530 
24994—25010 Smith. 
94 Smith Erwin F. Tlie watermelon disease of the South (Proc. of the 
Americ. Assoc. f. the Advanc. of Science, 43. Meet, held at Brooklyn 
1894, Salem 1895, p. 289). 
95 — Peach growing for Market (U. S. Dept. of Agrie., Farmer’s Bull. No. 33, 
1895, 23 pp.). 
96 — Bacillus tracheiphilus n. sp., die Ursache des Verwelkens verschiedener 
Cucurbitaceen (Centralbl. f. Bakt. u. Par., 2. Abt., I, 1895, p. 364—373). 
97 — Koot tubercles of Leguminosae (The Americ. Natural., XXIX, 1895, 
p. 898). 
98 — The watermelon wilt and other wilt diseases due to Fusarium (Proc. 
of the Americ. Assoc. f. the Advanc. of Science, 44. Meet, held at Spring- 
field 1895, Salem 1896, p. 190). 
99 — The Southern tornato blight (Proc. of the Americ. Assoc. f. the Advanc. of 
Science, 44. Meet, held at Springfield 1895, Salem 1896, p. 191). 
0 — Hints on the studj of Fungi. I. (Asa Gray Bull., IV, 1896, p. 25). — 
II. (1. c., p. 37). 
1 — Legal enactments for the restriction of piant diseases. A compilation of 
the laws of the United States and Canada (U. S. Dep. of Agrie. Div. of 
Veget, physiol. and pathol. Washington, Bull. 11, 1896). 
2 — A bacterial disease of the Tornato, Eggplant and Irish Potato: Bacillus 
Solanacearum n. sp. (U. S. Dep. of Agrie. Div. of Veget, physiol. and 
pathol., Bull. 12, 1896) tab. 
3 — The Bacterial diseases of Plants: A critical review of the present state 
of our knowledge. I—IV (The American Naturalist, 1896, p. 626, 716, 
796, 912). — V, VI (1. c., 1897, p. 34, 123). 
4 — Wakkers hyacinth bacterium (Bot. Gaz., XXIV, 1897, p. 188). 
5 — Description of Bacillus Phaseoli n. sp. (Bot. Gaz., XXIV, 1897, p. 192). 
6 — On the nature of certain pigments produced by fungi and bacteria, with 
special reference to that produced by Bacillus solanacearum (Bot. Gaz., 
XXIV, 1897, p. 192). 
7 — Pseudomonas campestris, the cause of a brown rot in cruciferous plants 
(Centralbl. f. Bakt. u. Par., 2. Abt., III, 1897, p. 284, 408, 478) tab. 
8 — The Spread of Piant diseases. A Consideration of some of the ways in 
which parasitic Organisms are disseminated (Boston, Massach., Hortic. 
Soc. for 1897, Boston 1898, 19 pp.). 
9 — Notes on Stewarfs Sweet-corn germ: Pseudomonas Stewartii n. sp. 
(Proceed. Amer. Assoc. f. Advanc. of Science, XLVII, Salem, Ma., 1898, 
p. 422—426). 
10 — Notes on the Michigan Disease known as „Little Peach“ (Fennville 
Herald, 15. Octob. 1898, 12 pp.). 
