IV CONTENTS. 



FORESTRY. 



Page. 



Forest planting and farm management, G. L. Clothier 147 



Horticulture and forestry, J. G. Hanev and 0. H. Elling 147 



Forest belts, W. T. Macoun 147 



Forestry in Indiana, S. .1. Record 148 



The Gila River Forest Reserve 148 



Forest administration in the Province of Assam, E. S. Garr 148 



Report of the forest department of the Madras Presidency 148 



Forest administration in the Andamans for 1903-4, B. B. Osmaston 149 



Determination of timber values, E. A. Braniff 149 



The red gum, A. K. Chittenden 150 



The mechanical properties of red gum wood, W. K. Hatt.. 151 



A new species of juniper for Texas, G. B. Sudworth 151 



Attitude of lumbermen toward forest fires, E. A. Sterling - 151 



Practical results of cup and gutter system of turpentining, C. H. Herty . . ----- 152 



Ex ] >erimental tapping of para rubber trees, R. Derry ~ 152 



Federal and State forest laws, G. W. Woodruff 153 



Forest legislation in the Northwest 153 



Arboretum and botanic garden, W. T. Macoun 153 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



Notes on fungus diseases for 1904, G. P. Clinton 153 



Insects and fungus diseases, W. Loch head 154 



Report of the department of bacteriology, F. C. Harrison 154 



Annual report of botanist, C. A. Barber 154 



Sclerotium diseases of plants 154 



Rusts of grain crops, J. Fletcher 155 



New studies of vegetative life of yellow grain rusts, J. Eriksson 155 



Dehne's disinfection machine, S. Rhodin 155 



Burrill's bacterial disease of broom corn, E. F. Smith and Florence Hedges. .*. 155 



Spraying potatoes for prevention of blight and rot, W. T. Macoun 155 



Downy mildew, or blight, of potatoes, G. P. Clinton 156 



' ' Wet rot" of potatoes, C. T. Musson and G. Marks 156 



Downy mildew, or blight, of muskmelons and cucumbers, G. P. Clinton 156 



Notes on Pseudomonas campeslris, H. A. Harding and M. J. Prucha 157 



Peach leaf-curl 157 



Bacterial infection in black spot of the plum, E. F. Smith 157 



The cedar and pear rust, P. Passy 157 



Diseases of the grape in Ontario in 1904, W. T. Macoun 157 



A fungicide for use in combating grape gummosis, de Sokolnicki 157 



A coffee leaf fungus, H. N. Ridley 157 



Pecan scab, W. A . Orton 158 



Pests of ornamental shrubbery, M. C. Cooke 158 



Bud rot of the cocoanut palm in the West Indies, E. F. Smith 158 



Some diseases of loblolly pine timber, H. von Schrenk 158 



ECONOMIC ZOOLOGY — ENTOMOLOGY. 



Ground squirrels and other rodent pests in Nevada, P. Frandsen 158 



Prairie dogs, J. G. Haney and O. H. Elling 159 



Relation of coyotes to stock raising in the West, D. E. Lantz 159 



Relation of birds to fruit growing in California, F. E. L. Beal 159 



Some benefits the farmer may derive from game protection, T. S. Palmer 159 



Monthly bulletin of the division of zoology, H. A. Surface 159 



Annual loss occasioned by destructive insects in U. S., C. L. Marlatt 159 



Insect pests of house and garden, M. Y. Slingerland 159 



Collecting and preserving insects, F. Sherman, jr 160 



Entomology in schools, H. S. Saunders 160 



The colors of insects, A. V. Battlev „ 160 



How do insects pass the winter? J~ Fletcher. . .' 160 



Report of the entomologist, J. Fletcher 160 



Common injurious and beneficial insects of Maryland, T. B. Symons 160 



Miscellaneous cotton insects in Texas, E. D. Sanderson 160 



The cotton bollworm, A. L. Quaintance and C. T. Brues 160 



