Page images
PDF
EPUB

Fortier, Samuel (Continued). Practical information for beginners in irrigation. 8°. pp. 40. il. Washington, 1906. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 263.)

[Revised ed.] 8°. pp. 38. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 864.)

Fuld, Maurice. See Vegetable lore.

[ocr errors]

The garden; or, Familiar instructions for the laying out and management of a flower garden. Ed. 4. sm. 4°. pp. x, 175. il. pl. 19 (12 col.). London, 1836. Gardeners' and florists' annual for 1916[-1917]. Edited by J. H. Dick. 12°. New York, [1916-17]. The gardener's new kalendar. See [Hill, John]. Gardner, Frank D. Farming for profit. Fruits, vegetables, and flowers; a non-technical manual for their culture, management, and improvement. By F. D. Gardner, assisted by R. L. Watts, Paul Work, C. W. Waid, [and others]. 8°. pp. 279. il. col. frontis. Philadelphia, etc., [1918].

Gardner, Victor Ray. The early summer pruning of young apple trees. pl. 9._(In GARDNER, V. R., MAGNESS, J. R., and YEAGER, A. F. Pruning investigations, 1916, pp. 3-36.)

Magness, J. R., and Yeager, A. F. Pruning investigations. 8°. pp. 88. pl. 23. Corvallis, [1916]. (Oregon. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 139.) Contents: -The early summer pruning of young apple trees, by V. R. Gardner. The influence of summer pruning on bud development in the apple, by J. R. Magness. A statistical study of the fruit-spur system of certain apple trees, by A. F. Yeager. Garton, James. The practical gardener, and gentleman's directory, for every month in the year, adapted to the new stile. An entire new work; containing the latest and most approved methods of cultivating and improving the kitchen, flower, fruit, and physic garden, and for managing the vineyard and pine-apple, etc. 12°. pp. [8], 285, [8]. plan. London, 1769.

Gaskill, Alfred. A shade tree guide. 8°. pp. 22. il. Union Hill, 1918. (New Jersey. Department of conservation and development. Reports.)

Gates, Burton N. Everyday essentials of beekeeping. 8°.

pp. 32. pl. 5. Boston, 1918. (Massachusetts. State board of agriculture. Apiary inspection. Bulletin no. 14.)

Honey-bees in relation to horticulture. 8°. pp. [18]. [Boston, 1917].

Transactions of the Massachusetts horticultural society, 1917, pt. 1, pp. 71-88.

Gesner, Johann Matthias. See Scriptores rei rusticae. Gibault, Georges. See Bois, Désiré, and Gibault, Georges. L'approvisionnement des Halles centrales de Paris en

1899.

See Bois, Désiré, and Gibault, Georges. Statistique horticole de la France. Gilbertson, G. I. See Severin, H. C., and Gilbertson, G. I. Grasshoppers and their control.

Gill, John Boyd. Important pecan insects and their control. 8°. pp. 48. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 843.) Gladwin, F. E. A non-parasitic malady of the vine. 8°. pp. [14]. pl. 3. [Geneva, 1918]. (New York. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 449.)

Why and when winter kills grapes. Summarized by F. H. Hall from bulletin by F. E. Gladwin. 8°. pp. 8. pl. 2. [Geneva, 1917]. (New York. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 433. Popular ed.)

Winter injury of grapes. 8°. pp. [35]. pl. 8. [Geneva, 1917]. (New York. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 433.)

Glaser, R. W. Wilt of gipsy-moth caterpillars. [28]. il. pl. 4. [Washington, 1915].

[ocr errors]

8°. pp.

Reprint from Journal of agricultural research," v. 4, 1915, pp. 101128. "Literature cited," pp. 127–128.

Glover, George H., Newsom, I. E., and Robbins, W. W. A new poisonous plant: the whorled milkweed, Asclepias verticillata. 8°. pp. 16. il. Fort Collins, 1918. (Colorado. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 246.) [Gosse, Philip Henry]. Wanderings through the conservatories at Kew. 16°. pp. vii, 296. il. London, [1856]. Gould, Harris Perley. Growing peaches; sites and cultural methods. 8°. pp. 44. il. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 917.)

"Revision and combination of nos. 631 and 632."

Peach-growing. 12°. pp. xxi, 426. il. pl. 32. New York, 1918. (The rural science series.)

Peach varieties and their classification. 8°. pp. 15. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 918.)

Revision of no. 633.

