950 



AGRICULTURAL INDEX 



Trees — Continued 



New Chinese trees and shrubs for the Pacific 

 slope and other favored regions. E. H. Wil- 

 son, il Gard M 22:197-200 Ja '16 



Notes on Noith American trees. C. S. Sar- 

 gent. Bot Gaz 65:423-59; 66:229-58 My, S '18 



Oldest trees in the world, il Literary Digest 

 (354 4th av., N. Y. 10c) 54:243-4 F 3 *17 



Ornamental and shade trees, il Am For 22: 

 360-1 Je '16 



Ornamental shade trees and their care. H. D. 

 House, il Am For 23:414-18 Jl '17 



Penetration of foreign substances introduced 

 into trees. W. H. Rankin. Phyt 7:5-13 F '17 



Quaint bit of sentiment. G. T. K. Norton, il 

 Am For 23:668 N '17 



Renewing the shelterbelt; with combinations 

 of species for planting. G. B. Macdonald. 

 la Ag Exp C 27:1-16 '16 



Reproduction in trees. Gard Chron Am 20: 

 152-3 Mr '16 



Selecting trees for shelter, shade and show. 

 H: R. Francis, il Am For 24:41-5 Ja '18 



Shade trees; characteristics, adaptation, dis- 

 eases and care. G: B. Stone, il Mass Ag Exp 

 B 170:123-264 '16; Same. R I Ag Bd 143p 

 n.d. 



Shade trees for home planting. W. N. Hutt. 

 Prog F 33:1173 O 26 '18 



Shade trees that bear nuts. J. R. Smith, il 

 Country Gent 81:44 Ja 8 '16 



Some historically interesting trees, il Am 

 For 23:352 Je '17 



Some interesting trees of singular growth, 

 il Am For 23:430 Jl '17 



Street and highway planting. B: T. Morrison. 

 (B. 4) 140p il n.d. California State bd. of 

 forestry, Saci-amento 



Trees and shrubs in modern gardening. Am 

 Flor 47:390 S 9 '16 



Trees and soil sterility. Gard Chron (LondJ 

 63:56 F 9 '18 



Trees in medicine. J: Foote. il Am For 22:648- 

 53 N '16; Same. Scientific Am Sup (233 

 Broadway, N. Y. 10c) 83:26-7 Ja 13 '17 



Trees in winter, il J Ag (Quebec) 21:135 Mr 

 'IS 



Trees in winter. B. Adams. Am For 23:32-3 Ja 

 •17 



Trees, shrubs and plants for farm and home 

 planting. C. P. Halligan. il Mich Ag Exp B 

 281:1-52 '18 



Trees — ^what, where, when and how to plant. 

 C. H. Shattuck and I. W. Cook, il map 

 Idaho Ag Exp B 105:1-66 '18 



Two kings among trees. W. Miller, il Coun- 

 try Life 30:64 My- '16 



Tyloses: their occurrence and practical sig- 

 nificance in some American w^oods. E. 

 Gerry, bibliog il J Ag Research 1:445-70 Mr 

 '14 



Use of trees. F. Steele, il Country Life 32: 

 19-28 As '17 



What to plant and how to care for hardy 

 plants, shrubs and trees. C: A. Green, il 

 Green's Fruit Grower 37:1 Ja '17 



Wonders of a tree. J. S. Underwood. Green's 

 Fruit Grower 36:30 Ja '16 



See lalso Bark as food; Forest ecology; 

 Forest planting; Forest products; Forests 

 and forestry; Fruit: Fruit culture; Fruit 

 trees; Grafting; Greenheart; Hedges; Land- 

 scape gardening; Lumber; Lumbering; 

 Nurseries (horticulture); Nuts; Pruning; 

 Shrubs; Timber; Tree planting; Wind- 

 breaks; Wood; also Arnold arboretum; also 

 names of trees, e.g. Acacias, Alder, Al- 

 mond, Ash, Aspen, Avocado trees. Birch, 

 Boxwood, Carob, Catalpa, Cedar, Cherry 

 trees, Chinese wood-oil trees, Christmas 

 trees, Cinchona, Cinnamon trees, Citrvis 

 trifoliata, Conifers. Cypress, Cyrtandra, 

 Deodar, Dogwood, Douglas fir. Elm, Ever- 

 greens, Fir, Ginkgo, Gum arabic trees. 

 Hazel-nut, Hemlock, Hickory, Horse chest- 

 nut, Huisache, Juniper, Kokio, Larch, Lig- 

 num nephriticum. Lignum vitae, Ligvistrum 

 lucidum. Linden, Locust trees, Magnolia, 

 Mahogany, Manzanillo, Maple, Nettle trees, 

 Nolina loderi. Oak, Ohio lehua. Oleasters, 

 Palm, Palmetto, Para rubber trees, Pecan, 

 Pine, Pifion, Plane trees. Plum trees. Pop- 



lar, Princess trees. Redwood, Saman, San- 

 dalwood, Sequoia, Silver bell trees. Soap- 

 berry trees. Spruce, Strychnos, Sugar palm. 

