IV CONTENTS. [Vol. 37 



HORTICTTLTUHE. 



Page. 



Proceedings of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 1916 239 



[Report of the] division of horticulture 240 



[ Report of horticultural investigations at the Crookston substation] 241 



[Horticultural work at the Crookston substation] 241 



Report of the work of the horticultural substation, Whipple 241 



A fruit survey of Mesa County, Sandstcn, Limbocker, and McGinty 241 



Fruits, trees, and shrubs recommended for northern Minnesota, McCall 241 



Dependable fruits, Green et al 241 



Annual report of the Fruit Experiment Station, Shillong, 191G, Holder 242 



Pruning, Clement and Reeves 242 



Apple breeding at the university experiment station, Crandall 242 



Field experiments in 8pra>'ing apple orchards in 1916, Gimderson and Brock . . 242 



Dominion experimental orchard work, Blair 242 



The culture of small fruits on irrigated sandy land, Allen 243 



Fruiting habita of budded trees of the different avocado varieties, Barber 243 



Cultural experiments with the filbert in the East, McGlennon 243 



Analyses of insecticides and fungicides for 1916, Cathcart and Willis 243 



FORESTRY. 



The training of a forester, Pinchot 243 



The theory and practice of working plans, Recknagcl 243 



Determining the (juality of standing timber, Berry 243 



Forest tree planting camps, Illick 243 



Eleventh report of the forest commissioner of Maine, 1916, Mace 243 



The conservation law as amended to 1916 244 



Report of the forestry branch 244 



Fifty years of forest administration in Bashahr, Glover 244 



Notes on the forests of Algeria, Marc 244 



A discussion of Australian forestry, Hutchins 214 



Correlation between the light and soil re<)uirement8 of a species, Coventrj'. . . 244 



The Ijiology of lodgcpole pine as revealed by the behavior of its seed, Bates. . 244 



The Mexican and Central American eoecies of Ficiis, 8landley 244 



Forest and shade trees and basket willows for planting in Idaho, Shattuck. . . 244 



Status and value of farm wofjdlots in the eastern United States, Frothingham . . 245 



Canadian woods for structural timbers, Lee 245 



Forest products of Canada, 1913, 1914, and 191o, Ivcwis et al 245 



Recent industrial and economic development of Indian forest products. 



Pearson 245 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



The susceptibility of cultivated plants to diseases and pests, Keuchenius 245 



Studies in the physiology of parasitism. Brown 245 



A study of (ibrosporium, Kriiger 245 



Further evidence as to tlie relation between crown gall and canter. Smith . . . 245 



Report of the pathologist, Stevenson 246 



1 Reports on plant disea.'ies in Switzerland, 1913-14 1, Miiller-Tliurgau et al . . . . 246 



•'ungus parasites in Kharkov and adjacent provinces, Potebnfa . 246 



Diseases and pests of cultivated plants in Dutch East Indies, 191"). van Flail . . 246 



Control measures ag-ainst plant diseases and injurious insects, van Hall et al . . 247 



Tests of new fungicides, Riclun 217 



Tests of fungicides with cereal diseases, Riehm 247 



Overwintering of stinking smut in soil, Appel and Riehm 2 17 



Diseases and pests of rice, Rutgers 247 



Treatment of loose smut of wheat and barley. Apjtel and Riehm 247 



A wheat disease caused by Dilophosjyora gramints, Afaugin 247 



[\Mieat rust in New Zealand], Waters 247 



Stalk disease of wheat. Foex 248 



Diseases of beans, Sackett 248 



Control of clubroot of crucifers, Appel and Schliunberger 218 



Phoma disease in crucifers, Laubert 248 



Conjncspora melmiis, Kriiger 248 



Flax blight, Aniaud 248 



The dying out of pepper vines in the Dutch Ea^t Indies, II, Rutgers 218 



Potato diseases in the Dutch East Indies, Westerdijk 249 



