1154 



EXPERIMENT STATION RKCORD. 



Fruit canning 963 



crop as affected by bees 353 



culture and marketing 152 



European, injuries of A.meri 



can scale insects 569 



evaporation 354 



flavor as affected by graft 551! 



fly, gooseberry 1066 



host plants 469 



notes 47o. 709 



fumigation with hydrocyanic acid . . . 771 



growing, JT. T. Cornell 059 



home canning 354 



industry in the United States, U. S. 



D.A .-,411,552 



list for planting in Colorado 152 



marketing, Oreg 353 



medicinal value as food 481 



packing, Oreg 353 



picking, Oreg 353 



protection against parasitic, fungi. . . . 56:! 



pulping '. 75S 



rot of cherries, N. Y. State 265 



scoring 355 



setting, conditions affecting 757 



tender, export 353 



thinning 46, 152, 354 



N. T. State 254 



TJ.S.D.A 107 



tree liark beetle 165 



remedies. U.S. I). A.. 469 



culture, handbook 152 



manual 48 



principles 757 



t rees, comparison of eastern and west 



ern grown, Wyo 44 



d iseases as affected by weather 365 

 evaporation of water from 



twigs ■ 1 52 



grafting 1044 



injurious effect of dendrolene, 



N. T. State 26!) 



injury by freeze, "Wash 551 1 



during winter of 1895- 



1896, N. Y. State 251 



insect and fungus diseases 871 



leaf diseases 1057 



manurial requirements 757 



pinning, Ark 1044 



root pruning, Ga 1040 



water content 757 



worm, notes 560 



Fruits, Ala. Canebrake 854 



American, exclusion from Germany. 169 



bush 756 



dried, analyses, Cal 255 



food value 1089 



for planting in Wyoming 44 



growth on hardpan, Cal 254 



in British Columbia, Can ... 854 



.Michigan 152 



indigenous to Queensland 355 



native 48 



evolution 853 



of tbe Tropics 152 



Fruits, orchard. {See Orchard fruits.) 



packing and shipping 758, 849 



pomaceous, keeping qualities 751 



preservation by lime 758 



small. (See Small fruits.) 



splitting, cause 519 



stone, gumming 457 



substitution of d sstic For foreign, 



U. S. D. A 549, 552 



Fuchsias, notes 855 



Fuller s rose beetle, Mich 168 



Fungi, Alabama,, new species 518 



and phanerogams, relation between 



evolution of organs 920 



appearance of sex 23 



as affected by ethereal oils 929 



light 1013 



cell walls 417 



conception of species 418 



edible, analyses 376,378 



ash analyses 378 



digestibility 377,378 



effect onautumn coloration of foliage 105 i 



fruitfulness of host 1049 



starch distribution 923 



formation of diastase 417 



heteroecious, culture experiments. . L56 



immunizing host plants 1050 



injurious, Can 238 



in Russia 2fl'i 



nature and treatment,) !al . 2 !7 



new species 57, 725 



Can 272 



nitrogenous coloring material 23 



on wheat 561 



parasitic 1057 



as affected by weather .... 858 



of cultivated plants 266 



Russian forest trees 266 



trees - 260 



rust 455 



utilization of rubidium salts 417 



variation due to medium 613 



Fungicides — 



adherence 1056 



experiments, Can 870 



new copper 156 



preparation 373, 562, 1051 



Kans 370 



N T .J 448 



and use 169, 267, 366 



Cal 267 



Can 273 



Conn. State 60 



Ind 157 



Mass. Hatch 457 



Mich ]69, 470 



K. T. Cornell 455 



Utah 661 



Fungus attacks of variegated plants 59 



cultures for destroying locusts 1077 



disease of apples, treatment, Conn. 



State 261 



Arundo donctx 365 



grapevines 971 