See Beattie, J. H., and Gould, H. P. Commercial evaporation and drying of fruits. Gourley, J. II. Some observations on the growth of apple trees. 8°. pp. 38. charts. tables. Durham, [1917]. (New Hampshire. Agricultural experiment station. Technical bulletin no. 12.)

Graefer, John. A descriptive catalogue of upwards of eleven hundred species and varieties of herbaceous or perennial plants. . . To which is added, a list of hardy ferns for the decoration of northern borders, and the most ornamental annuals. 8°. pp. iv, 139, [8]. London, [1789]. Graf, J. E. The potato tuber moth. 8°. pp. 56. il. map. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 427.)

"Bibliography," pp. 52-56.

1914.

Green, Joseph Reynolds. A history of botany in the
United Kingdom from the earliest times to the end of
the 19th century. 8°. pp. xii, 648. portraits. London, etc.,
Griffin, William. A treatise on the culture of the pine apple.
Ed. 2. 8°. pp. x, [2], 84. Newark, [Eng.], etc., 1808.
Gunn, D. The small cabbage moth, Plutella maculipennis
Curtis. 8°. pp. 10. il. Pretoria, 1917. (Union of South
Africa. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 8, 1917.)
Gurney, W. B. Insect pests of maize. (In WenHolz, H.
Maize culture, 1918, pp. 37-42.)

Guthrie, F. B. Lime on the farm. 8°. pp. 31. Sydney, 1917. (New South Wales. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 115.)

[blocks in formation]

Harlan, C. Farming with green manures, on Plumgrove farm. 8°. pp. 80. Wilmington, 1876.

Harris, A. G. See Clement, F. M., and Harris, A. G. Peach growing in Ontario.

Harrison, Charles Simmons. The gospel of beauty, and kindred topics. 8°. pp. 88. pl. 4. portrait. n. p., n. d. [Harrison, Fairfax, editor]. See Cato, M. P., and Varro, M. T. Roman farm management; the treatises of Cato and Varro done into English.

Hart, E. B., and Tottingham, W. E. Relation of sulphur compounds to plant nutrition. 8°. pp. [17]. pl. 3. [Washington, 1915].

"Reprint from Journal of agricultural research," v. 5, 1915, pp. 233249. "Literature cited." p. 249.

Hart, R. A. The drainage of irrigated farms. 8°. pp. 31. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 805.) Harter, Leonard Lee, and Jones, Lewis Ralph. Cabbage diseases. 8°. pp. 30. il. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 925.) Hartley, G. Inness. See Beebe, William, Hartley, G. I., and Howes, P. G. Tropical wild life in British Guiana. Hartzell, Frederick Zeller. The cherry leaf-beetle. 8°. pp. [76]. il. pl. 8. [Geneva, 1917]. (New York. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 444.) "Bibliography," pp. 819-820.

Hedrick, Ulysses Prentiss. The peaches of New York. By U. P. Hedrick, assisted by G. H. Howe, O. M. Taylor, C. B. Tubergen. 4°. pp. xiii, 541. col. pl. 91. portrait. map. chart. Albany, 1917. (New York, State. Department of agriculture. 24th annual report, v. 2, pt. 2.)

44

Report of the New York agricultural experiment station for the year 1916, pt. 2." 'Bibliography and references," pp. 499-510.

[ocr errors]

Hénard, Robert. Les richesses d'art de la ville de Paris. Les jardins et les squares. 8°. pp. 276. il. pl. 64.

Paris, 1911. Hervey, Alpheus B. See Collins, F. S., and Hervey, A. B. The algae of Bermuda.

Hesler, Lex R., and Whetzel, Herbert Hice. Manual of fruit diseases. 8°. pp. xx, 462. il. New York, 1917. (The rural manuals.)

Hibberd, Shirley. The amateur's kitchen garden, frameground, and forcing pit; a handy guide to the formation and management of the kitchen garden and the cultivation of useful vegetables and fruits. 12°. pp. vi, 306. il. col. pl. 6. London, 1877.

Higgins, James Edgar. The litchi in Hawaii. 8°. pp. 21. pl. 5. Washington, 1917. (Hawaii. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 44.) [Hill, John]. The gardener's new kalendar, divided according to the twelve months of the year containing the whole practice of gardening, under the four general heads, the pleasure garden, the kitchen ground, the seminary, the fruit garden and orchard, etc. 8°. pp. iv, 428. il. pl. 2. London, 1758.

