178 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL.84 



I have been through the Directory of Agricultural and Home Eco- 

 nomics Leaders of the United States and Canada (Tenth Edition, 

 Cambridge, Mass., 1928) and I find the following: 



Alabama: A Chief Apiarist. 



Arizona: A Commission of Agriculture and Horticulture having on its staff 

 among others a State Entomologist, a District Entomologist, a Bee Inspector, 

 and a Chief Crop Pest Inspector. 



California: Under the State Department of Agriculture there is a Division 

 of Plant Industry containing a Bureau of Plant Quarantine and Pest Control. 

 In this Bureau there is an Entomologist and two Assistant Entomologists. 



Georgia: IJnder the Department of Agriculture, there is a State Entomologist. 



Illinois: A Division of Apiary Inspection, a Chief Plant Inspector. 



Indiana: Under the Department of Agriculture there is a Division of Plant 

 Pest Control employing several entomologists. There was at one time a so- 

 called State Entomologist. 



Ka^isas: Under the Board of Agriculture there is a specified Entomologist. 

 There is, moreover, a State Entomological Commission of five men under this 

 Board, and two of these are entomologists. 



Louisiana: Under the Department of Agriculture and Immigration there is 

 a Division of Entomology with a State Entomologist. 



Maine: Under the Department of Agriculture, Division of Plant Industry, 

 there is one entomologist with the title of Field Agent Gipsy Moth Work. 

 There is also a corps of field inspectors. 



Maryland: Under the State Board of Agriculture there is, in the State 

 Horticultural Department, a State Entomologist and an Assistant. 



Massachusetts: There is under the Department of Agriculture a Division of 

 Plant Pest Control with a Director and one or more assistants. 



Michigan: There is a force of orchard and nursery inspectors. 



Mississippi: There is a State Plant Board with an Entomologist and six or 

 more assistants. 



Missouri: There is a State Apiarist. 



New Hampshire: A State Entomologist (O'Kane). 



New Jersey: A State Entomologist with an assistant in gipsy moth work 

 and one in Japanese beetle work. There is also a Japanese Beetle Suppression 

 Agent, and a Bee Inspector, as well as Nursery Inspectors. 



North Carolina: The Department of Agriculture has an official with the 

 title Entomologist (Leiby). 



Ohio: Under the Department there is a State Apiarist with five deputies. 



Oklahoma: A State Bee Inspector, under the State Board of Agriculture. 



Pennsylvania: Under the Department of Agriculture is a Bureau of Plant 

 Industry in which there is a Chief Entomologist with five assistants and a 

 Chief Apiary Inspector. 



Rhode Islatui: Under the Department of Agriculture there is a Chief of the 

 Bureau of Entomology and Plant Pathology. 



Tennessee: The Department of Agriculture has a Division of Plant Disease 

 Control with a State luitomologist, and an Assistant State Entomologist. There 

 is also a State Apiarist. 



