272 MISCELLANEOUS ENQUIRIES 



composition between English and foreign -grown wheat, was 

 again in 1904 made the subject of investigation at Rotham- 

 sted. It was found that these qualities were very little 

 influenced by manuring, but that to a considerable extent they 

 are inherent in the plant itself. The problem of controlling the 

 milling quality is thus one for the plant breeder, and from this 

 point of view it has been studied by Biffen at Cambridge and 

 by others. 



REFERENCES 



"On some Points in the Composition of Wheat Grain, its Products in the 



Mill, and Bread." Jour. Ckem. Soc., 10 (1857), 1. Rothamsted Memoirs, 



Vol. I., No. 10. 

 "Bread Reform." Jour. Soc. Arts, January 21, 1881. Rothamsted Memoirs, 



Vol. V., No. 16. 

 " On the Sewage of Towns (Third Report and Appendices 1, 2, and 3, of 



the Royal Commission, presented to Parliament), 1865." Rothamsted 



Memoirs, Vol. IV., No. 2. 

 "Report (presented to Parliament) of Experiments undertaken by Order 



of the Board of Trade to determine the Relative Values of Unmalted 



and Malted Barley as Food for Stock, 1866." Rothamsted Memoirs, Vol. 



IV., No. 3. 

 "Experiments on Ensilage conducted at Rothamsted, Season 1884-5." Agric. 



Gazette, April 27 to Aug. 10, 1885. Rothamsted Memoirs, Vol. IV., 



No. 12. 

 "The Question of Quality in Wheat." A. D. Hall. Jour, of Board of Agric., 



Vol. XI. (1904), No. 6, 321-337. 