Hill, Thomas. The arte of gardening, wherunto is added much necessarie matter, with a number of secrets, and the phisicke helps belonging to each hearb, which are easily prepared. Heer-unto is annexed two proper treatises, the first intituled The mervailous goverment, propertie, & benefite of bees, with the rare secrets of the honie and waxe; the other, The yearly conjectures, verie necessary for husband-men. To these is likewise joyned a treatise of the arte of graffing and planting of trees. sm. 4°. pp. [6], 164, [6], 92. il. London, 1608.

A profitable instruction of the perfect ordering of bees. . . To which is annexed a treatise intituled: Certaine husbandly conjectures of dearth and plenty for ever, and other matters. pp. [6], 92. London, 1608. (Appended to his Arte of gardening, 1608.)

Hoare, Clement. A practical treatise on the cultivation of the grape vine on open walls. Ed. 3. 8°. pp. ix, [2], 210. il. London, 1841.

Hodgkiss, Harold Edward. See Parrott, P. J., and Hodgkiss, H. E. The status of spraying practices for the control of plant lice in apple orchards.

[blocks in formation]

etc.

Houghton, John. A collection for the improvement of husbandry and trade; consisting of many valuable materials relating to corn, cattle, coals, hops, wool, &c. Now revised, corrected, and published, with a preface and useful indexes, by Richard Bradley. 4 v. 12°. London, 1727-28. v. 2-4, title reads: Husbandry and trade improv'd; being a collection, Husbandry and trade improv'd. See his Collection for the improvement of husbandry and trade. Howes, Paul G. See Beebe, William, Hartley, G. I., and Howes, P. G. Tropical wild life in British Guiana. Howitt, J. Eaton, and Caesar, Lawson. The more important fruit tree diseases of Ontario. 8°. pp. 44. il. Toronto, 1917. (Ontario. Department of agriculture. Bulletin

no. 257.) Hubbard, Henry Vincent, and Kimball, Theodora. An introduction to the study of landscape design. 4°. pp. xx, 406. i. pl. 77. New York, 1917.

Hulme, Frederick Edward. That rock-garden of ours. Illustrations by the author. 8°. pp. 328. pl. 50 (8 col.). London, etc., 1909.

Ideas for rustic furniture proper for garden seats, summer houses, hermitages, cottages, &c. 8°. pl. 25. London, [1825?].

Institute of makers of explosives, New York. Clearing land of stumps. 8°. pp. 75. il. New York, [1917].

The use of explosives in making ditches. 8°. pp. 70. il. New York, [1917].

The use of explosives in the tillage of trees. 8°. pp. 78. i. New York, [1918].

See Mattern, J. R. Clearing land of rocks for agricultural and other purposes. International garden club, New York. Journal. 1917-1918. 8°. il. [New York, 1917-18]. v. 1, issued twice a year; v. 2, issued quarterly.

Jarvis, Chester Deacon. schools. 8°. pp. 74. il. partment of the interior. 1916, no. 40.)

[ocr errors]

v. 1-2.

Gardening in elementary city pl. 3. Washington, 1916. (DeBureau of education. Bulletin,

Jekyll, Gertrude. Garden ornament. f°. pp. xii, 460. pl. col. frontis. London, 1918.

Jerrold, Tom. The garden that paid the rent. [Revised ed.] 16°. pp. 127. London, 1882. Johnson, Cuthbert William. The farmer's and planter's encyclopaedia of rural affairs. With extensive additions adapting the work to the United States, by Gouverneur Emerson. Revised ed. 8°. pp. vii, 1179. il. pl. 10. Philadelphia, 1868.

For earlier ed., see his Farmer's encyclopaedia, and dictionary of rural affairs.

Johnson, George William. The potato; its culture, uses, and history. 16°. pp. iv, 181. frontis. London, 1847. (The gardener's monthly volume. [January.])

and Barnes, James. The pine apple; its culture, uses, and history. [v. 2.] 16°. pp. iv, 133. il. London, etc., 1847. (The gardener's monthly volume. July.) Jones, B. W. The peanut plant; its cultivation and uses. 12°. pp. 69. il. New York, 1885. Jones, D. H. Bacteria; friends and foes. 8°. pp. 100. il. Toronto, 1918. (Ontario. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 265.)

"Bacterial diseases of plants," pp. 69-99.

Some bacterial diseases of vegetables found in Ontario. 8°. pp. 24. il. Toronto, 1916. (Ontario. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 240.)

Jones, Edward Richard, and Zeasman, O. R. The drainage on the farm. 8°. pp. 32. i. Madison, [1917]. (Wisconsin. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 284.) See White, F. M., and Jones, E. R., compilers. Getting rid of the stumps.

