JY UU1VJ.J1. IN LO. 



HORTICULTURE. 



Page. 



The farmer's vegetal >le garden, J. I>. Lloyd 969 



Vegetable growing 970 



Quality of vegetables and fruits for home garden, L. and Erne M. Barron and 



v <. W. Fletcher , 970 



Planting tables for flowers and vegetables 970 



Classified planting list for annuals and vegetables, P. T. Barnes 970 



Fifty dollars per acre from cucumbers, W. C. Collins 970 



Breeding sweet corn— cooperative tests, B. D. Halsted 970 



Results of experiments with mushrooms, F. Canning 971 



Canning fruit and vegetables. Preserving fruit juices, E. F. Pernot 971 



Small canneries in Virginia, R. H. Price 972 



Report of fruit experiment stations of Ontario, 1905, L. Woolverton et al 972 



Fruits recommended for planting in Ontario 972 



Fruit cultivation in Ceylon, II. F. Macmillan 972 



Experiments in orchard culture, W. M. Munson 972 



Suggestions upon the care of apple orchards, E. Walker 973 



The Spencer seedless apple 974 



Experience with plums, H. T. Thompson 975 



Orange culture - - - 975 



Orange hybrids 975 



Studies on the banana, L. B. Mendel and E. M. Bailey 975 



The Indian jujube 975 



The experiment in cocoa curing on the Gold Coast 975 



Report of horticultural and viticultural expert, A. Despeissis 975 



Influence of graft on quality of grapes and wine, Curtel and A. Jurie 976 



The Lincepina grape, M. B. "White 976 



The production of oil of wintergreen, H. D. Foster , 976 



Pruning, training, and trimming trees and shrubs, D. G. Mclver 976 



The book of the winter garden, D. S. Fish 976 



The lawn, L. C. Corbett 976 



Study of bibliography and horticultural literature of the past, G. Gibault 976 



FORESTRY. 



The tree book, Julia E. Rogers 977 



The forest service, G. Pinchot 977 



Working plan for forest lands in central Alabama, F. W. Reed 977 



Forestry in Nova Scotia, K. W. Woodward T 978 



Forestry and forest products of Japan 978 



Weight and shrinkage of Japanese woods, K. Moroto 978 



Beginning of lumbering as an industry in the new world, J. 1". Hobbs 978 



The rise in lumber prices, R. S. Kellogg 978 



The use of wood pulp for paper making, S. C. Philipps 978 



A new saving in the turpentine industry 979 



Laws relative to the taxation of forest lands 979 



Efficient fire protection, A. B. Recknagel 979 



Results of a Rocky Mountain forest tire, W. J. Gardner 979 



Influence of forests on the ground-water tal >le, A. Biihler 979 



Rubber, gutta-percha, and balata, F. Clouth 980 



Rubber tapping on Kepitigalla Estate, I. Etherington 980 



A new tapping method for Kickoda elastica, Strunk 980 



Experimental tapping of Para rubber trees, H. N. Ridley and R. Derry 980 



Note on the germination of teak and other seed, R. S. Pearson 981 



The teak-timber trade of Burma, T. A. Hauxwell 981 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 



The physiology of diseased plants, L. Montemartini 981 



Plant diseases of Belgium, H. Vanderyst 981 



Annual report of investigations on plant diseases, M. Hollrung et al 982 



Bearing of Mendelism on the susceptibility of wheat to rust, E. J. Butler 982 



Experiments with wheat and oats for smut, L. F. Henderson 982 



The Hag smut of wheat, D. McAlpine 982 



Potato scab, L. F. Henderson - 982 



Potato leaf curl, M. C. Cooke 983 



Cytolytic enzyrn produced by Bacillus carotovorus, L. R. Jones 1 



