219 



>3n Hawaiian entomology. Copies of this publication may be 

 o]:)tained at 50 cents each, by appHcation to the secretary or 

 treasurer of the society, Honolulu. 



CORRESPONDENCE. 



Editor Forester : Would you kindly put me in communica- 

 tion with the right party to supply me with eggs of pure White 

 Leghorns and B. Plymouth Rocks, or better ask such a party 

 to send me prices of above. I would also like to have price of 

 trio of each of the above breeds — cockerel and two young 

 pullets. 



Resj^ectfully, 



Correspondent (Hawaii). 



Answers to above, if directed care of Editor of Forester, Box 

 59, Honolulu, will be promptly forwarded to our correspondent. 



We have received by the Alameda a letter from Dr. Cobb 

 of the Bureau of Plant Industry, who is well known to our 

 readers. In it he very kindly offers to furnish Hawaiian 

 pineapple growers with any additional information they may 

 desire arising from the publication of his article on pineapple 

 diseases which appeared in the May Forester. He also adds: 

 *'I am most pleased to receive the Forester still. The news 

 about the Regents for the Agricultural College was very inter- 

 esting. I am gradually becoming settled in my new work, 

 and shall, in time, I hope, be able to send you something in 

 print that may interest you." 



Forester readers desiring to correspond with Dr. Cobb, rela- 

 tive to the information he offers, should address their letters: 

 Dr. Cobb, Crop Technology, Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S, 

 Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 



FIFTEENTH NATIONAL IRRIGATION CONGRESS. 



The fifteenth National Irrigation Congress will be held in 

 Sacramento, California, September 2-y, inclusive, 1907. The 

 four great objects of the Congress are to "save the forests, 

 store the floods, reclaim the deserts and make homes on the 

 land.'^ 



All who are interested in these achievements are invited to 

 attend the Congress, and, by participating in its deliberations, 

 contribute lo a wise direction of national policies and to th^ 

 development of practical methods of conserving and develop- 

 ing the great natural resources of the country, thereby insur- 

 ing a greater stability of prosperous conditions, extending the 

 habitable area, increasing the products of the land, and in- 

 creasing internal trade and commerce. 



