26 BULLETIN NO. 1, DIVISION OF ENTOMOLOGY. 
The retention to the tree of all infested wood that is living at the time 
of treatment, and restoring the tree to a healthy condition. 
The destruction of the insects without injury to many of their para- 
sites. 
Preventing the bronzing of the fruitand damage to the leaves by the 
rust mite. 
Methods of applying solutions in the most thorough manner, with the 
greatest possible dispatch and economy of material. 
Adapting these means to the varied wants of parties engaged in 
orange culture. 
NOTES OF EXPERIMENTS. 
TREE No. 1. 
August 15.—Cut down to three feet from the ground and budded; 
good shoots from buds. Bark covered with thick scale, variety known 
as hominy scale, color gray-ground speckled with white; nowhere is 
the bark visible. This scale has resisted everything applied to it. Ap- 
plied one part of murvite to five parts water. Ten minutes after appli- 
cation the scale was found to be loose; it was wiped off with a wisp of 
dry grass, with but little force. The bark was found to be green but 
ridged. After cleaning, the tree had’ a healthy appearance; weather 
hot. This and surrounding trees had been highly manured; soil good 
pine land, a little wet, ditched. . 
Mr. Hubbard classified the scale as Parlatoria pergandu. It was 
covered by a fungoid growth that matted the whole together. The 
capsules of the fungus I found were the white spots, the general color 
being gray. ; 
August 23.—Tree thriving. 
September 8.—Tree has made heavy, healthy growth. 
October 25.—Tree still growing. 
TREES” Nos. 2-5. 
August 16.—Tree No. 2 isin a well cultivated, highly manured, young 
grove of very thrifty trees, on fine land, thoroughly drained; its trunk 
is 4 inches in diameter at the ground; diameter of head 6 feet; height 
8 feet; has lost about one-half of its branches by M. gloverii. Took 
samples inside and sprayed with a solution of one part murvite to five 
parts water. Returned one hour afterward and threw a stream of water 
on the seales from a good force pump. The scale was readily washed oft 
the young, smooth bark, and much was washed from the rough, older 
bark, but not all. A greater force would clean off all the scales. The 
scales washed turned bluish white in color. 
Three other trees near by, similarly infested, were sprayed: No. 3 with 
solution 1 to 10, No. 4 with 1 to 20, No. 5 with 1 to 30. No water was 
