SOME RECENT LITERATURE ON NUTS AND NUT GROWING

The Agriculture of the Future. J. Russell Smith, Harper's Magazine, January,
1913, p. 273.
The Doctor's New Job. J. Russell Smith, Country Gentleman, June 28, 1913,
p. 970.
Nut Farming For Tomorrow. J. Russell Smith, Country Gentleman, July 5,
1913, p. 1015.
The Pecan and the Patient Waiter. J. Russell Smith, Country Gentleman,
December 20, 1913.
Pigs, Peas and Pecans. J. Russell Smith, Ibid., December 27, 1913.
The Real Dry Farmer. J. Russell Smith, Harper's Monthly, May, 1914.
Tree Crops as a Control of Erosion. J. Russell Smith, Science, June 12, 1914.
Two Story Farming. J. Russell Smith, Century Magazine, July, 1914.
The Agriculture of the Garden of Eden. J. Russell Smith, Atlantic Monthly,
August, 1914.
Vacations that Counted. J. Russell Smith, Harper's Weekly, September 12,
1914.
The Life History and Habits of the Walnut Weevil or Curculio, Conotrachelus
juglandis. Part III of the Annual Report of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment
Station, New Haven, 1912, p. 240.
The Walnut Bud-moth, Acrobasis caryae. Ibid., p 253.
Japan Walnuts, Juglans sieboldiana. Rural New-Yorker, February 1, 1913.
H. O. Mead on variation in type and crossing.
Persian Walnuts for Indiana. Van Deman, Rural New-Yorker, February 22,
1913, p. 225.
Dropping Walnuts. Ibid., p. 259.
Chestnut Bark Disease. Part V of the Annual Report of the Connecticut
Agricultural Experiment Station, New Haven, 1912. Very full account, 100
pages, plates, charts and bibliography.
The Chestnut Bark Disease. Ibid., bul. 178, September, 1913.
So-called Chestnut Blight Poisoning. Ibid. Part I of the Annual Report for
1914. 12 pages and plate.
Supposed Poisonous Properties of Chestnuts Grown on Trees Affected with
Chestnut Blight. C. Dwight March. Journal of the American Medical Association,
July 4, 1914, p. 30.
Studies in Juglans, 1. Study of a Form of Juglans Californica, Watson. By
Ernest B. Babcock. University of California Publications in Agricultural Sciences
Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 1-46, pls. 1-12. December 4, 1913.
Studies in Juglans, II. Further Observations on a New Variety of Juglans
Californica, Watson, and on Certain Supposed Walnut-Oak Hybrids. By
Ernest R. Babcock. Ibid. Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 47-70, pls. 13-19. Oct. 31, 1914.
Production of the Walnut in the Northwest. Ferd Groner. Fifth Annual
Report, Oregon State Horticultural Society, December, 1913. p. 159.
Top-Working Seedling Pecan Trees. W. N. Hutt. Bul. 224, North Carolina
Agricultural Experiment Station, Raleigh, January, 1914. Excellent description
and illustrations.
Birds as Carriers of the Chestnut Blight Fungus. Journal of Agricultural
Research, September, 1914, Vol. II, No. 6, Department of Agriculture, Washington,
D. C. Account of experiments, with plates and bibliography.
Pecan Rosette. By W. A. Orton and Frederick V. Rand. Reprint from
Journal of Agricultural Research, Vol. III, No. 2. Department of Agriculture,
Washington, D. C., November 16, 1914.
The Possibilities of Nut Culture in New England. By Dr. William C. Deming.
Reprinted from the Transactions of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society,
1914, Part 1. Boston, August, 1914.
Nut Culture. By William C. Deming. Circular No. 26, Massachusetts
State Board of Agriculture. June, 1914.
Nut Growing and the Propagation of Nut Trees. By William C. Deming.
To be printed in the Annual Report of the New Jersey State Horticultural Society,
1914.
Grafting the Hickory. By William C. Deming. Rural New-Yorker, December
12, 1914. Note on a simple method for grafting the hickory by the slip bark
method.
Nuts for the North. H. E. Van Deman. Green's Fruit Grower, December,
1914, p. 7.
Cracking the Walnut Blight. Walter V. Woehlke. The Country Gentleman,
November 28, 1914, p. 1910. Illustrations of top-working the walnut in California.
American Nut Journal. Published monthly at Rochester, N. Y., by Ralph
T. Olcott, Editor of American Fruits. $1.25 a year, or $2.50 with yearly membership
in this Association. First number issued June, 1914, Ellwanger & Barry
Building.
Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Convention of the National Nut Growers
Association, Thomasville, Georgia, October, 1914. J. B. Wight, Secretary,
Cairo, Georgia.


PRESENT AT THE FIFTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE NORTHERN NUT GROWERS ASSOCIATION

W. C. Reed
M. T. Reed
C. A. Reed
R. T. Morris
J. Russell Smith
Col. C. K. Sober
W. O. Potter
E. A. Riehl
J. L. Doan
H. R. Weber
C. P. Close
R. L. McCoy
J. F. Wilkinson
T. P. Littlepage
R. T. Olcott
W. C. Deming
H. D. Simpson
Ray C. Simpson
Dr. A. J. Knapp
L. W. Kiefer
Col. C. A. Van Duzee
John S. Parish
Miss Ellen Littlepage
Mrs. H. S. Kramer
Dr. Worsham
Mr. C. D. Evans
Paul White
Mr. A. C. Pomeroy
Mrs. Pomeroy
Harry Gieseke, Patoka, Ind., R. 22
D. C. Hargis, Hebbardsville, Ky.
C. A. Weilbrenner, Mt. Vernon, Ind.
C. E. Browne, Glen St. Mary, Fla.
J. W. Gleichman, Evansville
H. M. Thurber, Rockport
A. L. Moseley
W. E. McElderry, Princeton, Ind.
John F. Woods, Owensville, Ind.
Dr. F. L. Davis, 209 Dover St., Evansville
A. M. Williams, Evansville Press
L. P. Doarr, Howell, Ind., R. 9
Clarence A. Cook, Indianapolis
Robert J. Tracewell, Evansville, and son
Thomas L. Kerth, 910 Third Ave., Evansville
W. A. Graham, Enterprise
Carl J. Poll
C. F. Kale
C. F. Kleiderer, Henderson, Ky.
J. C. Haines, Lake
C. H. Baldwin, State Entomologist
Leo H. Fisher, Huntingburg, Ind.
Prof C. W. Matthews
Prof. Carmody
Mrs. J. W. Wilkinson
Mrs. Amy Norris
Miss Lottie Lee Mattingly
Anthony Dodds, Enterprise
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Dodds
Mrs. Ed. J. Fehn
Miss Ollie Dilday
Mrs. Fred Elmendorf
Miss Halma May Dodds
Miss Laura Hostetter
E. E. Lockwood, Poseyville, Ind.
Mason J. Niblack
W. A. Taylor, Oaktown
Hugh C. Schmidt, Evansville
J. W. Strassell, Rockport, Ind.
Mrs. J. W. Strassell, Rockport, Ind.
Miss Helen Gentry, Rockport, Ind.
Chas. F. Hartmetz, Evansville, Ind.
Reporters


ANNUAL MEETING IN 1915

The following letter was sent to our members and some of our correspondents living in or near Rochester. The secretary would be pleased if every person who opens this volume at this page would read this letter and, having read, would make a note of it for action.

Georgetown, Conn., September 10, 1914.