IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



Marketing Georgia peaches, Baxter 440 



The use of phylloxera-resistant stock, I, Blunno 440 



The past and present of American viticulture in Tuscany, Racah 440 



Papaw and papain, MacMillan 440 



Pecan growing in Georgia, Firor 440 



Citrus fruits, Coit 441 



A biometrical study of acidity of oranges, Mitra 441 



The pomerange, a natural hybrid between the orange and pomelo, Perkins 441 



Notice to citrus gi'owers 441 



Plant quarantine regulations 441 



California garden flowers, shrubs, trees, and vines, Wickson 441 



Hardy ornamental plants for unfavorable cit^/ conditions, Jensen 442 



Color grouping for small gardens, Armitage 442 



Methods and costs of planting a small park to grass and hedge, Ferriss 442 



A B C of gardening, Rexford 442 



FORESTRY. 



The relation of forestry to the development of the country, Campbell 442 



The subdivision of forests, Illick 442 



Report of the superintendent of forestry, Hosmer 442 



Report of the acting superintendent of forestry, Haughs 442 



Report of the forest nurseryman, Haughs 442 



Report of forest department of Madras Presidency for 1914, Lushington et al. . . 443 



Philippine dipterocarp forests. Brown and Mathews 443 



Forests of Japan, Eckbo. 443 



Utilization and management of lodgepole pine in the Rocky Mountains, Mason. 443 



The management of lodgepole pine, Mason 443 



Life history of shortleaf pine, Mattoon 443 



The uses of comus wood, Dallimore 443 



Ash manna, Marogna 443 



Memorandum on the oil value of some sandalwoods from Madras, Singh 444 



A fiuther note on the oil value of some sandalwoods from Madras, Singh 444 



Prevention of decay in mill timbers, Hoxie 444 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



Report of the phytopathological institute at Wageningen, 1912, Ritzema Bos. . . 444 



Report of the laboratory for plant diseases, Linsbauer et al 444 



[Plant diseases in Mauritius], Stockdale _. 444 



Transmission of rusts in general and Pucdnia malvacearum in particular, Buchet. 445 



Smuts and rusts of grain crops, Howitt and Stone _. 445 



Appearance of spores and mycelium of rust within grains of cereals, Eriksson. . . 445 



Efficiency of rust spores in grain for propagation of disease, Beauverie 445 



Foot rot of cereals, Desmoulins 445 



Rusts and smuts of Indian corn. 445 



A disease of red clover, Baccarini and Bargagli-Petrucci 445 



A bacterial disease of cultivated mushrooms, Tolaas 446 



A common but very serious potato disease in Cuba, Jehle 446 



Experiments in preventing wart disease of potatoes 446 



The virulence of Bacillus solanacearum against Nicotiana, Honing 446 



Two new species of fungi in tobacco seed beds, Saccardo and Peyronel 446 



A review of investigations of the mosaic disease of tobacco, AUard 447 



Fire blight, Brittain _ 447 



Fungus and other diseases of the apple and pear, Darnell-Smith a,nd Mackinnon . 447 



The toxic action of sulphurous anhydrid on olive blooms, Petri 447 



The fungus of peach mildew, Woronichine 447 



A disease of gooseberry new to Italy, Greppi 447 



Factors in the development of downy mildew, Moreau and Vinet 447 



Downy mildew and copper sprays, Heron 448 



Spraying in relation to flowering, Lebrun 448 



Death of mulberry, Montemartini 448 



Investigations in connection with cacao root disease, Brooks 448 



The mycoplasma theory of Eriksson, Haase-Bessell 448 



A new disease of chestnut, Cavara 448 



Bibliography of the chestnut bark disease, Beattie 448 



