Newport News
James H. Denmead, West Point, Box 50
John J. Rhodes, Potomac View Farm, Sterling
R. M. Fontaine, Richmond, care of Chesapeake and Potomac Telegraph Co.,
7th and Grace Streets
WASHINGTON
J. P. Douglass, Tonasket
A. H. Irish, Wapato
Robert W. Bryan, Alderdale
WEST VIRGINIA
Martin Crow, Dallas
WISCONSIN
W. S. Liston, 459 Van Buren Street, Milwaukee
WYOMING
W. C. Deming, Editor _Wyoming Stockman-Farmer_, Cheyenne
AUTHORITIES AND SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS
For a list of authorities and special correspondents in all the states
of the Union, and elsewhere, see the report of this Association for
1913.
* * * * *
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 Dise
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