Jones, Lewis Ralph. See Harter, L. L., and Jones, L. R.
Cabbage diseases.

Jones, S. A. Honeybees and honey production in the United
States. 8°. pp. 61. map. Washington, 1918. (United
States. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 685.)
Kains, Maurice Grenville. Plant propagation; greenhouse
and nursery practice. 12°. pp. xix, 322. il. frontis. New
York, 1916.

8°.

The principles and practice of pruning. 8°. pp.
xxv, 420. il. frontis. New York, 1917.
Kellaway, Herbert J.
grounds. Ed. 2.
New York, etc., 1915.
Kempton, J. H. See Collins, G. N., and Kempton, J. H.
Breeding sweet corn resistant to the corn earworm.

How to lay out suburban home
pp. xi, 134. pl. plans. maps.

Macauley, Mary E. See Beckwith, Florence, Macauley,
M. E., and Baxter, M. S. Plants of Monroe county, New
York, and adjacent territory. Second supplementary list.
MacGillivray, Alexander Dyer. See Britton, W. E., and
others. Guide to the insects of Connecticut, pt. III.
McGillivray, C. S. Evaporated apples. 8°.
pp. 38. il.
Ottawa, [1917]. (Canada. Department of agriculture.
Bulletin no. 24.)

Machmer, William L. See Cance, A. E., Machmer, W. L.,
and Read, F. W. Connecticut valley onion supply and
distribution.

Magness, J. R. The influence of summer pruning on bud development in the apple. pl. 10. _(In Gardner, V. R., MAGNESS, J. R., and YEAGER, A. F. Pruning investigations, 1916, pp. 46-67.)

Kerle, W. D. The peanut. 8°. pp. 39. il. Sydney, 1918. Major, Joshua. A treatise on the insects most prevalent on (New South Wales. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 119.)

Kimball, Theodora. See Hubbard, H. V., and Kimball, Theodora. An introduction to the study of landscape design.

Kinman, C. F. The mango in Porto Rico. 8°. pp. 30. pl.
11. Washington, 1918. (Porto Rico. Agricultural ex-
periment station. Bulletin no. 24.)

Kirkland, Archie Howard. See Fernald, C. H., and Kirk-
land, A. H. The brown-tail moth.
Kneeland, Paul D. The utilization of forest products in
Massachusetts as affected by the war. 8°. pp. 14. Bos-
ton, 1918.

Wood fuel; a bulletin to stimulate the production
and use of wood as fuel for patriotic and economic reasons
as a war measure. 8°. pp. 11. [Boston, 1917].
Kraus, Ezra Jacob. Variation of internal structure of apple
varieties. 8°. pp. 11. il. pl. 31. Corvallis, [1916].
(Oregon. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 135.)

and Ralston, G. S. The pollination of the pomaceous fruits. III. Gross vascular anatomy of the apple. 8°. pp. 12. pl. 8. Corvallis, [1916]. (Oregon. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 138.)

Lance, E. J. The hop farmer; or, A complete account of hop culture, embracing its history, laws, & uses, etc. 12°. pp. xii, 212. il. plate. map. London, 1838.

fruit trees, and garden produce . . . also, a few hints on the causes and treatment of mildew and canker on fruit trees and cucumbers, &c. 8°. pp. xvi, 302 [294]. London, 1829. Manwaring, H. M. A treatise on the cultivation and growth of hops, in the Kent style. 12°. pp. [5], 51. frontis. London, 1855. March, T. C. Flower and fruit decoration; with some remarks on the treatment of town gardens, terraces, &c. 8°. pp. viii, 108. il. frontis. London, 1862. Marsh, Charles Dwight. Stock-poisoning plants of the range. 8°. pp. 24. pl. 30 (16 col.). Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 575.) and others. Larkspur, or " Poison weed." By C. D. Marsh, A. B. Clawson, and Hadleigh Marsh. 8°. pp. 15. il. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 988.)

Revised ed. of no. 531.

Marsh, Hadleigh. See Marsh, C. D., and others. Larkspur, or "Poison weed."

Massart, Jean. Notice sur la serre des plantes grasses [au Jardin botanique de l'état]. 8°. pp. 31. il. Bruxelles, 1905. (Ministère de l'agriculture.)

Massey, Louis M. The diseases of roses. 8°. pp. [21]. pl. 2.
[Boston, 1918].

Transactions of the Massachusetts horticultural society, 1918, pt. 1, pp.
81-101.
"Bibliography," pp. 100-101.

