IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



Some financial forest problems, Barrows 640 



The farm woodlot, Cheyney and WentUng 640 



The management of second-growth hardwoods in Vermont, Hawes and Chandler. 640 



Development of white pine seedlings in nursery beds. Burns 640 



Experimental forest planting in the Hawaiian Islands, Hosmer 640 



The tree species of Java: Contribution No. 13, Koorders and Valeton 640 



Lumbering industry of the Philippines, Arnold 641 



Forest administration in Northwest Frontier Province, 1912-13, Jerram 641 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



Notes on plant diseases of Connecticut, Clinton 641 



Report of the imperial mycologist, Butler 641 



A species of Rhizopliidium parasitic on various Peronosporacese, Melhus 641 



Heterodera radicicola attacking the Canada thistle, Melchers 642 



Spore germinations of cereal smuts, Stakman 642 



Studies on club root. — I, The relation of Plasmodiophora brassicx, Lutman 642 



Occurrence of bacterial blight of alfalfa in Salt Lake Valley, Utah, O'Gara 642 



The cob rot of corn, Arzbei^er 642 



Hot water treatment for cotton anthracnose, Barre and AuU 643 



Disease resistance of potatoes, Stuart 643 



Chlorosis of sugar cane, Gile and Ageton 644 



Tomato diseases, Hewitt 644 



Some important diseases of tomato in North Carolina, Fulton 644 



Two tomato diseases 644 



Fruit diseases in Montana, Swingle 644 



The blight of apples, pears, and quinces, Pickett 644 



A contribution to our knowledge of apple scab, Morris 645 



A destructive strawberry disease, Stevens 645 



Endocellular fibers in tissues of grapevines and other dicotyledons, Mameli 645 



Report of the plant pathologist, Fawcett 645 



Rot of orange trees in Francofonte, and its treatment, Savastano 646 



The hereditary transmission of rust in mallows, Blaringhem 646 



A disease of Narcissus bulbs, Massee ._ 646 



The technique of operation for rot and gummosis of trees, Savastano 646 



Notes on diseases of trees in the southern Appalachians, III, Graves 646 



New facts concerrung the wliite pine blister rust, Spaulding 647 



The damping-off of coniferous seedlings, Spaulding 647 



Tests of disinfectants in controlling damping-off. Hartley and Merrill 647 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Revision of the American harvest mice (genus Reithrodontomya), Howell 647 



Birds and their value to the agriculturist, Guppy 648 



First report on the amphibians of Pennsylvania, Surface 648 



Bibliography of Canadian zoology for 1912, Lambe. 648 



Bibliography of Canadian entomology for 1912, Hewitt 648 



Eleventh annual report of the state entomologist of Montana, Cooley 648 



Insect pests in 1912, MacDougall 648 



Insect pests in 1913, MacDougall ._ 648 



Principal insect pests of field crops in European Russia for 20 years, Kulagin. . 648 



List of pests of alfalfa, Vassiliev 648 



First supplement to the list of animal pests of alfalfa, Vassiliev 648 



The imported cabbage worm and the cabbage aphis, Parker 649 



African cotton pests, Zacher 649 



Insect enemies of lettuce, Noel 649 



Animal enemies of the sugar beet in 1913, Stift 649 



Tree crickets injurious to orchard and garden fruits, Parrott and Fulton 649 



Tree crickets of garden and orchard. Hall 650 



The Acridiidse of Minnesota, Somes 650 



The tarnished plant bug (Lygus pratensis), Crosby and Leonard 650 



Susceptibility to spraying mixtures of hibernating pear psylla, Hodgkiss 651 



The pear psylla and its control, HaU 652 



The life cycle of the beet plant louse (Aphis euonymi), Malaquin and Moiti^ 652 



Lepidoptera in British Museum. — XII and XIII, Noctuidse, Hampson 652 



The gypsy moth, Barsacq 652 



