1752 



ENCYCLOPEDIA OK PRACTICAL HORTICULTURE 



VII.— PEACHES AJiD CHKBKIES 

 A. Peaches 



General Importance and Classes of 

 Peaches. Smith. Offioe Experiment Sta- 

 tion Report, 1906, Reprint 1029, pp. 399- 

 403 (including foot note references). 



Propagation, Stocks; Orchard Loca- 

 tion; Soils and Planting. Officer Experi- 

 ment Station Report, lltUG, reprint 1029, 

 pp. 415-419 (and foot note references). 



The First Two Seasons With a Peach 

 Orchard. Blake. New Jersey Bulletin 

 219: 5-27. 1909; Bulletin 231: 3-41. 1910. 



Peach Growing in Alabama. Williams 

 & Price. Alabama Bulletin 156, pp. 111- 

 142. 1911. 



Peach Experiments. 1906-10. Garcia & 

 Mundell. New Mexico Bulletin 76, pp. 

 4-42, 1911. 



Growth Period, Bud Formation, Bloom- 

 ing Habits, Self-Fertility and Winter In- 

 jury. Smith. Office Experiment Station 

 Report, 1906, Reprint 1029, pp. 403-413 

 (including principal foot note refer- 

 ences) . 



Cultivation and Fertilization of Peach 

 Orchards. Waite. U. S. Year-book, 1902, 

 pp. 607-626. 



Cultivation, Fertilization, Thinning 

 and Pruning. Smith. Office Experiment 

 Station Report, 1906, Reprint 1029, pp. 

 419-420 (and chief foot note references). 



Cultivation vs. Mulching. American 

 Garden, No. 325, 1901, p. 168; No. 443, 

 1903, pp. 384-86; No. 505, 1904, p. 662. 



Harvesting, Shipping, Storing, Canning, 

 Profits, etc. Smith. Office Experiment 

 Station Report, 1906, reprint 1029, pp. 

 426-34 (and leading foot note references). 



Studies on Peaches. (Analyses; and 

 changes in composition during growth, 

 ripening and storage. Technical.) Bige- 

 low & Gore. U. S. Bureau of Chemistry 

 Bulletin 97: 5-32. 1905. 



Insect Enemies on tlie Peacli 



Peach Tree Borer, Slingerland. Cornell 

 Bulletin 176: 157-232. 1899; Bulletin 192: 

 191-196, 1901. 



Peach Tree Borer. Starnes. Georgia 

 Bulletin 73: 149-189. 1906. 



Control of Borers by Immune Stocks. 



Blake. New Jersey Report, 1907, pp. 

 129-130. 



The Principal Insect Enemies of the 

 Peach. Quaintance. U. S. Year-book, 1905, 

 pp. 325-348. 



Peach Diseases and Their Control 



The Control of Peach Brown Rot and 

 Scab. Scott & Ayres. Also see Ref. IX 

 35, U. S. Bureau of Plant Industry Bulle- 

 tin 174: 7-26. 1910. 



Peach Yellows and Little Peach. Blake. 

 New Jersey Bulletin 226: 3-26. 1910. 



Peach Yellows. Clinton. Connecticut 

 Report, 1908, pp. 872-78. 



Peach Leaf Curl. Dnggar. Cornell 

 Bulletin 164: 371-388. 1899. 



Contribution to the Study of Bordeaux 

 Injury on Peaches. Groth. New Jersey 

 Bulletin 232: 3-20. 1910. 



B. Cherries 



The Cherry in North America. Macoun, 

 Little & Farrand. American Pomological 

 Society Special Report, 1904-5, pp. 14-29. 



The Cherry in Delaware. Powell. Del- 

 aware Bulletin 35: 1-23, 1897; also Del- 

 aware Report, 1900, pp. 99-129. 



Cherries in Iowa. Price & Little. Iowa 

 Bulletin 73: 48-60. 1903. 



Cherry. Powell & Wickson. In Bail- 

 ley's American Cyclopedia of Horticul- 

 ture, pp. 291-4. 1900. 



Stocks for Cherries. Iowa Bulletins 10, 

 22, 28; Canada Experimental Farms Re- 

 port, 1893, p. 117; Bailey's Nursery 

 Book, p. 206. 1896. 



Culture and Grafting. Rural New 

 Yorker, 1910; 489 and 494. 



(Cherries in Washington. Thornber. 

 Washington Bulletin 92: 3-32. 1910. 



VIII. PLUMS, PEAES AND QUINCES 

 A. Plums 



Propagation. Waugh's Plums and Plum 

 Culture, pp. 235-250. 1901. (Orange Judd 

 Co.) 



Selection of Varieties. Waugh's Plums 

 and Plum Culture, pp. 251-264; 308-316. 



Notes Upon Plums (chiefly domestical. 

 Willard and Bailey. Cornell Bulletin 131: 

 169-195. 1897. 



Pollination of Bartlett and Kieffer 