Lang, H. L. See Round, L. A., and Lang, H. L. Preserva- Mattern, J. R. Clearing land of rocks for agricultural and tion of vegetables by fermentation and salting.

Lantz, David Ernest. Rodent pests of the farm. 8°. pp. 23.
il. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of
Agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 932.)
Lawrence, William Hereford. Practical fig culture in Ari-
zona. 8°. pp. 43. il. plate. Tucson, 1916. (Arizona.
Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 77.)
Leonard, Mortimer Demarest. See Crosby, C. R., and
Leonard, M. D. Manual of vegetable-garden insects.
Lewis, R. G. See Morton, B. R. Native trees of Canada.
The library of agricultural and horticultural knowledge.
See Baxter, John, publisher.

Lloyd, Curtis Gates. The genus Radulum. 8°. pp. 12. il.
Cincinnati, 1917.

The Geoglossaceae (viz., the genus Geoglossum and related genera). 8°. pp. 24. il. portrait. Cincinnati, 1916.

Synopsis of some genera of the large Pyrenomycetes: Camillea, Thamnomyces, Engleromyces. 8°. pp. 16. il. Cincinnati, 1917.

Synopsis of the Cordyceps of Australasia. 8°. pp. 12. il. portrait. Cincinnati, 1915.

Synopsis of the genus Fomes. 8°. pp. [80]. il.

portrait. Cincinnati, 1915.

other purposes. 8°. pp. 68. il. New York, [1918]. "Published by the Institute of makers of explosives."

Mawe, Thomas, and Abercrombie, John. The universal
gardener and botanist; or, A general dictionary of gardening
and botany, exhibiting in botanical arrangement, accord-
ing to the Linnacan system, every tree, shrub, and herba-
ceous plant, that merit culture, either for use, ornament, or
curiosity, in every department of gardening. 4°. pp.
[1110]. London, 1778.

[May, W. J.] Villa gardening; being plain instructions for
the proper laying-out, planting, and management of small
gardens; with lists of trees, shrubs, and plants most suit-
able. By "Practical hand." 8°.
pp. 82. il. pl. 9.
London, n. d.

Mehta, H. K. Experiments with the water-finder of Mans-
field & co. in the trap area of western India. 8°. pp. 12.
map. Bombay, 1910. (India. Bombay presidency. De-
partment of agriculture. Bulletin no. 38 of 1910.)
Millais, John Guille. Rhododendrons; in which is set forth
an account of all species of the genus Rhododendron (in-
cluding azaleas) and the various hybrids. fo. pp. xi, 268.
pl. 61 (17 col.) London, etc., 1917.

Mitchell, J. Alfred. Incense cedar. 8°. pp. 40. il. pl. 5.
map. Washington, 1918. (United States. Department of
agriculture. Bulletin no. 604.)

Synopsis of the stipitate Stereums. 8°. pp. [32]. Montana. State board of entomology. Biennial report. 1stil. portrait. Cincinnati, 1913. 2d. 1913-1916. 8°. il. Helena, 1914-[16].

Morris, James J. The forests of Plymouth county [Mass.];
the results of a forest survey of the twenty-seven towns in
the county. 8°. pp. 48. il. pl. 4. plan. Boston, 1918.
Morse, William Joseph. The soy bean; its culture and uses.
8°. pp. 32. il. Washington, 1918. (United States. De-
partment of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 973.)
Morton, B. R. Native trees of Canada. With notes on
nomenclature and utilization by R. G. Lewis. 8°. pp. [159].
pl. 74. maps. Ottawa, 1917. (Canada. Department of
the interior. Forestry branch. Bulletin no. 61.)
Munro, Willis. See Clement, G. E., and Munro, Willis.
Control of the gipsy moth by forest management.
Murphy, Louis S. The red spruce; its growth and manage-
ment. 8°. pp. 100. il. pl. 7. Washington, 1917. (United
States. Department of agriculture. Bulletin no. 544.)
Murray, Lady Charlotte. The British garden; a descriptive
catalogue of hardy plants, indigenous, or cultivated in the
climate of Great Britain. Ed. 3. 2 v. 8°. pp. xxxi, 768,
[25]. London, 1808.

Paged continuously.

National rose test garden, Portland, Oregon. [Rules and
regulations, etc.] 12°. pp. [10]. Portland, [1917].
Newcomer, E. J. See Nougaret, R. L., Davidson, W. M.,
and Newcomer, E. J. The pear leaf-worm.
Newsom, I. E. See Glover, G. H., Newsom, I. E., and
Robbins, W. W. A new poisonous plant: the whorled
milkweed.

