ROSACEAE 



297 



Morse, W. J., ami Lewis, C. E. Maine apple diseases. 



[Orono? 1910.1 

 Noel, Eugene. Les aibres a cidre et le oidre dn paj'S d'Otlie. 



Troves. ^ 1889. 

 Patch, E. M. Elm leaf curl and woolv apple aphid. [Orono. 



1912.1 



Plant lice of the apple in Maine. {In Maine — 



Ai/ricidlnral experiment station. Four insect pests, 19-? 

 pp. 11-22.) 



PfeU, Theodor. Chemische beitrage zur pomologie. Dorpat. 



1S,S0. 

 Power, Georges. Traitc de la culture du pomniier et de la 



fabrication du cidre. 2 torn. Paris. 1890-93. 

 Quaintance, A. L. The apple maggot or "railroad worm." 



[Washington. 1908.1 



The apple-tree tent caterpillar (Malacosoma ameri- 



oana Fab.). [Washington. 1908.1 



Fumigation of apples for the San Jose scale. \\'ash- 



ington. 1909. 



The trumpet leaf-miner of the api>le. Washington. 



1907. 



and Scott, W. M. The more important insect and 



fungous enemies of the fruit and foliage of the apple. Wash- 

 ington. 1912. 



The one-spray method in the control of the codling 



moth and the plum curculio. See Spraying. 

 Ragan, ^\'. H. Nomenclature of the apple. Washington. 



190,^. 



"Index to the American literature of the apple." pp. 375-383. 

 Regel, Eduard von. Kurze systematische uebersicht der 



russischen aepfelsorten, .soweit solche dem verfasser auf den 



ausstellungen 1860, 1861 und 1862 des Russischen gartenbau- 



vereins in St . Petersburg bekannt geworden sind. [Erlangen. 



1863.1 

 Roberts, .1. W. The "rough-bark" disease of the yellow 



Xcwtown apple. Washington. 1913. 

 Sageret, Augustin. Remarques sur la reprise des boutm-es, 



et notamment sur celles de poirier et ponunier. Paris. 1834. 

 Saunders, William (183.5-1914). Progre.ss in the breeding of 



hardy apples for the Canadian Northwest. [Ottawa. [ 1911. 

 Scott, W. M., and Rorer, .J. B. Apple blotch. W^ashington. 



1909. 

 Apple leaf-spot caused by Sphaeropsis malorum. 



Washington. 1908. 

 "Bibliography," p. [12J. 



Sheldon, A. G. Apple trees. {In his Life, 1862, pp. 342- 

 3.-)l.) 

 Slingerland, M. V. The codling-moth. Ithaca. 1898. 



" Bibliography," pp. 63-69. 



Truelle, A. L'enseignement de la pomiculture et de I'in- 

 ilustrie ci(.lrieres en France et a I'etranger. 

 Mem. Soc. cenlraie agric. France, 1903, citl. 2SI-464. 



Turpin, P. .1. F. Memoire sur la difference ([u'ofifrent les 

 tissus ccllulaires de la pomme et de la poire. [Paris. 1840.1 



United States — De.paTtmenl of agriculluTC — Bureau of 

 cntoinoloqij. Demonstration spraying for the codling moth. 

 Washington. 1908. 



Waite, M. B. Experiments on the apple with some new and 

 little-known fungicides. Washington. 1910. 



Waugh, F. A. Apple growing in Grand Isle County. [Bur- 

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Wilkinson, A. E. The apple. Boston, etc. [1915.1 



[Worlidge, John.l Vinetum britannicum; or, A treatise of 

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MESPILUS 



Koch, Karl. Die weissdoru- uiul mispel-arten (Crataegus 

 und Mespilus). Berlin. 1854. 



Koehne, Emil. Zwei pfropfbastarde von Crataegus mono- 

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NEVIUSIA 

 Gray, .\.s:i. Neviiisia. 



Mem. Ainer. acad. oris act., 1859, uew ser., vi, 373-376. 



POTENTILLA 



Babington, C. C. On the distinctions between the Linneean 

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Magazine of natural history, 1833, vi, 248-252. 



Bertoloni, Antonio. Piante [nuove] asiatiche. See Phvto- 



llHAI'in — l.NDIA. 



Koehne, Emil. Zwei neue geholzarten [Potentilla micrandra, 

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Lehmann, J. G. C. Monographia generis Potentillarum. 

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Revisio Potentillarum. Breslafl, etc. 1856. 



iVova arta Acad. cxs. teop.-carol. nal. cur., 185(5, xxiii, suppl. 



Nestler, C. G. Monographia de Potentilla pra-missis non- 

 nullis ob.servationibus circa famiUam Rosacearuni. Parisiis, 

 etc. 1816. 



Wolf, Theodor. Potentillen-studien. 2pt. Dre.sden. 1901- 

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PRUNUS 



Atkinson, G. F. Leaf curl and plum pockets. Contribu- 

 tion to the knowledge of the prunicolous exoascese of the 

 United States. Ithaca. 1894. 



Bailey, L. H. The cultivated native plums and cherries. 

 Ithaca. 1892. 



Cushman, R. A. Notes on the peach and plum slug. W'ash- 

 ington. 1911. 



Genet, E. C. Observations on the disease of the gum 

 trees, called the black gum. 



Trans. Soc.promot. useful arts, 1819, iv, 122-125. 



Hansen, N. E. Some new fruits [originated from the native 

 sand cherry and plum in the Department of horticulture. 

 Brookings. 19111. 



Lodeman, E. G. Black-knot of plums and cherries. Ithaca. 

 1894. 



Rabak, Frank. Peach, apricot, and prune kernels as by- 

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Rouchy, -, alibe. Sur ciuelques especes dites jorda- 



niques. 



Bull. Soc. eludes sclent. .Angers, 1S78, vi & vii, 148-150. 



Schneider, C. K. NonnuUae species varietatesquc novae 

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 [Berlin. 1906.] 



Small, .1. K. An apparently undescribed species of Prunus 

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Apricots & Almonds. 



Baileyr L. H. .\pricnt growing in western New York. 



Ithaca. 1894. 

 Bougarel, Charles. De I'amygdaline et d'un principe nou- 



veau trouvc? dans les feuilles d'un certain nombre de vegctaux. 



Paris. 1877. 

 Fairchild, D. G. Spanish almonds and their introduction 



into America. Washington. 1902. 

 Marre, E., and Toulouse, C. L'amandier. Paris. 1913. 

 Spach, Edouard. Monographia generis Amygdalus. [Paris. 



1843.) 



Cherries 



Bailey, L. H. The native dwarf cherries. Ithaca. 1894. 

 and Powell, G. H. Cherries. Ithaca. 1895. 



