IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



Citrus fruit culture, J. W. Mills 952 



Mangoes in India, W. T. Fee 953 



Report of the horticultural department, C. A. Keffer 953 



Third report on experiment in pinching raspberry shoots, F. Cranetield 953 



An ever-bearing strawVjerry, E. F. Ichon 953 



The book of the grape, H. " W. Ward 954 



The tendrils of grapes, E. Durand 954 



Manures and the quality of wines, L. Degrully 955 



Pruning trees and shrubs, T. Wirth 955 



Storing fruit 955 



A new method of preserving fruit 955 



The preservation of fruits and vegetables, etc. , X. Noble 955 



Fruit gardening, T. Bridiieman 956 



A review of the fruit-growing industry in Cape Colony, C. Mayer 956 



Development and needs f>f export fruit trade in North America, C. Foster 956 



The freezing point of vegetable saps and juices, W. F. Sutherst 956 



Report of chemical division of experiment station at Proskau, R. Otto 956 



Caoutchouc plants and their culture, O. Warburg, trans, by J. Vilbouchevitch . 957 



Vanilla, its culture, etc. , E. D. Dunin 957 



Experiments in suVjirrigation of flower beds, F. Cranetield 957 



A southern New ^Mexico flower garden, F. E. Lester 958 



The liook of bulbs, 8. Arnott 958 



Old-time gardens newly set forth, Alice M. P'arle 958 



Prize gardening, G. B. Fiske 958 



Horticulture in Japan, T. Eckhardt 958 



Catalogue of Hbrary of National Horticultural Society of France, G. Gibault. . 958 



FORESTRY. 



The immediate future in forest work, G. Pinchot 958 



Suggestions to prospective forest students, G. Pinchot 958 



Forest planting antl timl)er supply, F. E. H. W. Krichauff 959 



Progress in tree planting, W. L. Hall 959 



Investments in Southern forests, C. A. Schenck 959 



The boundary line between the desert and the forest, S. J. Holsinger 959 



Notes on some forest trees of Ohio, AV. R. Lazenby 959 



Forestrv in the PhiHppines 959 



English coppices and copse woods, J. Nisbet 959 



Forestry in Sweden 959 



Forest tree planting on the estate of Nikolsko-Sergievskoye, N. Sukhodski 960 



The spruce forests of Canada 960 



Hybrid conifers, M. T. Masters 960 



Notes on supposed hybridization among eucalypts, H. Deane and J. H. Maiden. 960 



DLSEASES OF PL.\NTS. 



Report of botanical section of experiment station at Proskau, R. Aderhold 960 



Report of the government mycologist, J. B. Carruthers 961 



Report of vegetable pathological experiment station for 1900-1901, G. Liistner. 962 



Report of station for plant protection at Weihenstephan, J. E. Weiss 962 



On some undescribed or imperfectly known fungi, C. A. J. A. Oudemans 962 



Oat smut in Wisconsin, R. A. Moore 962 



Treatment of seed oats to prevent smut, R. A. Moore 962 



Investigations on the cereal fungus Ehynchosporium graminicola, E. Heinsen.. 963 



A California beet disease, Linhart '. 963 



A bacterial disease of beans, G. Delacroix 963 



Orange and lemon rot, C. W. Woodworth 963 



Notes on diseases of the orange, J. W. Mills 964 



The fungus diseases of cacao in the West Indies, A. Howard 964 



Fungus diseases of cacao, D. Morris 965 



Leaf curl of mulberry trees, M. ^liyoshi 965 



Notes on Nematospora coryli, V. Peglion 965 



A bacterial disease of strawberries, P. Voglino 966 



Investigations on sulphur used in combating grape mildew, K. Windisch 966 



A disease of carnations at Antibes, G. Delacroix 966 



