IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



The manuring of market garden crops, Dyer and Shrivell 336 



The partial sterilization of soils for glasshouse work, Russell 336 



Vegetable gardens on irrigated farms in western Nebraska, Knorr 336 



[Culinary peas and miscellaneous vegetables at Wisley, 1913] 336 



Chicory '( Cichorium intybus), Lapiccirella 336 



Jack bean (Canavalia etisiformis), Booth 336 



The fruits of Ontario 336 



A selected list of hardy fruits, Wilks and Bunyard 337 



Promising new fruits, Taylor and Gould 337 



New or noteworthy fruits, II, Hedrick 337 



Self-fruitfulness and self-sterility in apples, Chittenden- 337 



A comparison of tillage and sod mulch in an apple orchard, Hedrick 338 



Winter spraying with solutions of nitratei of soda, Ballard and Volck 338 



( 'itrus fruit handling and storage, McKay 338 



Olive culture in Tunis. Guillochon et al 339 



A test of commercial fertilizers for grapes, Hedrick and Gladwin 339 



Bibliotheca vinarifi , Simon 339 



The history and development of the strawberry, Bunyard 339 



Classification of the genus Annona, with descriptions of species, Safford 339 



Mango crops, and some factors influencing them, Hartless 339 



Control of imported tea seed, Bernard and Deuss. 339 



Analyses of materials sold as insecticides and fungicides 340 



Practical tree surgery, Collins 340 



Plants, etc., certified by the [Royal Horticultural] Society, 1859 to 1910 340 



[Antin-hinums and miscellaneous flowering plants at Wisley, 1913] 340 



Decorative garden dahlias at Duffryn, near Cardiff 340 



Garden design, ^\^lite 340 



The commuter's garden, edited by Hay ward 340 



Identifying plants without a key, Hamblin 340 



FORESTRY. 



Repoit of the forestry committee of the Fifth National Conservation Congress. . 340 



Seventh report of the State forester of Connecticut, Filley 341 



Forest statistics at the beginning of the nineteenth century, De Coincy 341 



The administration of a forest experiment station, Pearson ._ 341 



A proposed method of preparing working plans for national forests, Kircher. . . 341 



Reforesting cut-over chestnut lands, Richards 341 



A mechanical tree planter, McLean 341 



Design of a range finder, Crowell 341 



A new measuring instrument, Siggins 341 



Errors in estimating timber, Margolin 341 



Stem analyses, Bentley, jr 341 



The scope of dendrology in forest botany, De Forest 342 



The silvical and economic geographic importance of the valonia oaks, Burk . . . 342 



Tapping experiments with Funtumia elastim at Musa and Kutu, Gisseleire 342 



Hevea in Cochin China, Girard ; 342 



Exploitation of cross-ties in northern New Mexico, Korstian 342 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



The biological basis of international phytopathology, Orton 342 



Report of the botany department, Reed 342 



Report of the central station for plant protection, 1912, Zimmermann 343 



Heat killing and stem constrictions of plants, von Tubeuf 343 



The fungus genus Verticillium in its relation to plant diseases, Orton 343 



Studies on Nectriacese, II, Weese -. - • - 343 



Snow mold and other aspects of attack by Fusarium nivale on cereals Schaffnit . . 343 



Smut in small grains, Hughes and Taff 344 



Investigations of timothy rust in North Dakota during 1913, Mercer 344 



Heart rot of beets, KiippeU and Morgenthaler 344 



Celery disease ^44 



Cotton anthracnose, Fulton, Winston, and Cromwell 344 



Fruit rots of eggplant, Wolf 344 



1m golden seal resistant to the root knot nematode? McChntock 345 



IN'port of 1913 infection studies with Fusarium on potato, Himmelbaur 345 



