l8 MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. 



tomato anthracnose. Potato and beet scab. The Angou- 

 mois grain moth; the lime-tree winter-moth; the apple- 

 leaf bucculatrix; the Disippus butterfly; the May beetle; the 

 bean weevil; the pear-blight beetle or shot-borer; the carrot-fly. 



REPORT FOR 1894. 



Analyses of butter and imitation butter. Field experiments 

 with fertilizers. The profitable amount of seed per acre for 

 corn. Digestion experiments. Feeding experiments. Notes 

 of potatoes and corn. Notes of small fruits and on plant 

 breeding. The orange-colored roestelia or quince rust. 

 Diseases of oats. Night-flowering catchfly. The dichoto- 

 mous catchfly. Potato scab. The snow flea. The silver 

 fish. The ring-banded soldier-bug. The elm tree bark 

 louse. The gooseberry plant-louse. The oblique-banded 

 carpet beetle. The oak-bark weevil. The fall canker worm. 

 Tuberculin as a diagnostic agent. Bulletins issued in 1894 — 

 Fruit-culture. Spraying experiments. Tomatoes. Cauli- 

 flowers. Corn as a silage crop. Potatoes. Tuberculosis and 

 glanders. A scheme for paying for cream, etc. Foraging 

 powers of some agricultural plants. 



REPORT FOR 1895. 



Investigations on the foraging powers of some agricultural 

 plants for phosphoric acid. The profitable amount of seed per 

 acre for corn. Sunflower heads and blackeye peas as silage 

 crops. Feeding experiments with milch cows. The relation 

 of food to the growth and composition of the bodies of steers. 

 Notes on potatoes, sweet corn, peas and cabbage. Notes on 

 plants and insects. Second blooming of pear trees. Cattle 

 lice. The yellow woolly bear. Tapestry moth. The straw- 

 berry leaf beetle. The cucumber flea beetle. The currant fly. 

 Bulletins issued in 1895 — Important facts about corn. Inspec- 

 tion of fertilizers. A Discussion of certain commercial fertil- 

 izers. A discussion of certain commercial foods. Notes on 

 small fruits. Inspection of fertilizers. 