Nougaret, R. L., Davidson, William Mark, and Newcomer,
E. J. The pear leaf-worm. 8°. pp. 24. il. pl. 2. Wash-
ington, 1916. (United States. Department of agriculture.
Bulletin no. 438.)

Orton, William Allen. Watermelon diseases. 8°. pp. 18.
il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of
agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 821.)

and Chittenden, Frank Hurlbut. Control of diseases
and insect enemies of the home vegetable garden. 8°. pp.
72. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department
of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 856.)
Oswald, Wieland Leo, and Boss, Andrew. Minnesota weeds.
Series III. 8°. pp. 43. il. St. Paul, [1918]. (Minnesota.
Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 176.)

Paddock, F. B. Studies on the harlequin bug. 8°. pp. 65.
il. pl. 5. College Station, [1918]. (Texas. Agricultural
experiment station. Bulletin no. 227.)
"Literature cited; Bibliography," pp. 60-65.
Paillieux, Auguste, and Bois, Désiré. De quelques plantes
alimentaires de l'Abyssinie. 8°. pp. 7. Paris, [1890].
"Extrait de la Revue des sciences naturelles appliquées, 1890."
Palladius, Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus. See Scriptores rei
rusticae.

Parrott, Percival John, and Hodgkiss, Harold Edward.
The status of spraying practices for the control of plant
lice in apple orchards. 8°. pp. [20]. il. pl. 2. [Geneva,
1915]. (New York. Agricultural experiment station.
Bulletin no. 402.)

Parsons, Samuel, editor. See Pückler-Muskau, H. L. H.,
fürst von. Hints on landscape gardening.

Parsons, T. S. Alfalfa in Wyoming. 8°. pp. 55. il. [Lara-
mie, 1916]. (Wyoming. Agricultural experiment station.
Bulletin no. 111.)

Patterson, Mrs. Flora Wambaugh, and Charles, Vera Kath-
erine. Some common edible and poisonous mushrooms.
8°. pp. 24. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. De-
partment of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 796.)
Paul, B. H., compiler. The pine blister rust. 8°. pp. 16.
il. maps. [Boston, 1917]. (Massachusetts forestry asso-
ciation. Bulletin no. 120.)

In co-operation with the Bureau of plant industry, United States dept.
of agriculture."

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

pp. 17.

Pettey, F. W. The quince borer and its control. 8°.
il. Pretoria, 1917. (Union of South Africa. Department
of agriculture. no. 2, 1917.)

Pettit, Morley. The wintering of bees in Ontario. 8°. pp.
24. i. Toronto, 1917. (Ontario. Department of agricul-
ture. Bulletin no. 256.)

Phillips, Everett Franklin, and Demuth, George Sidney.
The preparation of bees for outdoor wintering. 8°. pp. 24.
il. [Washington, 1918]. (United States. Department of
agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 1012.)

and Demuth, George Sidney. Wintering bees in
cellars. 8°.
States.

no. 1014.)

pp. 24. il. Washington, 1918. (United
Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin

Pierce, Leslie. See Roberts, J. W., and Pierce, Leslie.
Apple bitter-rot and its control.

Pierce, William Dwight. A manual of dangerous insects
likely to be introduced in the United States through im-
portations. 8°. pp. 256. il. frontis. pl. 49. Washington,
1918. (United States. Department of agriculture. Office
of the secretary.)

Plat, Sir Hugh. The garden of Eden; or, An accurate de-
scription of all flowers and fruits now growing in England,
with particular rules how to advance their nature and
growth, as well in seeds and hearbs, as the secret ordering
of trees and plants. Ed. 5. 24°. pp. 175. London, 1659.
The second part of The garden of Eden . . . Never
before printed. 24°. pp. [16], 159. London, 1660.
The pomological magazine; or, Figures and descriptions of
the most important varieties of fruit cultivated in Great
Britain. 3 v. 8°. col. pl. 152. London, 1828-30.
Popenoe, Wilson. See Dorsett, P. H., Shamel, A. D., and
Popenoe, Wilson. The navel orange of Bahia.

The potato magazine; published by and under the auspices of
the Potato association of America. [monthly]. v. 1, no. 1.
June, 1918. 4°. il. [Mount Morris, Ill., 1918].

Potts, A. T. The fig in Texas. 8°. pp. 41. il. Austin,
[1917]. (Texas. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin
no. 208.)

Practical hand, pseud. See May, W. J.

