CONTENTS. Ill 



rage. 



Fertilizer inspection, Woo<ls and Bartlett 1024 



Fertilizori?, Cathcart 1024 



Complete report of conunercial fertilizers for 1!)()7, Stewart and Ilite 1024 



Laws regulatin;,' the sale of eonunereial fertilizers in Massachusetts 1024 



Ad RI( r I.TIRA I, BOTA N Y. 



Evajioration ami jtlant development, Livingston 1024 



Evaporation and plant habitats, Livingston 1025 



The physiology of gum formation in the Amygdalacea>, Ruhland. - 1025 



The infiiienee of grafting on plants containing liydrocyanic acid, Guignard.. . 1025 



The tf)xic effect of certain common salts of the soil on plants, JMagowan 1025 



The action of manganese on plants, .Salomone 1()2() 



The malignant effect of certain trees upon surrounding plants, Reed 102() 



The antitoxic value of complete and incomplete nutrient solutions, le Renard. 1026 



The chemistry of some of the higher fungi, Zeilner 1027 



The fermenting power of pure yeasts and some associated fungi, Alwood 1027 



A bibliography of mycological literature, Lindau and Sydow . . - 1027 



FIELD CROPS. 



Demonstration work in cooperation with southern farmers, Knapp 1027 



West Virginia agricultural resources and possibUities, Garvin 1028 



Agriculture and agricultural conditions in .Syria, Auhagen 1028 



Rei)ort of the agronomist for the season of 1907, Grantham 1028 



Results of cooperative tests of varieties, 1907, Wiancko and Cromer 1029 



Forage crop experiments, Billings 1030 



Experiments with different crops, Malkoff 1031 



Alfalfa as a crop for Massachusetts, Brooks 1031 



Corn growing in Oklahoma, Moorhouse 10.32 



Corn culture, Calvin and Kimbrough 1032 



The Williamson plan in 1907, Newman 1032 



Corn breeding in Alabama, Wilcox 1033 



Cotton culture, Calvin and Kmibrough 1033 



Cotton culture, Moorhouse and Nicholson 1033 



Cowpeas, Nielsen 1034 



Oats, Bowman and Burnett ! - 1034 



Results from stripping experiments, Eckart 1034 



V^iriety tests of wheat, Hume, Center, and Hegnauer 1035 



Seed separation and germination. Stone 1036 



Seed inspection, Woods and Hammond 1036 



The distribution of pedigree seed, Shepperd and Churchill 10.36 



Weeds and methods of eradication, Bolley 1036 



HORTICULTURE. 



Report of the horticulturist, Blake and Voorhees 1037 



Commercial melon growing. Troop and Woodbury 1038 



The fig in (Georgia, Starnes and Monroe 1038 



New December pear 1039 



Relations of weather and soil conditions to the fruit industry, Cardoza 1039 



The census of fruit trees on the farms 1039 



Report of the botanist, Halsted, Owen, and Shore. 1039 



Distribution of station strawberries and raspberries, Hedrick and Taylor. .... 1041 



A hedge plant for dry southwestern gardens, Miller 1041 



Daffodils, Kirby - - 1041 



My rock garden, Farrer 1041 



The art of landscape gardening, Repton -. 1042 



Relation of Southern Appalachian Mountains to water power, I.,eighton et al. 1042 

 Relation of Southern Appalachian Mountains to inland water navigation, 



Leighton and Horton 1043 



Light retjuirement of forest trees an<l methods of measuring light, Zederbauer. 1043 



The forest formations of Boulder County, Colorado, Young 1043 



