NOTES. 97 



culture or forestry is 570. There are also 40 students enrolled in the graduate 

 school, as candidates for the degree of Master of Arts or Doctor of Philosophy, 

 who are taking their major work in some branch of agriculture, and 196 students 

 in the two-year winter course in agriculture of whom 17 are women enrolled 

 in the short course in home economics. 



A refrigeration i)laut is to be installed in the agricultural chemistx'y building. 



M. E. Hays, a 1915 graduate of the university, has been appointed assistant 

 in horticulture ; Miss Clella Jenkins, assistant in home economics ; Harold C. 

 Libby, assistant in veterinary science ; K. C. Sullivan, deputy inspector of 

 nurseries ; and William H. Baker, assistant extension professor of soils and farm 

 crops. Miss May C. McDonald has resigned as assistant professor of home 

 economics and has been succeeded by Miss Babb Bell, and Carl C. Filler has re- 

 signed as field demonstrator in the hog cholera serum work. C. S. Woodard has 

 been appointed farm demonstrator for negro farmers from March 1 to September 

 1 of each year, his i*emaining time being spent at the Bartlett Negro School at 

 Dalton. C. M. Long has been transferred as county agent from Johnson County 

 to Pettis County, succeeding S. M. Jordan, resigned, and has been succeeded by 

 F. A. Gougler ; and W. R. Hendricks has been appointed county agent for St. 

 Charles County. 



Montana College and Station. — Dr. Edward C. Elliott, of the department of 

 education of the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed chancellor of the 

 University of Montana, comprising the State University at Missoula, the State 

 College at Bozeman, the School of Mines at Butte, and the State Normal School 

 at Dillon, beginning February 1. J. D. Morgan, assistant in the State grain 

 laboratory, has resigned to take up work in grain standardization for the Bureau 

 of Plant Industry of this Department, with headquarters at New Orleans, and 

 was succeeded by "E. W. Jahnke, November 15, 1915. 



New Hampshire College. — C. J. Fawcett (Ohio State University, 1915) has 

 been appointed instructor in animal husbandry. 



New Jersey College and Stations. — Warren W. Oley has resigned as extension 

 specialist in fruit growing to become farm demonstrator in Cumberland County. 

 Other aiipointments include William J. Carson as professor of dairy husbandry 

 and dairy husbandman ; Allen G. Waller as assistant in crops ; Franklin O. 

 Church as rvosearch assistant in hydraulic engineering; Fidel P. Schlatter, as 

 research assistant in cranberry investigations ; and Lawrence G. Gillam, as in- 

 structor in horticulture in the short courses. 



New York State Station. — According to a note in Science, A. W. Bosworth, 

 associate chemist, has accepted an appointment as chief of the department of 

 biological chemistry of the Boston Floating Hospital, beginning about January 1. 



Oklahoma College. — Dr. Charles O. Chambers, of Peabody College, has been 

 appointed professor of botany. 



Oregon College. — F. L. Griffin, head of the girls' and boys' industrial clubs, 

 has resigned to accept a similar position at Cornell University, beginning 

 February 1. 



South Dakota College and Station. — V. R. Jones, assistant in dairy industry 

 in the colkjge of agriculture of Cornell University, has been appointed assistant 

 professor of dairy husbandry and assistant dairyman. 



Vermont University. — A hog barn, 30 by 88 feet, with a concrete floor, has 

 been erected which accommodates from 55 to 65 mature hogs. H. A. D. Leggett 

 has been appointed instructor in poultry husbandry in the college of agriculture 

 and John A. Dana farm agent for Chittenden County. 



Washington College. — Ernest O. Holland, superintendent of schools in Louis- 

 ville, Ky., has been appointed president to succeed Dr. E. A. Bryan, beginning 