A practical treatise on the culture and management of the
vine, under glass and in the open air. By the editors of

"The floricultural cabinet,' etc. 12°. pp. [2], 52. il.
pl. 4 (3 col.). London, etc., [1858]. (The gardener's library
of fruits, pt. 1.)

Pückler-Muskau, Hermann Ludwig Heinrich, fürst von.
Hints on landscape gardening. Translated by Bernhard
Sickert and edited by Samuel Parsons. 8°. pp. xlv, 196.
pl. 38. portrait. plans. Boston, etc., 1917.

Quaintance, Altus Lacy, and Baker, Arthur Challen.
Aphids injurious to orchard fruits, currant, gooseberry, and
grape. 8°. pp. 42. il. [Washington, 1917]. (United
States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin
no. 804.)

and Siegler, Edouard Howard. Information for fruit
growers about insecticides, spraying apparatus, and im-
portant insect pests. 8°. pp. 99. il. Washington, 1918.
(United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers'
bulletin no. 908.)

Ralston, G. S. See Kraus, E. J., and Ralston, G. S. The
pollination of the pomaceous fruits. III. Gross vascular
anatomy of the apple.

Rands, R. D. Early blight of potato and related plants.
8°. pp. 48. i. Madison, [1917]. (Wisconsin. Agricul-
tural experiment station. Research bulletin no. 42.)
"Literature cited," pp. 47-48.

Rankin, William Howard. Manual of tree diseases. 12°.
pp. xx, 398. il. New York, 1918. (The rural manuals.)
"General bibliography of tree diseases," pp. 367-370.
Read, Frederick W. See Cance, A. E., Machmer, W. L.,
and Read, F. W. Connecticut valley onion supply and
distribution.

Reese, Charles A. Beekeeping for West Virginia. 8°. pp.
52. il. [Charleston, 1917]. (West Virginia. Department
of agriculture. Bulletin no. 33.)

Reeves, F. S. See Clement, F. M., and Reeves, F. S.
Pruning.

Rehder, Alfred. The Bradley bibliography. v. 5. Index of
authors and titles; subject index. 4°. pp. xxxii, 1008. Cam-
bridge, 1918. (Publications of the Arnold arboretum, no. 3.)
Reynolds, Harris A., compiler. White pine blister rust.
Published by the Committee on the suppression of the pine
blister rust in North America. 8°. pp. 40. n. p., 1918.
Rixford, G. P. Smyrna fig culture. 8°. pp. 43. il. Wash-
ington, 1918. (United States. Department of agriculture.
Bulletin no. 732.)

[ocr errors][merged small]

Robb, O. J. See Clement, F. M., and Robb, O. J. The pear
in Ontario.

Robbins, W. W. See Glover, G. H., Newsom, I. E., and
Robbins, W. W. A new poisonous plant: the whorled
milkweed.

Roberts, John William, and Pierce, Leslie. Apple bitter-
rot and its control. 8°. pp. 14. il. Washington, 1918.
(United States. Department of agriculture. Farmers'
bulletin no. 938.)

Rohwer, Sievert Allen. See Britton, W. E., and others.
Guide to the insects of Connecticut, pt. III.
Roosevelt, Theodore. See Beebe, William, Hartley, G. I.,
and Howes, P. G. Tropical wild life in British Guiana.
Round, L. A., and Lang, H. L. Preservation of vegetables
by fermentation and salting. 8°. pp. 15. Washington,
1917. (United States. Department of agriculture. Farm-
ers' bulletin no. 881.)

Rowles, William F. How to make and manage a garden.
8°. pp. 204. il. London, 1905.

[blocks in formation]

Cranberry insect problems and suggestions for solv-
ing them. 8°. pp. 45. il. Washington, 1917. (United
States. Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no.
860.)

Scriptores rei rusticae veteres latini Cato, Varro, Columella,
Palladius, quibus nunc accedit Vegetius de mulo-medicina
et Gargilii Martialis fragmentum
et lexicon rei rus-

ticae, curante J. M. Gesnero. 2 v. 4°. pp. v. 1. [10], Ivi,
858. v. 2. [10], 859–1316, 159. il. pl. 4. Lipsiae, 1735.
Severin, H. C., and Gilbertson, G. I. Grasshoppers and
their control. 8°. pp. [40]. il. Brookings, [1917]. (South
Dakota. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 172.)
Severin, Henry H. P. The currant fruit fly. 8°. pp. [72].
pl. 5. [Orono, 1917]. (Maine. Agricultural experiment
station. Bulletin no. 264.)

"Bibliography," pp. 243-244.

