INDEX TO PEACH YELLOWS AND ROSETTE. 203 



Premature peaches: Page. 



Absent in rosette — 194, 200 



Appearance of, in yellows 166, 182 



Borers induce one sort of .. 195 



Taste of, when due to yellows 182 



Premature pits, healthy seedlings from _ 170 



Pruning, yellows not known to be communicated by 175 



Primus Chicasa, rosette in . , . 193 



Prunus domestica 193 



Rainfall, yellows not worse when excessive 183 



Red spotting of fruit, a symptom in yellows 166, 167, 183 



Rising Sun, Delaware, excisions, near 178 



Rosette: 



Cases by years at Vineyard, Georgia 197 



Conclusions respecting nature of _ 200 



Dangerous nature of 196, 200 



Flowers and fruits in. 194 



Fir st appearance and present distribution of 195 



Foliage in 194 



Gum-pockets in . 195 



Healthy-looking buds did not produce 198 



How different from yellows 200 



How induced 196 



Plants attacked by 193 



Premature fruit absent in 194, 200 



Rapid progress in plants attacked 193, 196, 200 



Roots and rootlets in _. 195 



Shoot-axes in _ 193 



Small amount of diseased tissue required to produce 197 



Symptoms of 193 



Sassafras River: 



Peach on plum at mouth of 189 



Peach yellows destructive in vicinity of 189 



Scolytus regulosus, rosetted trees attacked by 194 



Seaford, Delaware: 



Healthyold orchards at 187 



Peach pits from 174 



Seedlings: 



Healthy ones from premature peaches 170 



Subject to yellows .'. 186 



Shiloh, Georgia, rosette at 196 



Shriveled fruits in rosette 194, 200 



Sicily, exemption from yellows '. 165 



Smock seedlings for inoculation 169 



Sprouts due to yellows 167 



Still Pond, Maryland: 



Excisions at 178, 179 



Inoculation experiment at _. 169 



Peach on plum at 188 



Sussex county, Delaware: 



Peach borer in 185 



Peach pits from _ 174 



Symptoms of rosette 193 



Symptoms of yellows 166 



Tennessee pits 171, 174 



Tephritis, danger of introduction of 190 



Terminal branches: 



Buds for inoculation from 174, 199 



Diseased growths from 167, 193 



Texas, probably occurrence of yellows, in northeast part of. 165 



Turkestan, peach stones from 190 



United States, yellows native in eastern part of 165 



Varieties (see Peaches). 



Vineyard, Georgia, inoculation experiments at 193, 198 



Virginia, yellows in 165 



Washington, District of Columbia, inoculation experiments in 170, 174 



Wet seasons, yellows not worse in 183 



Wheat, effect of in peach orchard 173 



Wild Goose plum, rosette in.. __ 193 



Winter buds, premature growth from (see also Excisions) 166, 167 



Winter freezing, not the cause of yellows.. 187 



Tellows: 



Annual increase of cases 168 



Bud inoculation not only method of spread. 190, 192 



Chronic nature of _ 168 



Conclusions from experiments 191 



Destructive nature of 165, 168 



Due in part to careless selection of buds 190 



Duration of affected trees 168 



First symptoms of 166, 175 



Green foliage, usually found in first stage of 167, 176, 177, 178, 179 



Gradual progress of 167, 175 



Healthy-looking buds may produce 171, 174, 191 



How best to deal with 165, 191 



How different from rosette 200 



Immunity, by careful selection of buds and stocks 186 



Influence of locality on... 187 



