
  of 
  the 
  Chestnut 
  Blight 
  Fungus. 
  Journal 
  of 
  Agricultural 
  

   Research, 
  September, 
  1914, 
  Vol. 
  II, 
  No. 
  6, 
  Department 
  of 
  Agricultiure, 
  Washing- 
  

   ton, 
  D. 
  C. 
  Account 
  of 
  experiments, 
  with 
  plates 
  and 
  bibliography. 
  

  

  Pecan 
  Rosette. 
  By 
  W. 
  A. 
  Orton 
  and 
  Frederick 
  V. 
  Rand. 
  Reprint 
  from 
  

   Journal 
  of 
  Agricultural 
  Research, 
  Vol. 
  Ill, 
  No. 
  2. 
  Department 
  of 
  Agriculture, 
  

   Washington, 
  D. 
  C, 
  November 
  16, 
  1914. 
  

  

  The 
  Possibilities 
  of 
  Nut 
  Culture 
  in 
  New 
  England. 
  By 
  Dr. 
  William 
  C. 
  Deming. 
  

   Reprinted 
  from 
  the 
  Transactions 
  of 
  the 
  Massachusetts 
  Horticultural 
  Society, 
  

   1914, 
  Part 
  1. 
  Boston, 
  August, 
  1914. 
  

  

  Nut 
  Cultiu-e. 
  By 
  WiUiam 
  C. 
  Deming. 
  Circular 
  No. 
  26, 
  Massachusetts 
  

   State 
  Board 
  of 
  Agriculture. 
  June, 
  1914. 
  

  

  Nut 
  Growing 
  and 
  the 
  Propagation 
  of 
  Nut 
  Trees. 
  By 
  William 
  C. 
  Deming. 
  

   To 
  be 
  printed 
  in 
  the 
  Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  the 
  New 
  Jersey 
  State 
  Horticultural 
  Society, 
  

   1914. 
  

  

  Grafting 
  the 
  Hickory. 
  By 
  William 
  C. 
  Deming. 
  Rural 
  New-Yorker, 
  December 
  

   12, 
  1914. 
  Note 
  on 
  a 
  simple 
  method 
  for 
  grafting 
  the 
  hickory 
  by 
  the 
  sMp 
  bark 
  

   method. 
  

  

  Nuts 
  for 
  the 
  North. 
  H. 
  E. 
  Van 
  Deman. 
  Green's 
  Fruit 
  Grower, 
  December, 
  

   1914, 
  p. 
  7. 
  

  

  Cracking 
  the 
  Walnut 
  BUght. 
  Walter 
  V. 
  Woehlke. 
  The 
  Country 
  Gentlemarif 
  

   November 
  28, 
  1914, 
  p. 
  1910. 
  Illustrations 
  of 
  top-working 
  the 
  walnut 
  in 
  Cali- 
  

   fornia. 
  

  

  The 
  American 
  Nut 
  Journal. 
  Published 
  monthly 
  at 
  Rochester, 
  N. 
  Y., 
  by 
  Ralph 
  

   T. 
  Olcott, 
  Editor 
  of 
  American 
  Fruits. 
  $1.25 
  a 
  year, 
  or 
  $2.50 
  with 
  yearly 
  member- 
  

   ship 
  in 
  this 
  Association. 
  First 
  number 
  issued 
  June, 
  1914, 
  Ellwanger 
  & 
  Barry 
  

   Building. 
  

  

  Proceedings 
  of 
  the 
  Thirteenth 
  Annual 
  Convention 
  of 
  the 
  National 
  Nut 
  Growers 
  

   Association, 
  Thomasville, 
  Georgia, 
  October, 
  1914. 
  J. 
  B. 
  Wight, 
  Secretary, 
  

   Cairo, 
  Georgia. 
  

  

  