rV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



Pruning, Morris 835 



Effect ol" various dressings on pruning wounds of fruit trees, Howe 835 



Pruning wounds need no protection, Hall 835 



Soils of Massacluisctts and Connecticut for apples and peaches. Wilder 835 



Eliminating unproCitablc trees from the apple orchard, Fletcher 836 



Further experiments in dusting and spraying apples, Reddick and Crosby. . . . 836 



Dusting tlie apple orchard, Reddick 837 



Inifluencc of the axillary shoot on the peach, Manaresi and Draghetti 837 



Native American species of Prunus, Wight 837 



Pruning stone fruits, Whipple 837 



Ampelographical studies, Marques de Carvalho 838 



Olive culture and production of olive oil in Austria, Slaus-Kantschieder 838 



The loquat, Condit 838 



Mamirial experiments on cacao, 1913-14, De Verteuil 838 



The composition of the coffee V)erry and its relation to manuring, Anstead 838 



Thenewgenus,Fortunella, comprising four species of kumquat oranges. Swingle. 838 



Windbreaks, hedges, and ornamentals for eastern Oregon, Allen 839 



Flower gardens. — A selected list of books 839 



The care of house plants 839 



Geraniums 839 



FORESTRY. 



[Report of] forestry investigations, Cheyney 839 



Forest conditionsof Mississippi 840 



Possibilities of municipal forestry in New York, Brown ' 840 



The height growth of trees, Bernbeck 840 



Growth studies in forest trees. — II, Pinus strobus, Brown 840 



Forest fires; their prevention and control, Lundberg 840 



Forest valuation, Chapman 840 



Forest products of Canada, 1913. — Lumber, lath, and shingles, Lewis et al 841 



Tests of wood preservatives, Wei.ss and Teesdale 841 



DISEASES OP PLANTS. 



Annual report of botanical experiment station at Proskau for 1913, Ewert 841 



Observations on diseases in nursery and orchard, Schindler 842 



Recent studies at the Agricultural Botanical Institute at Munich, Hiltncr 842 



Second contribution to the mycological flora of Tunis, Maire 842 



New species of CoUetotrichum and Phoma, O'Gara 842 



The control of root knot, Bessey and Byars 842 



The conidial form of Ophiobolus herpotrichus, Voges 843 



Control of stem rust of rye, Miiller and Molz 843 



Leaf spot of beans, Appel 843 



Eggplant rots. Wolf 843 



Further studies on the spread and control of hop mildew, Blodgett 843 



Stem rot of sweet potato. Barter and Field 844 



Black rot, shed burn, and stem rot of tobacco, Johnson 844 



The yellow blight of the tomato, George 844 



Fire blight, Cardiff 844 



Life history of a new species of Sphserella, Higgins 844 



Roncet of grape, Bernatsky 844 



[Two fungus parasites of conifers in Scotland], Somerville 844 



Withortip of iir in Sweden, Lagerberg 844 



The mode of infection of larch canker and means of preventing it, Hiley 844 



A disease of pine shoots 845 



A leaf cast of pines in Sweden, Lagerberg 845 



A disease of oaks in Westphalia, Hey 845 



A timber rot accompanying Hymenochxte rubiginosa, Brown 845 



Studies in dry rot, V, Wehmer 845 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Handbook of medical entomologj'-, Riley and Johannsen 846 



Entomology, or the study of insects, and its importance. Tucker 846 



Habits and instincts of insects, Renter 846 



Cyanid of potassium in trees 846 



