IV CONTENTS. 



Page. 



The cashew (Anacardium ocddentak), Granato. 746 



Manurial experiments on coconuts, De Verteuil 746 



The inspection, certification, and transportation of nursery stock, Atwood 746 



FORESTRY. 



Economic botany of Alabama.— I, Geographical report on forests, Harper 746 



The fifth annual report of forest conditions in Ohio 746 



1888 to 1913, 25 years of state and private forestry in Prussia, Semper 746 



A review of the Saxony state forests for the year 1911, Vogel 746 



Methods of identification of Philippine woods, Schneider 747 



The trees of Great Britain and Ireland, Elwes and Henry 747 



Yield investigations in oak high forests, Wimmenauer 747 



Investigations on the value accretion of pine and spruce, Schwappach 747 



Plantation rubber in Hawaii, Anderson 747 



Effect of nitrate of soda and saltpeter on the flow of Ceara latex, Anstead 748 



Castilla rubber in Dominica, Jones and Jones 748 



DISEASES OP PLANTS. 



Report of the department of botany, Butler _ 748 



Work connected with insect and fungus pests and tiieir control, Watts 748 



[Plant diseases in Jamaica, 1913], Martinez 749 



Mycological work in Southern Nigeria, Farguh a rson 749 



The unattached aecial forms of plant rusts in North America, Johnson 749 



Uredinales on Carex in North America, Arthur 750 



Prevalence and prevention of stinking smut in Indiana, Orton 750 



Late blight of barley, Bakke 750 



Prevention of bunt in wheat. — Experiments with fungicides, Reynolds 750 



A new grass parasite, Massee _. — -_ 751 



Cotton anthracnose and how to control it, Gilbert 751 



A typical case of curly leaf of cotton in the greenhouse, Thiele 751 



Diseases of ginseng caused by Sclerotrnias, Osner 751 



Sugar cane diseases, Chavanne _ 751 



[Lime treatments of soil for Plasmodiophora brassieae], Gilchrist 752 



The New York apple tree canker. Hosier 752 



A new parasite on Polystigma rubrum, Bondartsev.^ 752 



A conidia-bearing species of Septobasidium, Patouillard 752 



The acid spotting of morning glories by city rain, Harshberger 752 



Diseases of the violet, Reddick 753 



The chestnut bark disease, Stoddard and Moss 753 



The discovery of the chestnut bark disease in China, Fairchild 753 



The chestnut blight parasite from China, Shear and Stevens 753 



Recent work on the chestnut blight, Rockey 753 



Report of Pennsylvania Chestnut Tree Blight Commission, 1912, Sargent et al. 753 



Pathological investigations, Heald and Anderson 753 



Report of the physiologist, Rumbold 754 



Birds as carriers of chestnut blight fungus, Heald and Studhalter 754 



Some problems in the treatment of diseased chestnut trees. Pierce 755 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Life zones and crop zones of New Mexico, Bailey 755 



The natural history of the nine-banded armadillo of Texas, Newman 755 



The rats of Providence and their parasites, Robinson 755 



Observations on the bionomics of fleas and rats in Java, Swellengrebel 756 



Leprosy-like disease in rats, Tidswell and Cleland 756 



Examination of contents of stomachs and crops of Australian birds, Cleland. . . 756 



Annual report of the division of entomology for 1911, Lounsbury 756 



Note« on insect pests in Antigua, Ballou 756 



Tho\T„se'^'t T)ests of cotton in Burma, Shroff 756 



^me nuV" ^ cai^ ^^ British Guiana, Moore 756 



l/r „„,'S*^^ ^gtobacco in Southern Rhodesia, Jack 756 



%net^?^^ inse'^ies of the pear, Picard ._ _. 756 



["he il^^ re^sP ^^ insects to disease in man in Australia, Cleland 756 



• ^\ie jsible etiologic factor in pellagra, Jennings and King 756 



