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CONTENTS. V 



rage. 



Rust attack of winter cereals, Hiltner 546 



Treatment of winter grain with corrosive sublimate, Hiltner 546 



Chinosol and formaldehyde as protection against Fusarium in cereals, Hiltner . . 546 



Limitation and management of grain for seeding, Hiltner 546 



Use of rusted grain for seed, Hiltner 546 



Dry spot of oats, Hiltner 546 



Hiltner 's experiments on the control of dry spot of oats, Schoevers 557 



Some observations on ordinary beet scab, Lutman and Johnson 547 



Beet'scab, Grimm 547 



Rearing beet nematodes on agar, Berliner and Busch 547 



Root scab and other celery diseases, Quanjer and Slagter 547 



Some new bacterial diseases of legumes, Manns 547 



The life history of Ascochyta on some leguminous plants, II, Stone 548 



The Rhizoctonia lesions on potato stems, Drayton 548 



Puccinia endivias and rust of prickly lettuce, Maffei 548 



Protascus colorans, the source of yellow grains in rice, van der Wolk 548 



Rust of fruit trees, Desmoulins 549 



Influence of atmospheric conditions on the appearance of downy mildew, Capus. 549 



Oidium of oak and grape, Ravaz 549 



Report of the plant pathologist, Fawcett 549 



Pythiacystis citrophthora and its probable relation to m.al di gomma, Fawcett 550 



The citrus root nematode ( Tylcnchulus scmipcnetrans) in Florida, Nelson 550 



Storm and drought injury to foliage of ornamental trees, Hartley and Merrill. . . 550 



New hosts for some forest tree fungi. Weir 550 



Notes on the chestniit bark disease, Rogers and Gravatt 551 



Chestnut blight in Nebraska, Pierce 551 



Notes on chestnut fruits infected with the chestnut blight fungus, Rumbold. . . 551 



Notes on Rhizoctonia, Hartley and Bruner 551 



Observations on Himeola auricula- judse , Le Goc 551 



Further observations on Himeola auricula- judae, Le Goc 552 



Some observations on abortive sporophores of wood-destroying fungi. Weir 552 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Zoological philosophy: Natural history of animals, Lamarck, trans, by Elliott. . 552 



Some Canadian rodents injurious to agriculture, Criddle 552 



How plague may be carried from place to place 552 



Rat proofing the public docks of New Orleans, Letton 552 



The economy of ground squirrel destruction, Long 552 



Cimex pipistrelli; nonpathogenicity of Trypanosoma vespertilionis, Pringhault. . 552 



The bird book, Reed 553 



Forty common birds of West Virginia, Brooks 553 



Some Pennsylvania birds and their economic value, Surface 553 



The practical value of birds, Henderson 553 



Some observations on the food of nesthng sparrows, Collinge 553 



Comparative physiology and morphology of the arachnids, I, Dahl 553 



Bibliography of Canadian entomology for the year 1913, Bethune 553 



Guide to California insects, Woodworth 553 



First biennial report of the Montana State Board of Entomology, Cooley 553 



Report of the entomologist. Van Zwaluwenburg 554 



Report of State entomologist and plant pathologist for 1914, Bentley 554 



Injurious insects and other animals in Ireland during 1913, Carpenter 554 



[Reports of the entomologist of Southern Rhodesia], Jack 554 



[Insect pests in Mauritius], d'Emmerez de Charmoy 554 



Insect notes 555 



Insect pests of field crops, Haseman 555 



Insect enemies of lucorn, Picard 555 



Injury by tipulids and tabanids in rice ifields, Del Guercio 555 



Protecting cabbage and cauliflower from attacks by worms. Tucker 555 



The cochylis, eudemis, and pyraUd moths and altisa beetle, Clario-Soulan 555 



[Insect pests of coconuts and cacao] 555 



Two years' study of insects in relation to pellagra, Jennings 555 



Spraying for apple sucker and leaf-curhng plum aphis, Petherbridge 555 



Effect of cj^anid of potassium on trees, Shattuck 556 



New fumigating machines, Gray 556 



