viii THE CONNECTICUT POMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 



Evening Session at 7:30 



Lecture — "The Fruit Garden in its Relation to the Suburban and 

 Farm Home." 



Prof. F. A. Waugh, Dept. of Horticulture, Mass. 

 Agricultural College, Amherst. 

 Ten-Minute Papers—" The Advantages of a Map or Plan for Farms 

 and Gardens and How to Make it." 



G. A. Parker, Supt. Keeny Park, Hartford. 

 " Co-operation and Cost of Production as Factors in Meeting Com- 

 petition in Fruit Growing." 



Edwin Hoyt, New Haven. 



WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3fd 



Morning Session at 9:30 



"FIGHTING THE SAN JOSE SCALE." 



(a) "The Latest and Most Effective Methods." 



Prof. W. E. Britton, State Entomologist, New Haven. 



(b) " Some Extensive Spraying Experiments of the Past Season." 



Mr. E. R. Bennett, Storrs Agricultural Experiment 

 Station. 



(c) "Cost and Results of the Work." 



J. NoRRis Barnes, Yalesville. 

 Discussion. 



10.45. Address — "Some York State Ideas in Successful Fruit 

 Culture." 



S. W. Wadhams, Clarkson, N. Y. 



11.30. Five-Minute Talks and Demonstrations by Students in Horti- 

 culture from the Connecticut Agricultural College. 



RECESS. 



Afternoon Session at 1:30 

 Election of Officers. 



2.00. Address^" Cultivation vs. the Mulch System in Fruit Grow- 

 ing." 



Wm. H. Skillman, President New Jersey Horticul- 

 tural Society, Belle Mead, N. J. 

 Discussion. 

 2.45. Address—" Commercial Small Fruit Culture ; and How I Grow 

 Strawberries." 



R. H. Race, North Egremont, ^lass. 

 3.30. Ten-Minute Paper—" Raspberries and Blackberries for Profit." 



J. T. ]\IoLUMPHY, Berlin. 

 Questions and Discussion. 



Closing Business, 



