IV CONTENTS. 



irORTICl'I/rURE. 



Page. 



Kfjiort of tlu' liorticnltiiript, ('. 1'. Close 578 



IJit'imial report of the State l)OHrd of horticulture 580 



Reiu.rt of the fruit expert, W. J. Allen 580 



Handbook of horticulture and viticulture of Western AuHtralia, A. Desjieisses . 580 



A laboratory manual in .systematic i)()niology, U. I*. Iledrick 580 



Ju<l<,nnji; fruit by scale of points, F. A. Waugh 581 



Fruit culture in ('osta Rico, C. Werckle 5S1 



Fertilization and hybridization, H. de Vries 581 



The (juestion of varieties, L. H. Bailey 581 



The culture and marketing of orchard and garden fruits, W. F. Massey 581 



Experiments in fertilizing orchards, C. Lierke 581 



Pruning, L. C. Corbett 581 



Some notes on canning fruits and vegetaVjles, W. B. Alwood 581 



The apple in cold storage, G. FI. Powell and S. H. Fulton 581 



( "old storage for fruit - 583 



Cherries and cherry growing in Iowa, H. C. Price and E. E. Little 584 



(Huinge in the composition of growing i:>eaches, C. L. Penny and C. P. Close.. 584 



The orange on Citrus trifoliata 585 



Production and consumption of oranges and lemons, R. M. Bartleman 585 



Hyl)rid mangoes 585 



Bush fruits, second report, H. L. Price 585 



Grapes and small fruits, W. F. Massey 585 



American vines; their adaptation, culture, etc., P. Viala and L. Ravaz 585 



On the budding of cacao, T. J. Harris 586 



The Leeming system 586 



The culture of the Central American rubber tree, O. F. Cook 586 



New caoutchouc from New Caledonia. R. Schlechter 586 



India-rubber and gutta-percha, T. Seeligmann et al., trans, by J. G. Mcintosh. 586 



New species of gutta-percha from New Guinea, R. Schlechter 586 



^Modern jirogress in horticulture, F. W. Burbidge 587 



The daffodil; its root progress from planting to flowering, AV. Bartholomew .. 587 



Flower culture for distilling in Southern France, A. Piatti 587 



Manufacture of perfumes in Grasse, R. Guenther 587 



The lighter branches of agriculture, Edith Bradley and Bertha La Mothe 587 



FORESTRY. 



Shade trees and other ornamentals, F. Garcia 587 



Ornamental and commercial tree planting 588 



Tree planting for timber and fuel, C. B. McNaughton 588 



Trees and tree planting in the upper districts of Natal, T. R. Sim 588 



Forest administration in Baluchistan for 1901-2, C. B. Sen 588 



Mountain pine and spruce in Jutland heath culture, P. E. Miiller 588 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



Studies in plant diseases, F. D. Chester 588 



Letters on the diseases of plants, N. A. Cobb 589 



A guide to fungus parasites, H. Vanderyst 589 



Injurious mildews on cultivated plants in German East Africa, P. Hennings.. 589 



Precautions against rust of cereals, H. Hitler 590 



A bacterial disease of rice, P. Voglino 590 



The specialization of Erysiphe graminis, E. Marchal 590 



Notes on the biology of Cystopus cnndidus, A. Eberhardt 590 



Some observations on crown gall of apple trees, W. B. Alwood 590 



Inoculation experiments with Neclria ditissima, R. Aderhold 591 



Fungus enemies of the peach, plum, cherry, etc., F. L. Stevens 591 



Clasterosporium rarpnjihiluii) and the gummosis of stone fruits, R. Aderhold. . . 591 



A new group of fungi, the Bornetinea', L. Mangin and P. Viala 591 



The brunissure of the grape, L. Ravaz and L. Sicard 591 



Black rot of the grape in North Carolina and its treatment, A. W. Edson 591 



The use of copper in combating gray rot of grapes, C. de James 592 



Powdery mildew and some grape hybrids, J. de Bouttes 592 



Change in coloration of copper and sulphur fungicides, J. M. ( iuillon. 592 



A pepper vine disease, C. A. Barber ...,., 592 