Shamel, Archibald Dixon. See Dorsett, P. H., Shamel,
A. D., and Popenoe, Wilson. The navel orange of Bahia;
with notes on some little-known Brazilian fruits.
Shantz, Homer Le Roy. See Briggs, L. J., and Shantz,
H. L. Influence of hybridization and cross-pollination on
the water requirement of plants.

Sherbakoff, C. D. Some important diseases of truck crops
in Florida. 8°. pp. [87]. il. [Gainesville, 1917]. (Florida.
Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin no. 139.)

Tomato diseases. 8°. pp. [16]. il. Gainesville,
[1918]. (Florida. Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin
no. 146.)
Sherry, Christopher. The Glasgow botanic gardens; its
conservatories, greenhouses, etc. 12°. pp. 80. il. Glas-
gow, [1901?].

Shorey, Edmund C. The principles of the liming of soils.
8°. pp. 30. il. Washington, 1918. (United States. De-
partment of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 921.)
Sickert, Bernhard, translator. See Pückler-Muskau, H.
L. H., fürst von. Hints on landscape gardening.
Siegler, Edouard Howard. See Quaintance, A. L., and
Siegler, E. H. Information for fruit growers about in-
secticides, spraying apparatus, and important insect pests.
Sinclair, Sir John, bart. Correspondence; with reminiscences
of the most distinguished characters who have appeared in
Great Britain, and in foreign countries, during the last fifty
years. 2 v. 8°. pp. v. 1. xxxiv, [1], 491, 36, 2. v. 2. xi, 452, 49.
portrait. map. facsimiles of autographs. London, 1831.

[Sandrart, Johann Jacob von. Fontanen in und um die ge- Speechly, William. A treatise on the culture of the pine
gend Rom.] f°. pp. 11. pl. 42. [Nürnberg, 16–?].
Title-page wanting.

Sargent, Charles Sprague. Charles Edward Faxon. 8°.
pp. [6]. portrait. [Boston, etc., 1918].

Reprinted from Rhodora," v. 20, 1918, pp. 117-122.

Notes on North American trees. I. Quercus. 8°.
pp. [37]. [Chicago, 1918].

[ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors]

The trees at Mount Vernon; report to the council of
the Mount Vernon ladies' association of the Union. 8°.
pp. 16. plan. n. p., [1917].

Reprinted from the Annual report for 1917 of the Mount Vernon ladies'
association of the Union."

Sasscer, Ernest Ralph, and Borden, A. D. Fumigation of
ornamental greenhouse plants with hydrocyanic-acid gas.
8°. pp. 20. il. Washington, 1917. (United States. De-
partment of agriculture. Bulletin no. 513.)

and Borden, A. D. Fumigation of ornamental green-
house plants with hydrocyanic-acid gas. 8°. pp. 20. il.
Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of agri-
culture. Farmers' bulletin no. 880.)

Scammell, Harold Besnard. The cranberry girdler. 8°.
pp. 20. pl. 7. Washington, 1917. (United States. De-
partment of agriculture. Bulletin no. 554.)

apple and the management of the hot-house; together with
a description of every species of insect that infest hot-
houses, with effectual methods of destroying them. Ed. 2.
8°. pp. xvi, 211. pl. 6. York, 1796.
Spencer, A. P., and Brown, W. E. Peanuts in Florida. 8°.
pp. 20. il. n. p., [1916]. (Florida. Cooperative demon-
stration work in agriculture and home economics. Bulletin
no. 6.)

Steele, Richard. An essay upon gardening; containing a
catalogue of exotic plants for the stoves and green-houses
of the British gardens; the best method of planting the hot-
house vine; with directions for obtaining and preparing
proper earths and compositions, to preserve tender exotics;
observations on the history of gardening; and a contrast of
the ancient with the modern taste. 4°. pp. xxii, [2], 159,
102. pl. 3. York, 1800.

Stevens, Harold Edwin. Florida citrus diseases. 8°. pp.
[98] il. Gainesville, [1918]. (Florida. Agricultural ex-
periment station. Bulletin no. 150.)
Stuart, William. Good seed potatoes and how to produce
them. 8°. pp. 16. il. Washington, 1913. (United States.
Department of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 533.)

Potato storage and storage houses. 8°. pp. 27.
il. Washington, 1917. (United States. Department of
agriculture. Farmers' bulletin no. 847.)

Clark, C. F., and Dewey, George W. Potato culture

under irrigation. 8°. pp. 24. il. Washington, 1918.

« PreviousContinue »