1919] CONTENTS. Ill 



FIELD < BOPS. 



Page. 



Some fnHnrs of success and failure in dry fanning, Kezer 128 



Experiments in electrical stimulation of crops, Washington 128 



Treatment of growing crops with overhead electric discharges, Hendrick- 129 



The electrocultnre of crops, JSrgensen and Stiles 129 



[Report of work with field crops in Montana] 



[Work with field crops on Scottsbluff experiment farm in 1917], Holden_ 



fp'ieid crops wurk at Umatilla experiment farm. Oreg, in 1917], Allen 131 



[Report of field crops work on Yuma experiment farm in 1017 1. Blair 133 



Report on the department of agriculture, Barbados, 1916 17, Bovell 



Field experiments [In Ireland], 1917 134 



Cereal culture in New Castile, Spain, Qulntanllla 43-1 



The Influence of chemical fertilizers on the composition of grain 134 



Effect of sodium chlorid on the development of certain legumes, Hendry. 434 



Our colonial agriculture. — -XII, Fibers, van [terson, Jr 135 



Field beans. Stewart 435 



Our colonial agriculture.— I, Cassava, Blokzeijl 



Breeding new easier beans, White 435 



Relntion between yield and ear character in corn. Hutcheson and Wolfe 135 



A fifth pair of factors, Aa, for aleurone color in maize, Emerson 436 



Cotton variety tests, 1918, Rast >-7 



Varieties of cotton, 1909-1917, Ayres 437 



Varieties of cotton. Summary 1909 to 1917. Ayres 438 



Production of American Egyptian cotton, Scofield et al 138 



The cotton resources of the [French] colonies, Bourdarie 438 



Experiment with tlax growing at Guemmeiza. Dudgeon 138 



The inheritance of bull-lessness in oat hybrids. Love and McRostie 138 



Scientific potato culture. Young, sr 439 



Effect of inoculation and certain minerals on soy beans. Fellers 439 



Growing sugar beets in Michigan and Ohio, Washburn et al 440 



Sugar beet seed, Palmer 441 



Results of field experiments with susir cane in Java, VII-IX, Geerts 441 



[Java canes in Tucuman], Rosenfeld 4!1 



Fall and winter planting I of sugar cane] in the Argentine, Rosenfeld 441 



A cane drainage experiment, Kosenfeld 4 41 



Avoiding frost damage to cane stools. Rosenfeld 142 



Sweet tussock (Phalaris bulbosa), T'.otto 442 



Some studies in blossom color inheritance in tobacco, Allard 442 



Trials with Reunion tobacco in 1910-17. Auchinleck 442 



Our colonial agriculture. — VIII, Tobacco, ( ] e Yries 442 



Culture and possible utilization of Typha in France, G§ze 4 (3 



Spring wheat for Illinois, Burlison and Stark 44:'. 



Fourth report of Montana grain laboratory. Atkinson and Jahnke 443 



Commercial agricultural seeds, 1918, Woods 443 



Report of seed tests for 1918 143 



Disinfection of seeds with hromin, Artsixovsky and Stom 443 



HOBTICUXTTTBE. 



[Report of horticultural investigations], Whipple 444 



[Horticultural Investigations at the Umatilla experiment farm], Allen 444 



[Horticultural investigations on Yuma reclamation project], Blair 444 



The garden: How to make it pay. Thomas 444 



A new method of using explosives in tree planting, Fiedallu 444 



Progress report on rootstock experiment. Howard 444 



orchard spraying v. dusting Giddings 445 



Why prune bearing apricot trees heavily? Tufts It." 



Breeding a bard; pear. Patten 446 



Acclimatization, selection, and hybridization experiments in Alaska 446 



Hybridization experiments with strawberry in Alaska i 16 



A new method of grafting, Verdifi 446 



Chemical composition of pineapple. Gonoalves de Sousa 446 



The detection and elimination of frosted fruit, Chace 446 



Trees, their use and abuse. Berry 447 



Trees and shrubs on the farm. Whipple and Starring 447 



Seaside planting for shelter, ornament, and profit, Webster 447 



Bud variation in dahlias, Shamel 447 