 Sycamore, Tamarisk, Teak, Tulip poplar, 

 Viburnums, Walnut, Willow, Yew 



Bibliography 

 Shade trees and gardening. lOp '17 Detroit 

 public library, Detroit, Mich. 



Diseases and pests 



Basic problems in forest pathology. E. P. 



Meinecke. J For 15:215-24 F '17 

 Biology of the alder flea-beetle. W: C. Woods. 



bibliog il Maine Ag Exp B 265:249-84 '17; 



Same. Maine Ag Exp Rep 1917:249-84 

 Black zones formed by wood-destroying fungi. 



A. S. Rhoads (Syracuse Univ. Pub. 17.no. 



28:61 '17). Exp Sta Record 38, no 6:555 '18 

 Commercial fruit growing. Country Gent 82: 



1326 Ag 25 '17 

 Damage to fruit trees from mice. G: T. 



Powell. Rural N Y 76:514 Ap 7 '17 

 Disease control and forest management. F. H. 



Millen. J 'For 15:974-7 D '17 

 Diseases of forest and shade trees. D. C. Bab- 

 cock, il Ohio Ag Exp B v 1:291-6, 333-90 O- 



N '16 

 Do ants kill trees about their colonies? R. C. 



Hawley and S. J. Record, il Am For 22: 



685-6 N '16 

 Endothia parasitica and related species. C. L.. 



Shear and others, bibliog il maps U S Ag B 



.•580:1-82 '17 

 Flat-headed borers affecting forest trees in 



the United States. H. E. Burke. U S Ag B 



437:1-8 '17 (10c Supt. of doc.) 

 Forest biology. P. S. Lovejoy. J For 15:203-14 



F '17 

 Forest disease surveys. J. R. Weir and E. 



E. Hubert, il map U S Ag B 658:1-23 '18 

 Forest insect investigation in Stanley park, 



Vancouver, British Columbia. R. N. Chyrs- 



tal. il Ag Gaz of Canada 3:794-8 S '16 

 Forest'-insect problem in Stanley park. R. N. 



Chrystal. (.In Pro., Entom. Soc. of British 



Columbia, 1916, p. 63-6) il '16 

 Forest longicorn beetles and their parasites. 



W. W. Froggatt. il Ag Gaz of New South 



Wales 27:561-7 Ag '16 

 Forest pathology in forest regulation. E. P. 



Meinecke. U S Ag B 275:1-62 '16 

 Fungus diseases of trees. R. B. Maxwell, il 



Am For 22:161-3 Mr '16 

 Identity of peridermium fusiforme with peri- 



dermium cerebrum. G: G. Hedgcock and W. 



H. Long, il J Ag Research 2:247-50 Je '14 

 Insect enemies of trees and how to combat 



them. E. P. Felt. Country Life 29:70-|- Mr '16 

 Investigations of the rotting of slash in Ar- 

 kansas. W. H. Long. U S Ag B 496:1-14 



'17 

 Lightning injury to citrus trees in Florida. 



H. E. Stevens, il Phyt 8:283-5 Je '18 

 Manual of dangerous insects likely to be in- 

 troduced in the United States through im- 

 portations. W. D. Pierce. 256p il '18 U S Ag 

 Montana forest tree fungi — polyporaceae. 



J. R. Weir, il Mycol 9:129-37 My '17 

 Notes on forest tree rvists. J. R. Weir and 



E. E. Hubert. Phyt 8:114-18 Mr 'IS 

 Notes on the altitudinal range of forest 



fungi. J. R. Weir. Mycol 10:4-14 Ja '18 

 Notes on the overwintering of forest tree 



rusts. J. R. Weir and E. E. Hubert. Phyt 



8:55-9 F '18 

 Notes on wood-destroying fungi which grow 



on both coniferous and deciduous trees. J. 



R. Weir. Phyt 7:379-80 O '17 

 Observations on forest tree rusts. J. R. Weir 



and E. E. Hubert, il Am J Bot 4:327-35 Je 



'17 

 Observations on rhizina inflata. J. R. Weir. 



bibliog il J Ag Research 4:93-6 Ap '15 

 On the mycorrhizas of forest trees. W. B. Mc- 



Dougall. bibliog il Am J Bot 1:51-74 F '14 

 Orchard winter injuries. J. E. Richardson, jr. 



il Fruit-Grower 27:277 My 1 '16 

 Overpruning and its relation to sunscald. 



C. O. Ormsbee. Fruit-Grower 28:279 Je 1 '17 

 Oyster-shell scale and the scurfy scale. A. L. 



Quaintance and B. R. Sasscer. bibliog il 



Farmers' B 723:1-16 '16 



