599 
39088—89102 Scovell—Scott. 
88 Scovell M. A. cfr. Peter A, M. Smut (I. Ann. Rept. Kentucky Agrie. Exper. 
Stat., Frankfoit 1890, p. 126). 
89 Scott Dunkinfield Henry. The present position of palaeozoic botany (Pro¬ 
gressus Rei Botanicae, I, 1907, p. 139—217) fig. 
— cfr. Lister Arthur. 
— cfr. Renault Bernard. 
90 Scott James. Microscopic tree-fungi (Knowledge and Sc. News, London 
YI, 1909, p. 384—387) fig. 
91 Scott William Miller. The leaf-curl disease of the peach and its treatment 
(Georgia State Bd. Entol. Bull. 6, 1902, 12 pp.) fig. 
92 — Self-boiled lime-sulphur mixture as a promising fungicide (U. S. Dept. 
Agrie. Washingion-Bur. Pl. Industry, Circular 1, 1908, p. 1—18). 
92a — Spraying for the control of peach brown rot and scab (Ann. Rept. Mo. 
Board Hort. III, 1909, p. 256—266). 
93 — Lime-Sulphur mixtures for the summer spraying in orchards (Cire. Dept. 
Agrie. Washington, 1909, 17 pp.) fig. 
91 — Fighting apple scab in the Middle West (West Fruit-Grower, XX, 1909, 
p. 5—6) fig. 
95 — The substitution of lime-sulphur preparations for Bordeaux mixture in 
the treatment of apple diseases (U. S. Depart. Agrie. Bur. Piant Industry, 
Cire. 51, 1910, 15 pp.) tab. 
96 — The use of lime-sulphure sprays in the summer spraying of Virginia 
apple orchards (Virginia Agrie. Exper. Stat., Bull. 188, 1910, 16 pp.) fig. 
97 — and Ayres T. W. The control of peach brown-rot and scab (Bull. U. S. 
Dept. of Agrie. Bur. of Piant Industry Washington, Bull. 174, 1910, 31 pp., 
fig., tab. 
9S — and Quaintance A. L. Spraying for apple diseases and the coddling 
moth in the orchards (U. S. Dept. Agrie, Bull. 283, 1907, p. 14—18) fig. 
99 — and — Brown rot and pium curculio on peaches (Better Fruit, V, 1910, 
p. 19-22) fig. 
0 — and — Control of the brown-rot and pium curculio on peaches (U. S. 
Depart. of Agrie. Bureau of Entomology, Circular 12°, Washington 1910, 
p. 3—7). 
1 — and Rorer James B. The relation of twig cankers to the Phyllosticta 
apple blotch (Proceed. Benton County, Arkansas hortic. Soc., Aug. 8, 1907, 
4 pp.). 
2 — and — Apple leaf-spot caused by Sphaeropsis malorum (U. S. Dept. 
of Agricult. Bureau of Piant Industry Bull. 121, part V, 1908, p. 47— 
54) tab. 
