99 



greatly exceeds that of all other classes of individuals. They have been 

 investigators and teachers, students and propagandists; they have car- 

 ried their researches into the fields of botany, bacteriology, chemistry, 

 mechanics, and general zoology. Nearly all of the practical remedies 

 in use to-day have been of their suggestion, and all great advances in 

 recent years have come from their labors. Occasionally a practical 

 agi'iculturist or horticulturist, unskilled in entomology, has discovered 

 an important remedy, as was the case when Mr. J. S. Woodward sprayed 

 his apple orchard with Paris green for canker-worms and found it to 

 be a remedy for the codling moth ; but Mr. Woodward would never 

 have sprayed his trees at all but for the suggestion of Dr. LeBaron 

 several years previously. And then, too, Prof. Cook, making the same 

 discovery independently, was the one who, by his careful experiments, 

 established public confidence in the remedy, and it is to him, more than 

 to any one man, that the country today owes the great annual saving 

 from the widespread adoption of this eminently practical remedy. 



We have, then, done good work. We have accomplished results 

 which have added greatly to the productive wealth of the world. We 

 have justified our existence as a class. We are now better equipped 

 for the prosecution of our work than ever before, and it may confidently 

 be expected that the results of the closing years of the century will 

 firmly fix the importance of economic entomology in the minds of all 

 thinking men of all countries. 



APPENDIX. 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL LIST OF ENTOMOLOGICAL PUBLICATIONS OF THE STATE AGRICUL- 

 TURAL EXPERIMENT STATIONS ORGANIZED UNDER THE HATCH ACT. 



Alabama College Station, Auburn, Ala. 

 G. F. Atkinson, entomologist. Appointed 1889; resigned 1892. 



Bulletin No. 9, December, 1889: Nematode Root Gall. Bulletin No. 15, April, 

 1890: Kerosene Emulsion; How to Make and Apply It. Bulletin No. 17, 

 July, 1890 : Dry Axiplication of Paris Green and London Purple for the Cotton 

 Worm. 

 .1. M. Stedmau, biologist. Appointed 1893. 



Bulletin No. 45, June, 1893: Injurious and Beneficial Insects. 

 Alabama Canebrake Station, Uniontown, Ala. 



No entomological work. 

 Arizona Station, Tucson, Ariz. 

 J. W. Toumey, botanist and entomologist. Appointed 1891. 



Bulletin No. 9, November, 1893: Notes on Insects and Insecticides. 

 Arkansas Station, Fayetteville, Arlc. 

 S. H. Grossman, entomologist. Appointed 1888 ; died 1888. 



Bulletin No. 3, April, 1888: The Peach-tree Borer and the Codling Moth. 

 C.W. Woodworth, entomologist. Appointed 1888, resigned 1891. 



Annual Report, 1888, pp. 121-127 : The Grape-leaf Roller. Bulletin No. 10, June, 



1889, Part l: Kerosene as an Insecticide, and the Tarnished Plant Bug. 

 Annual Report, 1889, pp. 141-190: Insects and Insecticides. Bulletin No. 14, 

 September, 1890: The Effects of the Arsenites upon Plants. Annual Report, 



1890, pp. 70-97 : Report of the Entomologist. 

 5216— Ko. 2 4 



