WHOLE VOL. APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY HOWARD 167 



Appropriations for Bureau of Entomology by Fiscal Years 

 Year , Amount Year Amount 



1879 ,. $10,000 1905 $82,450 



1880 5,000 1906 84,470 



1881 7,000 1907 262,110 



1882 23,200 1908 : 326,010 



1883 27,900 1909 424,960 



1884 27,900 I9IO 527,860 



1885 , 42,900 191 1 532,180 



1886 47,900 I912 601,920 



1887 38,335 I913 682,340 



1888 44,289 I914 752,210 



1889 50,508 I915 828,720 



1890 31,300 I916 829,900 



1891 42,000 I917 868,880 



1892 42,300 I918 1,077,255 " 



1893 32,300 I919 1,208,680" 



1894 29,800 1920 1,41 1,360 



1895 29,800 I92I 1,748,460 



1896 29,500 1922 1,769,280 



1897 29,500 1923 2,053,080 



1898 29,500 1924 . 1,797,880 



1899 29,500 1925 2,065,848 



1900 30,700 1926 2,554,743 



1901 33,200 1927 12,149,668 " 



1902 36,200 1928 3,284,265 



1903 70,463 1929 2,069,728 " 



1904 77,450 1930 2,31 1,764 



" Includes $145,775 allotted to the Bureau from a fund for stimulating agriculture on 

 account of the war. 



*> Includes $222,000 allotted to the Bureau from the fund for stimulating agriculture. 



•^ Appropriation of $10,000,000 for Corn Borer Control 1927-1928, of which amount 

 $9,592,000 was allotted to the Bureau of Entomology. 



■^ For the fiscal year 1929 the appropriations for the Bureau of Entomology were reduced 

 by $1,472,720, by transfer of this amount to Plant Quarantine and Control Administration; 

 nevertheless there was an increase in the appropriations for -this year of $258,183 for re- 

 search work by the Bureau of Entomology. 



When in 1904, as has heen shown, the Division of Entomology was 

 made a Bureau and its liranches of work were grouped together 

 into definite sections, only two of the older men to whom especial 

 reference has been made in an earlier part of this story were made 

 chiefs of sections. These were Doctor Marlatt and Doctor Chittenden 

 and of these men we have written somewhat at length in earlier 

 pages. Some brief statements may well be made here of the other men 

 who were appointed to corresponding positions at that time or a little 

 later. It would be very difficult, in fact impossible, for the writer to 

 express in words at all adequately his estimate of the work done 

 by the many other scientific men in the service during the past 20 or 

 more years. There have been very many of them, and they have done 



