4 HATCH EXPERIMENT STATION. [Jan. 



The following bulletins and reports are still in stock and 

 can be furnished on demand : — 



No. 27. Tuberculosis in college herd ; tuberculin in diagnosis ; 



bovine rabies ; poisoning by nitrate of soda. 

 No. 33. Glossary of fodder terms. 

 No. 35. Agricultural value of bone meal. 



No. 41. On the use of tuberculin (translated from Dr. Baug). 

 No. 54. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 57. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 64. Analyses of concentrated feed stuffs. 

 No. 67. Grass thrips ; treatment for thrips in greenhouses. 

 No. 68. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 69. Rotting of greenhouse lettuce. 

 No. 70. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 72. Summer forage crops. 

 No. 73. Orchard experiments ; fertilizers for fruits ; thinning 



fruits ; spraying fruits. 

 No. 75. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 76. The imported elm-leaf beetle. 

 No. 77. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 78. Concentrated feed stuffs. 

 No. 79. Growing China asters. 



No. 80. Fungicides ; insecticides ; spraying calendar. 

 No. 81. Fertilizer analyses; treatment of barnyard manure with 



absorbents ; trade values of fertilizing ingredients. 

 No. 82. Orchard mauagement ; cover crops in orchards ; pruning 



of orchards ; report on fruits. 

 No. 83. Fertilizer analyses. 

 No. 84. Fertilizer analyses. 

 Special bulletin, — The brown-tail moth. 

 Special bulletin, — The coccid genera Chiouaspis and Hemichion- 



aspis. 

 Index, 1888-95. 

 Annual reports for 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901. 



Of the other bulletins, a few copies remain, w^hich can be 

 supplied only to complete sets for libraries. 



An outline of the more important work undertaken and 

 the results secured is all the limits of our space will allow. 

 There have been no serious outbreaks of insects dm'ing the 

 year. The gypsy moth and brown-tail moth have continued 

 their ravages, while the elm-leaf beetle has been found more 



