IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



Report of the Royal American Grape Nursery in Apti, 1901 to 1910, Persi 840 



Report of the enological station of Ilaro for 1910, De Zuniga 840 



The viticultural conditions in Algeria, Wortmann 841 



Storage test of shipping grapes, De Castella 841 



Coffee culture; its future in the French colonies, Jacotot 841 



The pecan and hickory in Texas, Kyle 841 



[Report on ornamentals], Kennedy 841 



Chrysanthemums and how to grow them, Powell 841 



Indoor gardening, Rexford 841 



FORESTRY. 



[Report of the] department of forestry, Ferguson 841 



Preliminary report on forestry investigation at Colesborne, Pritchard et al 842 



Report on forest administration in lower Bengal, 1908-9, Hart 842 



Report on forest administration in lower Bengal, 1909-10, Trafford 842 



The forest re-formation and private ownership, Ducrot 842 



Example of a German working plan, trans, by Recknagel 842 



The need of encouraging cutting on National Forests of Paciiic coast, Kirkland . 842 



A method of assessing fire damages in the Southwest, Rogers and Moore 843 



The Biltmore stick and its use on National Forests, Jackson 843 



The climatic and hygienic influences of forest growth, Anders 843 



Experiments on ramming forest trees, Pritchard 843 



Some useful woods of Kamerun. — II, Leguminoste, Harms 843 



Utilization of osage orange, Maxwell 843 



The commercial mahoganies, Busch 843 



Eucalyptus culture in Hawaii, Margolin 844 



A manual for eucalyptus planters, Navarro de Andrade 844 



Guayule: A rubber plant of the Chihuahuan Desert, Lloyd 844 



Treatment of shingles with creosote to increase their durability, Ferguson 844 



DISEASES OP PLANTS. 



Notes on plant diseases occiu-ring in North Carolina, Stevens and Hall 845 



Plant diseases in Virginia in the years 1909 and 1910, Reed and Cooley 845 



Three interesting species of Claviceps, Stevens and Hall ' 845 



On the causes of the damping-off disease of beet seedlings, Peters 845 



On the occurrence of the damping-off organisms in the soil, Busse et al 845 



Cabbage club root in Virginia, Reed 845 



On the curly leaf disease of cotton, Kranzlin 846 



A serious lettuce disease, Stevens ._ 846 



Heterosporium variabile, Spinacia oleracea and environment. Reed and Cooley. . 846 



The diseases of sugar cane, Maublanc 847 



The sereh disease of the sugar cane 847 



Tomatoes and Irish blight, McAlpine 847 



Some frost injuries of fruit trees, Ltistner 847 



A new disease of apples, Stewart 847 



Hold-over blight in the pear, Sackett 848 



Withertip, Smith 848 



Life history and biology of Botryosphieria ribis, Grossenbacher and Duggar 848 



A fungus disease of Ribes aureum, Rottger 849 



On a disease of Ribes species due to Botnjtis cinerea, Krause 849 



The ascogenous form of the fungus causing dead -arm of the grape. Shear 849 



Chlorosis and mildew, Provost-Dumarchais.^ 849 



[Double flower in dewberries and blackberries] 849 



A new raspberry disease, Rosenthal _ 849 



The hollyhock rust, its nature and developmental phases, Eriksson 850 



On the wintering over of certain Erisiphacese, Peglion 850 



Artificial production of the black canker of the chestnut, Briosi and Farneti. . . 850 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Re\'ision of the spiny pocket mice (genera Heteromys and Liomys;, Goldman. . 850 



Distribution of the American egrets, Cooke 851 



Eighth annual report of the state entomologist of Montana, Cooley 851 



Department of entomology, Doten 851 



Report of the entomologist. Smith 851 



