1756 



ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PRACTICAL HORTICULTURE 



Wallace. Cornell Bulletin 289: 141-162. 

 1911. 



Experiments With Concentrated llome- 

 Made Lime-Sulphur. Porrott and Schoene. 

 N. Y. Geneva Bulletin 330: 451-484. 1910. 



Preparation and Use of Self-Boiled 

 Lime-Sulphur. Scott and Quaintance. U. 

 S. Farmers Bulletin 440: 33-40. 1911. 



The Development and Teehnique of Lime- 

 Sulplmr 



Recent Advances in Our Knowledge of 

 Lime-Sulphur. Stewart. Cornell Country- 

 man, Feb. 1911; and reprint from the 

 Pennsylvania State Horticultural Asso- 

 ciation Report, 1911, pp. 1-5. 



Concentrated Lime-Sulphur: Its Prop- 

 erties, Preparation and Use. Stewart. 

 Pennsylvania Station Annual Report 

 1908-09, pp. 259-296. Also Pennsylvania 

 Station Bulletin 92: 3-20. 1909. 



Chemical Investigation of Best Condi- 

 tions for Making the Lime-Sulphur Wash. 

 Van Slike, Bosworth and Hedges. N. Y. 

 Geneva Bulletin 329: 405-449. 1910. 



The Lime-Sulphur Wash. Chemical 

 Study. Fulmer. Ontario Agricultural 

 College Bulletin 177: 4-33. 1909. 



Lime-Sulphur Spray. Harris. Michi- 

 gan Technical Bulletin 6: 3-15. 1911. 



Manufacture and Storage of Lime-Sul- 

 phur Spray. Patten. Michigan Circular 

 10: 71-77. 1911. 



Studies of the Fungicidal Value of 

 Lime-Sulphur. Wallace. N. Y. Cornell 

 Bulletin 290: 167-207. 1911. 



B. Bordeaux Mixture 



Brief Directions for preparation are 

 given in references 1, 2, 4, 5, etc., of our 

 Section IX above. 



History and Preparation. Crandall. 

 Illinois Bulletin 135: 201-217. 1909. Also, 

 Fairchild, U. S. Division of Veg. Path- 

 ology Bulletin 6: 7-30. 1894, and Lode- 

 man's Spraying of Plants, pp. 24-30, 

 and 125-133. 1896. (Macmillan Co.) 



"Woburn" Bordeaux. Bedford & Pick- 

 ering. Woburn Experimental Farm Re- 

 port, 1909, pp. v+191; Journal Agricul- 

 tural Science 3, 1909, No. 2, pp. 171-178; 

 abstracts in Experiment Station Record 

 XXIII, pp. 50-51, and Experiment Station 

 Record XXIII: 455-456. 



Action of Lime in Excess on Copper 

 Sulpliate Solutions. Bell & Taber. Jour- 

 nal Physical Chemistry 11, 1907, No. 8, 

 pp. 632-636; abstracts in Experiment Sta- 

 tion Record XXII, pp. 456-457. (Tech- 

 nical.) 



C. Miscible Oils 



How to make them. Penny. Pennsyl- 

 vania Station Bulletin 86: 3-20. 1908; and 

 Delaware Bulletin 79: 3-40. 1907. 



Proprietary and Home-made. Jarvis. 

 Storrs Connecticut Bulletin 54: 169-197. 

 Dec. 1908. 



D. Arsenicals 



Directions for use are found in ref- 

 erences 1, 2, 4, 5, of Section IX, and in 

 references 1 and 3 of the present Sec- 

 tion X. 



Lead Arsenate. Composition, home- 

 preparation and action on foliage. Hay- 

 wood and McDonnell. U. S. Bureau of 

 Chemistry Bulletin 131: 5-49. 1910. 



(a). The Significance of Lead Arsenate 

 Composition. Volck. Science, 1911, pp. 

 866-870. 



(b). Preliminary Report on the Effects 

 of Arsenical Compounds Upon Apple 

 Trees. Swingle & Morris. Reprint from 

 Phytopathology. June, 1911, pp. 79-93. 



(c). Takanap Soap Co., Darby, Pa. 

 (Fine soap for making kerosene emulsion 

 without heating.) 



E. Spray Injury 



Spray Injury of Lime-Sulphur and Ar- 

 senicals. Stewart. In Pennsylvania State 

 Horticultural Association Report 1911. pp. 

 186-189. (Reprint obtainable from the 

 author.) Further discussion in Pennsyl- 

 vania Station Bulletin 106: 11-13. 1910; 

 and Pennsylvania Station Report 1908- 

 09, pp. 286-292; and New Jersey Horticul- 

 tural Society Report for 1911. 



Spray Injury Induced by Lime-Sulphur 

 Preparations. Wallace. Cornell Bulletin 

 288: 10.5-137. 1910. 



Orchard Spraying Experiments. Bonns. 

 Maine Bulletin 189: 33-80. 1911. 



Bordeaux Injury. Crandall. Illinois 

 Bulletin 135: 217-296. 1909. 



Bordeaux Injury on Peaches. Groth. 

 New Jersey Bulletin 232: 3-20. 1910. 



